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
17 Torak shut his eyes. Death Marks. Yes. The souls must be kept together, or Bale might become a demon or a ghost.
At least I can do this for you, thought Torak.
With clumsy fingers, he untied his medicine pouch and shook it. Out fell the medicine horn that had been his mother's, and the little mussel spoon. He blinked. He hadn't even thanked Bale for it. They had eaten in silence. Then they'd fought. No, he corrected himself. Bale didn't fight.
You
did the quarreling. The last thing you ever said to him was in anger.
Bale lay on his back. His face was unmarked. It was the back of his skull that had cracked like an eggshell. Numbly, Torak daubed earthblood circles on the forehead, chest, and heels. He'd done the same for Fa. The mark on Fa's chest had been the hardest, as he had a scar where he'd cut out the Soul-Eater tattoo. Torak's own chest bore a similar scar, so when his time came, that mark would be difficult, too. Bale's chest was smooth. Flawless.
When it was done, Torak sat on his heels. He knew
18
he was too close to the body, that this was the most dangerous time, when the souls are still close and might try to possess the living. But he stayed where he was. Someone was crunching through the seaweed, calling his name.
He turned.
Renn saw his face and stopped.
"Stay back." His voice was rough, as if it belonged to someone else.
She ran to him. She saw what lay beyond. Her cheeks drained of color.
"He fell," said Torak.
The blood under the nails.
The meaning of it drenched him like an icy wave. That blood wasn't Bale's. Someone else had been with him on the Crag. Bale didn't fall. He was pushed.
He had to repeat it twice before she heard, but for once she didn't argue. Like a sleepwalker she trudged toward camp.
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Fin-Kedinn turned to Torak. "How did it happen?"
"I don't know."
"Why? Weren't you with him?"
Torak flinched. "No, I ... I should have been. I wasn't." If I'd been with him, he wouldn't have died. This is my fault.
My fault.
Their eyes met, and in Fin-Kedinn's sharp blue gaze, Torak saw understanding and sorrow: sorrow for
him.
The Raven Leader raised his head and studied the Crag. "Go up there," he said. "Find out who did this."
Whoever had killed him.
It still wasn't real. Only yesterday they'd been gutting cod together on the foreshore, Rip and Rek sidling closer to the steaming entrails, Bale tossing them scraps now and then. At last the final cod hung by its tail from the rack, and they were free to go skinboating. Asrif had lent Torak his boat, and Detlan and his little sister had come to see them off, Detlan on his crutches, waving so hard he nearly fell over.
Only yesterday.
The neck of the Crag was shaggy with rowan and
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From far below came a cry like a creature being torn in two. Torak sucked in his breath. Bale's father had found his son.
Don't
think about that. Think about this. Do this for Bale.
The killer must have been strong to have overcome
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Bale, but that was all Torak knew. He had to make the Crag tell him the rest.
Step by step, Torak followed him. He forgot the voice of the Sea and the salt wind in his face. He lost himself in the search.
The sense of being watched brought him back. He stopped. His heart began to pound. What if Bale's killer were still hiding in the rowans? Whipping out his knife, he spun around.
"Torak, it's me!" cried Renn.
With a harsh exhalation, he lowered his knife.
"Never
do that again!"
"I thought you'd heard me!"
"What are you doing here?"
"How did it happen?" she said. "I thought you were with him."
"No."
She met his eyes. He glanced away. "You go first,"
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she said in an altered voice. "You're the best tracker."
He hadn't gone far when he found more signs. A crumb of lichen scraped by a running boot; and behind the altar, a lobe of stonecrop ground to a green smear. Snagged in a crack, a strand of reindeer hair. Torak's skin crawled. Bale wore seal hide. This had belonged to his killer. An image began to take shape, like a hunter emerging from mist. A big, heavy man clad in reindeer hide.
23
A red mist descended over Torak's sight. Sweat broke out on his palms. When he caught the killer, he would ...
"Look there," said Torak. He picked up a tiny speck of dried spruce-blood. "And this." He drew aside a branch to reveal a handprint.
Renn breathed in with a hiss.
Bale's murderer had leaned on one hand to watch his victim fall. That hand had only three fingers.
Torak shut his eyes. He was back in the caves of the Far North, facing the Soul-Eater. Wolf sprang to his defense, leaping at the attacker, snapping off two fingers. "So now we know," said Renn in a cold voice.
They stared at each other, both remembering cruel green eyes in a face as hard as cracked earth.
Torak's fist closed over the spruce-blood. "Thiazzi," he said.
Torak and Renn tracked him to where the trail ended in the Sea. "From where I was," said Torak, "I might have seen him." "Why were you camping out here?" said Renn. "I--I needed to be alone." She gave him a penetrating stare, but didn't ask why. That was worse. Maybe she'd guessed that he'd made a
25
terrible mistake; so terrible that she couldn't bring herself to talk of it.
"He might be anywhere by now," she said, turning back to the waves. "He could've made for the Kelp Island, or one of the smaller ones. Or gone back to the Forest." "And he's got a head start," said Torak. "Let's go."
Under the tip of the altar, Torak found what Thiazzi had uncovered: a small hollow hacked from the surface of the Crag. It was empty.
"He found what he was after," said Torak.
Torak's blood thudded in his ears. Renn's voice
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reached him from a great distance. "He found it, Torak. Thiazzi has the fire-opal."
"Tell no one," said Fin-Kedinn. "Not that he was murdered, or who did it, or why."
Torak agreed at once, but Renn was aghast. "Not even his father?"
"No one," said the Raven Leader.
They squatted by the stream at the south end of the bay, daubing each other's faces with clay mourning marks. The roar of the waterfall drowned their voices. There was no danger of being overheard by the Seal women downstream who were preparing the funeral feast, or by the men readying Bale's skinboat for the Death Journey. The Seals worked in silence to avoid offending the dead boy's souls. Torak thought they seemed like people in a dream.
All day they had worked, and he had helped. Now dusk was falling, and every shelter, every skinboat, every last rack of cod had been moved to this end of the bay, farthest from the Crag. To the north, only the shelter Bale had shared with his father remained. It had been doused in seal oil and set ablaze. Torak could see it: a red eye glaring at him in the gathering dark.
"But that's
wrong"
protested Renn.
"It's necessary." Her uncle caught her gaze and held it. "Think, Renn. If his father knew, he'd seek revenge."
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"Yes, and so?" she retorted.
"He wouldn't be alone," said Fin-Kedinn. "The whole clan would want to avenge one of their own."
"So?" repeated Renn.
"I promise," said Torak. He didn't want the Seals going after Thiazzi. Revenge must be his and his alone.
Reluctantly, Renn gave her word. "But his father's bound to find out," she said. "He must have seen what we saw. The--the blood under his nails."
On the shore, the Seals had set a ring of kelp torches: a leaping orange beneath the dark-blue sky. Within this, they had laid Bale in his skinboat. Greasy black smoke stung Torak's eyes, and he breathed the stink of burning seal oil. He felt the mourning marks stiffening on his skin. He thought, Bale's funeral rites. This can't be.
After him, every member of the clan added a gift for the Death Journey. Asrif gave a food bowl, Detlan a set of fish-hooks, while his little sister--who'd been very keen on Bale--managed to keep from crying for long enough to put in a small stone lamp. Others gave clothes, dried whale meat or cod, seal nets, spears, rope. Fin-Kedinn gave a harpoon, Renn her three best arrows. Torak gave his pike-jaw amulet, for hunting luck.