When Maleficent had placed a crown on Aurora’s head, she hadn’t thought she was putting Aurora in danger. Making her queen of two kingdoms had seemed like a perfect plan. After all, Aurora had wanted to live in the Moors, and she was already the heir to Perceforest. She was a human the faeries loved, and humans would be predisposed to love her, too.
Maleficent believed she would make a wonderful queen.
And she was wonderful.
But the job turned out to be terrible. In the Moors, the only expectation of Queen Aurora was that she guard them from outside threats. But in Perceforest, danger came from all sides—and so did obligations; when her people didn’t want to trick her or cheat her or steal her throne, they wanted her to solve all their problems.
And since Maleficent was the one who had put Aurora in that position, she’d decided to help her—in small ways. Nothing too obvious.
A few seeds planted along the borders. Potions cooked up to guard Aurora against poison. The occasional criminal waking in the royal prisons, begging to confess. Lightning storms drawn from the clouds when it seemed as though Perceforest’s farmlands had gone too long without rain.
And if people looked up in fear when thunder crashed around Aurora, well, perhaps that was no bad thing, either. It was a good reminder that if the humans ever thought to move against her, there would be no one to hold Maleficent back.
But in her travels through Perceforest, she discovered something she hadn’t expected.
The nature of humans.
Maleficent had known a few of them, of course, but, well, a vanishing few. She hadn’t really understood how desperate their lives could be. She hadn’t seen them digging in the dirt for shriveled vegetables, their faces lined and their bodies bent. She hadn’t seen hungry children, or young lovers torn apart by greed, and she hadn’t seen the cruelty neighbors inflicted on one another.
Now she alighted in trees and watched. It made her recall watching over Aurora when she was a baby, neglected by the pixies who were supposed to raise her.
It made her think of Stefan, orphaned and desperate for power.
And it made her certain that getting Aurora away from other humans was the best way to keep her safe.
But as much as she might like to, she couldn’t just drag the girl back to the Moors and keep her there. No, she had to tempt Aurora to spend more and more time among the faeries until she forgot all about the humans. And for that, Maleficent needed something extraordinary.
A palace in the Moors.
A majestic place that would make the castle in Perceforest appear like a dull pile of rubble.
Stretching out her fingers, she began to twist and shape the earth, conjuring up soil and rocks in a spiraling path up a hill. And then she moved on to the palace itself, smoothing out great boulders into walls and thickening vines into staircases. Spires rose into the air, thick with moss, green and magnificent. When she was done, there was a castle where no castle had been, all of leaves and flowers, wood and stone—a living thing, pulsing with magic.
And if a part of her hoped to make up for the hurt she’d already caused Aurora with a truly extravagant gift, if part of the structure itself felt as though it were shaped from her guilt and her fear of losing Aurora again, well, that only made it more beautiful.