He got back just before sunset and stopped on the path below the cave where he called for his mother.
A crowd gathered at the ledge outside the cave to gawk at the doomed young man.
Donte hurried down the path to him.
“Are you OK Pell?
What’s all the blood?”
“Yes, I’m OK.
The blood is from a boar I killed, but my firepot tipped over and my coal went out.”
“Oh no Pell!
I don’t think they’ll let me get another coal.
They’re in a foul mood.
Pont hasn’t been able to do any good for Tando’s wrist and the hunting continued to go badly after you left.
All
of the last kill is gone, so they’re looking forward to a hungry night.”
“I’ve brought
most
of my pig.
I’ll trade it for the coal.
I could even try to fix Tando’s wrist if he’d like.”
“What?
You have pig?
Where did you get it?”
“Remember, that’s why I’m bloody, I killed a pig.”
Pell wondered a moment how bad this lie was but decided that, after all, he
had
built the trap that killed the boar and he couldn’t help the fact that she would assume that he had killed it in a hunt.
Donte looked at him in stunned amazement.
“What do you mean you could try to fix Tando’s wrist?
”
she asked in a near whisper.
“I fixed my finger when Pont couldn’t.”
He reflected that he had only let the healer try once on his own finger.
“I also fixed Gontra’s finger.
It wasn’t any ‘bush’ or ‘Boar Spirit’.
I’ve found a trick for doing it.
I tried to tell Pont about it once but he won’t even listen to me.”
Donte’s eyes narrowed.
Pell thought with dismay that even his own mother didn’t believe him.
She said, “Give me some of the boar and the firepot.
I’ll see whether they’ll trade...
I don’t think I’d better bring up Tando’s wrist.”
Pell gave her the haunch from the boar.
“I’ll give them the rest of the boar that I brought if they let you bring me a coal. All I’m keeping is one haunch.”
He handed her the little firepot and she started up the hill.
More of the tribe had crowded out onto the ledge to stare and Pell felt quite self-conscious.
He shifted from foot to foot and looked away at the horizon.
He worried that dark would fall before he’d be able to get back to the brush choked ravine that he now thought of as
his
safe haven.
There was some shouting from up at the cave.
Pell recognized Roley, Pont, and Donte’s voices but couldn’t understand what was said.
After a bit, Donte came back down the hill.
With mixed feelings he saw that she was carrying the little firepot carefully.
So it must have a coal in it, meaning he’d won his deal.
Why did he feel so disappointed?
He
realized he’d been hoping that
somehow
,
in view of his kill, Roley would change his mind and allow him to come back.
Donte stopped in front of him with a sad look in her eyes.
“I asked them to let you stay.
I think Roley was feeling guilty about exiling you but Pont reminded him about Tando’s wrist.
Pont
even tried to claim that you’ve been bringing bad luck to the tribe.
Pont told Roley to just have the hunters come down here and
take
your meat, ‘becaus
e you were going to die anyway.’
Pont is so evil sometimes!
Anyhow, the best I could get them to agree to was to let you have some coals.”
“’
Let
me have some coals?’ This meat is worth a lot more than a few lousy coals!” Then Pell thought of Tando’s wrist... actually, probably Tando’s life.
“
Oh well, you did what you could, thanks,
Here’s the rest of the meat.”
Pell loaded her down with the remainder of the boar, gave her another hug and hurried off with his firepot.
“I’ve got to go before it gets dark,” he
said
over his shoulder.
The sun had set and it was nearly dark by the time he got back to the little brush-choked gulch.
He quickly found the little pile of shavings he had made earlier and this time successfully started them on fire with the little firepot.
With twigs he soon had a little fire going.
To his surprise he saw that the young wolf was still there.
It lay on its side gnawing on the skull of the boar.
He had been sure that the wolf would drag itself away by now if it hadn’t already died.
H
e
again thought about
killing it for its fur—
then he looked
the wolf in the eye once again—he decided it wasn’t going to happen.
Using a brand from the fire for light, he relocated up into the little tunnel in the brush.
He moved into the area he had blocked off.
He enlarged that little area by tearing out branches and limbs, chiefly to make the roof higher, piling the wood in the uphill part of the tunnel.
Once he was sure that a small fire wouldn’t catch the entire brush pile he started a little fire from his brand.
He unrolled his bundle and laid out his sleeping furs on the downhill side of the fire.
He wanted to be able to make an escape if the brush pile did catch on fire.
Finally he sliced some strips off the pig haunch that he had kept. He roasted them over the little fire.
For some reason this meal tasted better than any mea
l he had had before in his life. However, as he gorged on the pig
his fear and dread, dread of a life alone, returned.
Finally, after stoking his fire, he lay down to sleep.
He tossed and turned a while, torn between feelings that he didn’t deserve to live after what he had done to Tando, and his burning hatred for Denit.
He also felt sick betrayal
over
his
lack of support from Boro, Gontra and Exen.
Over and over he wondered how it would ever be possible for him to feed himself.
Maybe he would gain his coordination soon and get better at throwing?
He briefly pictured himself returning to the Aldans triumphant, having become a mighty hunter, a hunter who
m
they desperately needed. Eventually he drifted into a sleep tormented by visions of Tando and his deformed arm.
These shifted seamlessly into visions of Durr’s not too different deformity then of Tando/Durr ly
ing broken at the bottom of the
C
liff.
He awakened repeatedly in cold sweats, often imagining that he could see the eyes of enormous night cats at the periphery of the light from his fire.
He built up his little fire after each
run of
nightmare
s
and then struggled to get back to sleep.
The next day dawned clear and cold again.
Pell woke exhausted but was relieved to see no evidence of impending rain.
Bad
weather would make his journey to
ravine
of the
cold spring
s
much more difficult.
First he worked on the bundle his mother had given him.
Using some of the thongs and leather straps within, he fashioned a shoulder sling so that he could carry it
easily
.
He spent time putting some good coals from the fire into his little firepot.
Then he picked up his spear and made his way out of the little tunnel.
To his amazement the young wolf was still there.
She was sitting up and appeared to be waiting for Pell’s next move.
When he set out on his journey she laboriously got to her feet and then limped along behind him.
The wolf was almost carrying one hind paw but, after they’d been traveling a while, the wolf seemed to warm up.
After a bit more she seemed to have little difficulty keeping up with Pell.
By late morning, limping less, she occasionally ranged ahead a bit.
When Pell’s direction turned out to be different than that of the wolf, she would swing around and follow behind him a little ways.
Then, once sure of his direction, she would take the lead again.
Pell
thought i
t seemed to as if the wolf had
become confused and thought
that she and Pell
were
a small wolf pack.
The day passed slowly as Pell followed a route that he and the tribe had followed every spring and fall since before he could remember.
He recognized that he was making better time than the Aldans did in their semiannual treks.
After some thought he realized that, having few possessions, he wasn’t burdened like Aldans
normally
were when they made the trip.
This thought again led him to worry about how he could possibly survive without the equipment and tools that the tribe had built up over the years.
This was to say nothing of all the skills that different members of the tribe had that he did not.
He wished that he had paid more attention to how the women cooked the Aldan’s meals.
But at least he had vague ideas of how they cooked from being present while it was done.
He hadn’t
gone on gathering trips with t
he women since he was a toddler so
his knowledge of the gathering of plants and roots w
as abysmal
.
When the plants began to green up later in the spring he would have virtually no
idea
which one
s
were edible and which ones weren’t.
Of course, he would be able to recognize berries and some of the grains.
How to separate the grains from their stalks and hulls and how to recognize the plants which
had
tubers underground—now that was another matter indeed.
He remembered the other hunters taunting him about “women’s work.”
If only he actually did know how to do a woman’s work!
Why hadn’t he let his mother join him in exile?
To augment his despair,
his thoughts returned to just
how poorly he performed at the “man’s work” of hunting!
He trudged on, head down, heart heavy, nearly oblivious to his surroundings.
Suddenly he heard the wolf growling in a menacing tone from somewhere behind him.
What?
Was the wolf going to attack him
now
?!
For the Spirit’s sake,
Pell wondered,
why didn’t I kill it when I had the chance?
He turned, swinging his spear about, to confront the wolf but the wolf was staring fixedly off to the north.
She was snarling viciously now, lips
wrinkled
up, tail low.
Pell glanced in the direction that the wolf was glaring.
He saw a flicker of a tail and then a rippling, tawny body bounded into view.
It was a lion
that had been laying in ambush. Now, its ambush ruined it was
accelerating his way!
Pell’s bundle fell unnoticed as he vaulted into a nearby small tree, grasping its lower branches and swinging up.
He scrambled up until the branches became too dense to make any more progress, then looked down.
The lion stood on its hind paws at the base of the tree reaching up with outstretched claws.
Shuddering, Pell realized that without the wolf’s warning he would
already
be crushed
in
those slavering jaws!
He looked about and saw to his amazement that the wolf was fifteen paces back, hackles up, her hair raised on end.
She continued snarling, lips still curled back to show all of her teeth.
Even more unbelievably, she was making little dashing movements toward the lion as if contemplating attack.
Pell couldn’t believe his eyes. T
hat wolf couldn’t possibly think that she could kill the lion, could she?
Suddenly, to Pell’s dismay he realized that the lion was trying to climb the tree.
Cook fire discussions back at the cave had taught Pell that the smaller cats could climb trees after prey but there had been arguments about whether the big cats could.
It looked like Pell might discover just who’d been right in those arguments—the hard way.
The lion pulled up a little and looked like it was about to reach for a higher grip with its front paws! Then the wolf dashed in and snapped at its hindquarters!
Snarling and snapping, the lion dropped out of the tree, knocking the wolf end over end.
The big cat twisted after the wolf but the wolf skittered out of its path.
The lion pursued halfheartedly, seemingly recognizing a futile chase.
Moments later i
t returned to the base of the tree.
Pell looked frantically about, considering his chances of leaping from this tree to a neighboring one.