The Burning Ring
Orem's war with the Queen made him almost frenetic during the days, as if he had to work off some of the power he stole from her. As she neared the time of delivery, he harried her more and more, so that she spent her days exhausted after battling futilely all night. Orem, however, spent his days in ever more active games. Timias and Belfeva were surprised, but gladly joined him, even when he indulged in madness like racing horses with the cavalry on the parade ground or competing with Timias to see which of them could throw a javelin the farthest. Timias was not the sort to let Orem win, and so Orem, untrained in any of the manly arts, invariably lost. But he kept at it furiously, and gradually improved.
When Beauty went into labor for the birth of Orem's son, he was climbing up a wall of the Palace, racing to the top with Timias. This was one competition where agility and endurance counted for more than brute strength and long practice, and Orem was holding his own. He was nearly to the top, in fact, when he noticed a sharp pain like a candle flame on his leftmost finger. He looked, and saw that his ruby ring was glowing hot. He could not take it off, not without falling a hundred feet or so. Instead he endured it, climbed the rest of the way to the top, and only then tried to pry it off his finger. He could not.
Weasel and Belfeva were there, watching. "Help me," Orem said.
"You can't take it off," Weasel said. "The ruby ring will burn till the child is born. It isn't really burning you. Anyway, you should be glad—it's proof that the child is not only yours, but also a son."
"The child is being born," Orem said. Then this was the last day of his life, he was sure. He walked to the lip of the roof, reached down, and helped Timias to the top.
"You won," Timias said, surprised. "I didn't think you had it in you."
"I kept looking down," Orem said. "The thought of death makes me quick."
Suddenly Weasel cried out in pain.
"What is it!" they demanded, but she would not tell.
"Orem," she said, "you must go to your wife."
"At a birthing? The father?"
"At this birthing, with that mother, yes." She winced again.
"What's wrong? What's happening to you?"
"Help me to my room, Belfeva," Weasel said. "And you, Little King, go to your wife, I say."
"But she hasn't sent for me," Orem said. In truth, he wanted to spend the last day of his life with anyone but Beauty.
"Do you forget which finger bears her ring? She'll obey you if you command her to let you stay."
"No one commands Queen Beauty."
"You do," Weasel said. "But beware how you command her, for she'll obey you with cruel perfection if you ask unwisely."
"I don't want to go," he said angrily.
She winced again, and staggered against Belfeva. "Not for her. Your son. Your son has begun his voyage down the river to the sea. She'll have no other help but you. No one but the father can help at the birth of a twelve-month child."
Orem wanted to stay, wanted to know why Weasel was in such pain. But he knew that Weasel was wise, that Weasel did not lie; if she said he must go to Beauty, then he would go.