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
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flesh, as in life he had eaten theirs; and when his shelter was ashes and the ashes had blown away, all trace of him would be gone, like a ripple on the Sea. But he'll come back, thought Torak. He was born here. This was his home. He'll be lonely at Sea.
Fin-Kedinn was speaking his name. "Torak. Come. You must join the feast."
"I can't," he said without turning around.
"You must."
"I can't! I have to go after Thiazzi."
"Torak, it's dark," said Renn at her uncle's side, "and there's no moon, you can't leave now. We'll set off first thing in the morning."
"You must honor your kinsman," Fin-Kedinn said severely.
Torak turned on him. "My kinsman? That's what we've got to call him, isn't it? My kinsman. The Seal Clan boy. For five whole summers, till we've forgotten his name." "We'll never forget," said Fin-Kedinn. "But it's better this way. You know that."
"Bale," said Torak, very distinctly. "His name. Was Bale."
Renn gasped.
Fin-Kedinn watched him narrowly.
"Bale," said Torak again. "Bale. Bale. Bale!"
Shouldering past them, he ran the length of the bay,
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only stopping when he reached the smoldering ruins of Bale's shelter.
His fault.
"Torak!" Renn stood on the other side of the fire, her pale face shimmering in the heat. "Stop naming him! You'll draw his spirit!" "Let it come!" he flung back. "It's only what I deserve!" "You didn't kill him, Torak."
"But it was
my fault!
How do I bear it?"
To that she had no answer.
"Fin-Kedinn's right!" he cried. "The Seals can't avenge Bale; that's for
me
to do!"
"Don't keep naming him--"
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Mountain pack, Wolf misses her the most. They are one breath, one bone. He feels this in his fur.
Darkfur goes down on her forepaws and barks.
Come! The hunt is good, the pack is strong!
Wolf's tail droops.
Her bark becomes impatient.
The Dark came, and the taillesses settled down for their endless sleep. Wolf heaved himself up and went to nose around the Dens. Scornfully evading the dogs, he ate some fishes hanging from sticks, and a delicious hunk of fish-dog fat. Then he found an over-paw outside a Den and ate that, too. When the Light came, he trotted into the Forest, trod down some bracken to make a comfortable sleeping-patch, and had a nap.
The smell woke him instantly.
His claws tightened. His hackles rose. He knew that smell. It made him remember bad things. It made the tip of his tail hurt.
The scent trail was strong, and it led up-Wet. With a growl, Wolf leaped to his feet and raced after it.
"I told you," said the Sea-eagle hunter, tying up a bundle of roe buck antlers. "I saw a big man coming ashore. That's it."
"Where did he go?" said Torak. He was relentless. Renn, cradling a cup of hot birch-blood in her hands, wondered how much more the Sea-eagle would take. "I don't
know!
" snapped the hunter. "I was busy, I wanted to trade!"
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"I think he went upriver," said the hunter's mate. "Upriver," repeated Torak.
"That could mean anywhere," said Renn. But already Torak was heading for the Raven camp and the deer-hide canoes.
It was the second night after Bale's funeral rites, and after an exhausting crossing, they'd reached the trading meet on the coast. Fog shrouded the camps along the shore and the mouth of the Elk River. Willow, Sea-eagle, Kelp, Raven, Cormorant, Viper: all had come to barter horn and antler for seal hide and flint Sea eggs. FinKedinn had gone to return their borrowed skinboats to the Whale Clan, and the ravens were roosting in a pine tree. There was no sign of Wolf.
"I don't care," said Torak.
"But think! Somewhere out there are Thiazzi and Eostra: the two remaining Soul-Eaters, and the most powerful of all."
"I don't
care!
He killed my kinsman. I'm going to kill him. And
don't
tell me to get some sleep and we'll start in the morning."
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"I wasn't going to," she replied, nettled. "I was going to say I'll fetch some supplies."
"No time. He's already got two days' lead."
"And it'll be more," she retorted, "if we have to keep stopping to hunt!"
When she reached the shelter she shared with Saeunn, the sight of its familiar, lumpy reindeer hides brought her to a halt. Less than a moon ago, she'd left it and run down to the skinboats, eager to have Fin-Kedinn and Torak to herself, and to see Bale again.
She shut her eyes. In disbelief, she had stared at his broken body. The blind blue gaze. The gray sludge on the rocks. Those are his thoughts, she'd told herself. His thoughts soaking into the lichen.
The Raven Mage huddled in her corner beneath a musty elk pelt. Over the winter, she had shrunk in upon 36
The elk pelt stirred. Renn's heart sank.
"No," said Renn. Saeunn could always place her talon on a weakness.
"But the Forest is vast.... You must have tried to see where he went."
She meant Magecraft. Renn's hands tightened on the gutskin. "No," she muttered.
"Why?"
"I couldn't."
"But you have the skill."
"No. I don't." Suddenly, she was close to tears. "I'm supposed to see the future," she said bitterly, "but I
37
couldn't foresee his death. What's the
good
of being a Mage if I couldn't foresee that?"
"You might be able to do Magecraft," rasped Saeunn, "but you're not yet a Mage."
Renn blinked.
"You'll know it when you are. Though perhaps your tongue will know before you do."
Riddles, thought Renn savagely. Why always riddles?
"Yes, riddles," said Saeunn with a wheeze that was almost a laugh. "Riddles for you to solve!" She paused to catch her breath. "I've been casting the bones." Torak appeared in the doorway and threw Renn an impatient glance.
She motioned him to silence. "What did you see?" she asked Saeunn.
The Mage licked her gums with a tongue as gray as mold. "A scarlet tree. An ash-haired hunter burning inside. Demons. Scrabbling under scorched stones." "Did you see where Thiazzi went?" Torak said brusquely.
"Oh, yes ... I saw."
Fin-Kedinn appeared beside Torak, his face grim. "He's heading for the Deep Forest."
"The Deep Forest," echoed Saeunn. "Yes ..."
"A group of Boar just arrived," said Fin-Kedinn. "They came down the Widewater. At the ford, they saw a big man in a dugout, heading up the Blackwater." 38
Torak nodded. "He's Oak Clan, that's Deep Forest. Of course, that's where he'll go."
"We'll take two canoes," said Fin-Kedinn. "I've told the clan they're to stay here while we head upriver."
"We?"
Torak said sharply.
"I'm coming with you," said Fin-Kedinn.
"So am I," said Renn, but they ignored her.
"W
7
hy?" Torak asked Fin-Kedinn. With a pang, Renn saw that he didn't want them. He wanted to do this on his own.
"I know the Deep Forest," said Fin-Kedinn. "You don't."
"No!" Saeunn was fierce. "Fin-Kedinn. You must not go!" They stared at her. "One thing more the bones revealed, and this is
certain.
Fin-Kedinn, you will not reach the Deep Forest." Renn's heart clenched. "Then--we'll go without him. Just Torak and me."
"Yes we can," she insisted.
Fin-Kedinn sighed. "You know there's been trouble between the Aurochs and the Forest Horses since last
39
summer. They won't let in outsiders. But they know me--"
"No!" cried Renn. "Saeunn means it. She's never wrong."
The Raven Mage shook her head and gave another rattling sigh. "Ah, Fin-Kedinn ..."
"Torak, tell him!" pleaded Renn. "Tell him we can do it without him."
But Torak picked up a bag of supplies and avoided her eyes. "Come on," he muttered, "we're losing time."
Fin-Kedinn took the other bag from her hands. "Let's go," he said.
40
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he'd attacked Wolf's pack-brother. Wolf had leaped at the bad tailless, clamping his jaws on one hairy forepaw, crunching bones and rich, juicy flesh. Wolf loped faster. He didn't know
why
he sought the Bitten One--wolves do not hunt taillesses, not even bad ones--but he knew that he had to follow. The scent thickened. Through the voices of wind and birch and bird, Wolf heard the tailless stirring the Wet with a stick. He smelled that the tailless had no dog. Then he saw him.
From many lopes away came the high, thin howl of the bird bone that Tall Tailless and the pack-sister used for calling him.
Wolf didn't know what to do. He longed to go to them; but that would mean turning back.
The bird bone went on calling.
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The Bitten One went on sliding up-Wet.
Wolf didn't know what to do.
"You let him get away!" shouted Torak, so angry that he forgot to talk wolf. "He was right there and you let him get away!"
Wolf tucked his tail between his legs and shot behind Fin-Kedinn, who was on his knees, waking a fire. "Torak, stop it!" cried Renn. "But he was so close!" "I know, but it's not his fault. It was me!" He turned on her.
"
I
called Wolf," she told him. "It's my fault he let Thiazzi get away." She opened her palm, and he saw the little grouse-bone whistle he'd given her two summers before.