Authors: Michelle Paver,Geoff Taylor
Tags: #Good and evil, #Death, #Animals, #Wolves & Coyotes, #Juvenile Fiction, #Philosophy, #Prehistoric peoples, #Battles, #Fiction, #Voyages and travels, #Good & Evil, #Prehistory, #Adventure fiction, #Historical, #Fantasy & Magic, #Demoniac possession, #Friendship, #Murder, #Enemies
"Why did you do it, Torak? Why spirit walk now?"
He opened his eyes. "To find Thiazzi." He hesitated. "I see him, Renn. Sometimes it's a flash of fair hair. Sometimes he's right there. Streaming wet. Accusing." A chill crawled over her skin. She saw from his face that he meant Bale.
She thought of the day of the death rites, when Torak had stood on the beach and shouted Bale's name to the
122
sky. As if he'd
wanted
to be haunted. "Why would he be accusing?" she said.
He struck the back of his head against the yew, hard enough to hurt. "We had a fight. I went off on my own."
Oh, Torak. "What--what did you fight about?"
He avoided her gaze. "He was going to ask you to stay with him."
Renn felt the heat rising to her face.
"He didn't want to quarrel," Torak went on. "It was me. I was the one. I left him to keep watch alone. That's why he was killed."
Around them, the birds were waking up. Renn saw the dew glistening on fat caterpillar curls of bracken. A bumblebee bumping about among the windflowers.
"Torak," she said at last, "that doesn't make it your fault. Thiazzi's the killer. Not you."
The bee settled on Torak's knee, and he watched its unsteady progress. "Then why is he haunting me? I have to fulfill my oath, Renn. Or he'll be with me forever." She thought about that. "Maybe you're right. But I'll be with you too. And Wolf. And Rip and Rek." She
123
paused. "Only from now on,
don't
tell me to go back to my clan."
His lip curled. Then he snorted. Easing the bee onto his palm, he placed it on a dock leaf.
Dawn came, and they sat side by side, watching sunlight slanting through the Forest.
After a while, Torak said, "If he had asked you to stay with him, would you have said yes?"
Renn turned to stare at him. "How can you ask that?" she said, exasperated.
He was puzzled. "I'm sorry, I ... Does that mean no?"
Renn asked him what Wolf was saying.
"Bright Beast," he told her. "And--I'm not sure, something broken. Think? Mind? Broken mind?"
"Mad," they said together.
They never had time to wonder what it meant.
124
knife, she and Torak were surrounded.
The hunters were clad in plain buckskin and carried no weapons. Somehow, they didn't need them. Renn saw that they wore no headbands. Whose side were they on? "You will come with us," said a quiet voice which was used to being obeyed. "Your search is at an end."
125
"You're Red Deer," said Renn.
"And you're Raven," said the woman, calmly seeing through her disguise. "And you"--she turned to Torak-- "are the spirit walker."
126
He gaped. "How did you know?"
"We felt your souls walk. You can mask it from others, but not from the Red Deer."
"He doesn't mask it," said Renn.
"Then someone does it for him," the woman replied.
Renn wanted to ask what she meant, but Torak said eagerly, "My mother was Red Deer. Did you know her?"
"Of course."
He took a breath that ended in a gulp. "What was she like?"
"Not here," said the woman. "We'll take you to our camp."
"I'm not an outsider," said Torak. "I'm kin."
"What have you got against me?" said Renn.
"She said our search was at an end. That might not mean the same thing."
"They're my bone kin. They
have
to help."
She pointed to the man with the bark-bound head, who was walking in front. "Why doesn't he like me?"
The young man sighed. "We fostered a Raven once. He helped the Soul-Eater make the demon bear."
Renn bridled. "That was my brother. The Soul-Eater tricked him, too."
The man with the bark-bound head glared at her. "So
you
say. The bear killed my mate. That's why I don't like Ravens." When he was out of earshot, the young hunter apologized. "He still misses her." "Is that why he binds his head?" asked Renn.
"Yes. We place our dead in their chosen tree, then bind our heads in its bark, to remember."
128
"But you don't wear headbands. So whose side are you on?"
He drew himself up. "We take no sides. We never fight."
Renn raised her eyebrows. "What do the other clans think of that?"
"They scorn us, but they leave us alone."
The Red Deer camp lay above the lake, and was so well concealed that she would have passed it if it hadn't been for the fire. A mound of juniper turned out to be the biggest shelter she'd ever seen: She counted seven doorways covered by reindeer-hide flaps stained green. A couple of dogs--the first she'd encountered in the Deep Forest--came to investigate, caught Wolf's scent on her, and fled. Children peered out, then ducked inside.
It was weirdly quiet, but for the first time in days, she felt safe. Nothing could get her here: neither tokoroths,
129
The young hunter led Torak to the lake to wash, and a woman beckoned Renn to a secluded bay. After some persuasion, she stripped and stood shivering while the woman used a cake of what appeared to be hard gray mud to scrub off her Deep Forest disguise. It was good to be herself again, but her skin stung. She asked what was in the gray cake.
Ash,
thought Renn. Always ash. "Everyone in the Deep Forest uses it," said the woman. "It's like soapwort, but better."
"But ours are so much better," protested the women. Better clothes, better washing, better everything, Renn thought crossly. Maybe we should all give up and imitate them. 130
He made room for her beside him while the rest of the clan settled around the fire. "Stop scowling," he whispered. "They're helping us. And smell that food!" She snorted. "It's bound to be
so
much better than ours."
But she had to admit it was good. A huge wovenroot basket had been hung directly over the embers. It was full of a fragrant stew of chopped auroch meat, mushrooms, and bracken tops, which was cooked when the basket was nearly burned through. There were also delicious flatcakes of crushed hazelnuts and pine pollen, and a big pail of honey to ladle over everything, with steaming spruce-needle tea to wash it all down.
Torak struggled to explain. "I--I was a yew. Then I was in tree after tree. Too many voices ... I couldn't bear it."
"Ah," sighed the whole clan.
Torak swallowed. "My mother ... You said you knew her. Tell me about her?"
Durrain dismissed that with a wave of her hand. "She chose to leave. I can tell you nothing." "Nothing?" Torak was aghast. Renn felt angry for him. "Surely you tried to find her?" Durrain gave her a chilly smile. "But--she and Torak's father were fighting the Soul-Eaters. They needed your help."
132 She was right. It was Renn's turn to be crushed. Beside her, Torak stirred. "You don't know anything about Renn. Last summer, her visions warned us of the flood. She saved whole clans." "Indeed," said Durrain. Torak lifted his chin. "We're wasting time. You said our search is at an end. Do you know where the Oak Mage is?"
"There is no Oak Mage in the Deep Forest," declared Durrain.
"You're wrong," said Torak. "We tracked him here. The trail leads south."
"If there was a Soul-Eater in the Deep Forest, the Red Deer would know it."
"You didn't before," said Renn. "The crippled wanderer lived with you for a whole summer and you never knew who he was."
That drew angry murmurs from the others, and Durrain's lips thinned. "Your search is at an end. Tonight we will pray. Tomorrow we'll take you back to the Open Forest." "No!" cried Renn and Torak together.
"You don't understand what you've blundered into," said Durrain. "The Deep Forest is at war!"
"But you never fight," retorted Renn, "so why should that affect you?"
"It affects us all," said Durrain. "It keeps the World
133
Spirit away, which blights the Forest. Surely even in the Open Forest you know of this?"
"No, we're much too ignorant," said Renn. "Why don't you enlighten us?"
Renn felt Torak stiffen. "The Forest Horse Mage," he said. "Is that a man or a woman?"
"A man," said Durrain.
Renn's heart began to race. "What does he look like?"
"No one sees his face. At all times, he wears a mask of wood, to be one with the trees."
"Where is the sacred grove?" said Torak.
134
"In the valley of the horses," said Durrain. "Where's that?" said Renn. "We never tell outsiders."
"In whose range is it?" said Torak, "Auroch or Forest Horse?"
Renn took a deep breath. "What if we told you that the Forest Horse Mage is Thiazzi in disguise?"
Durrain gave her a pitying stare, while the others smiled in disbelief.
"But if we're right," said Torak, "you'd help us? You'd help me, your bone kin, fight the Soul-Eater?"
"The Red Deer never fight," repeated Durrain.
"But you can't do nothing!" cried Renn.
"We pray for the fighting to stop," retorted Durrain. "We pray for the World Spirit to come." "That's your answer?" said Torak. "To pray?"