Seekers #6: Spirits in the Stars (12 page)

Read Seekers #6: Spirits in the Stars Online

Authors: Erin Hunter

Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Fantasy, #Juvenile Fiction, #Fantasy & Magic, #Action & Adventure, #Animals, #Nature, #Fate and Fatalism, #Bears

BOOK: Seekers #6: Spirits in the Stars
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No!

Ujurak dragged his mind back, clinging to his knowledge of who he really was, and focused on what he had to do. As he powered through the water, back toward the seals, his senses told him that the water was tainted. He knew it was a bad place for hunting, but the instincts of the killer whale were so strong that they were overriding that knowledge. His mind drifted, his awareness slipping away and sinking into the orca’s overwhelming urge to kill and eat.

Suddenly grunts and squeals of panic surrounded him. Bodies thrashed past him, and he realized that the seals had spotted him. Ujurak darted toward the nearest of them, all his senses screaming for food.

No . . . I’m a bear . . . a bear. . . .

With a massive effort Ujurak swerved away. He knew that he wasn’t there to hunt. Instead he had to scare the seals into defending themselves. But his belly was hollow with hunger, and the seals smelled so good. . . .

Thud!

Ujurak’s body rocked as a seal slammed into him. Then another. Then a whole line of them. His whale mind shrieked in fury, braced to fight back, wanting to teach these miserable bits of food a lesson. But his bear mind rejoiced.

Yes! The seals are defending themselves!

Through the blurry, stinking water Ujurak made out Dark, directing his community of seals. Sharp satisfaction shot through him as he realized the head seal was using the suggestions he had made. Splash chivvied the calves and the smaller seals into shallow water or the cover of rocks, while Dark, Silver, Dapple, and the others formed a line and hurtled toward the whale’s flank.

They were too fast for Ujurak to turn and face them. The line of seals crashed into him with their blunt noses, and the shock of their heavy bodies made him roll in the water.

Surrendering to his whale instincts, Ujurak recoiled and snapped at them, but the sleek seal bodies evaded his jaws and re-formed the line to attack him again. Driven back, Ujurak’s fear of the shallow water stopped him from following them.

Water thrashed around him as the seals darted in again and again to strike his body. At last Ujurak turned, swimming away into deeper water. As the blackness closed around him, the scent of prey cleared from his nose, and he became fully aware of himself as a bear.

Let’s hope I’ve done enough. I can’t do any more.

Ujurak swam around the entrance to the cove and headed for some rocks. Relief flooded through him as he returned to his familiar bear shape and clambered out of the sea. Every muscle in his body was aching as he padded up the beach and found a spot where he could scramble up the cliff.

Lusa, Toklo, and Kallik were still peering over the edge, looking down at the seals. The other white bears had disappeared. His friends must have convinced them to go. As Ujurak trudged up from behind, Lusa spun around, her eyes stretching wide with surprise as she spotted him.

“What are you doing here?” she asked. “Are you giving up? Did you get attacked by that orca?”

“No, that was me.” Ujurak flopped down beside her, unable for the moment to answer her urgent questions.

Kallik swung around to stare at him, almost dislodging Kissimi from her shoulder fur. “Are you crazy? Now they’ll never leave if they think there’s an orca waiting for them out at sea!”

“Wait,” Toklo said, before Ujurak could respond. The big grizzly was still staring down into the cove. “Something’s happening.”

Together all the bears gazed down. Ujurak saw that the seals had bunched into a tight group and were gathering at the mouth of the cove, their dark bodies circling below the ice. The seals still on the surface slipped one by one into breathing holes to join their companions. Every so often Ujurak spotted Dark popping his head up, barking at them to hurry.

“They’re leaving!” Kallik whispered in relief.

Ujurak could hardly believe what he was seeing. Though he was battered and exhausted from his fight, he felt that every ache was worth it. “They know now that they are brave and strong,” he murmured. “They know that they can make their own safety without relying on the no-swims.”

Toklo let out a grunt of astonishment and gazed at Ujurak as if he thought his friend was crazy. Ujurak was too tired to explain.

Together he and his friends stood on the cliff and watched the last seals vanish; Ujurak pictured them swimming beneath the ice until they reached their new home in the bay.

“It will be a while before the seals are free of the poison inside their bodies,” he said, “but it will happen in time.”

“Then the white bears will be able to hunt without getting sick.” Lusa’s voice was full of satisfaction.

A pang of conscience shook Ujurak like a gust of icy wind. When he’d been in seal shape, and even more as an orca, he had begun to respect the seals.
Was I right to send them to a place where the white bears will be able to hunt them more easily?

But Ujurak realized that the bears would hunt the seals no matter what he did, wherever they lived; that was the way the world worked, just as the seals ate fish and the orca ate seals and bears.

At least we’ve given them the chance to lead healthy lives.

Ujurak gazed up at the gray sky, wondering if his mother, Ursa, was watching.
It has begun,
he told her silently.
We are fighting back.

“So from now on the seals
will be living in the bay beyond the steep gorge,” Lusa explained. “You’ll be able to hunt them safely there.”

Aga and the other white bears were pale shapes in the twilight. Kallik watched them anxiously as Lusa finished her account of how she and her friends had managed to move the seals.

Will they believe what Lusa is telling them?

Aga nodded slowly as Lusa finished speaking, but Kallik saw that her eyes were wary. “This tale is strange to me,” she said at last. “But I am willing to hear the words of Tungulria.”

“Well, I’m not!” Unalaq pushed forward to stand at the front of the crowd of bears, next to Aga. “I can’t believe they just walked in here and interfered with our hunting! We should drive them out now!”

Kallik’s belly lurched to see the threatening look that Unalaq gave the small black bear. But Lusa faced him bravely.

“Fine!” she snapped. “Don’t bother to thank us for saving your lives!”

Unalaq opened his jaws for an angry retort, but Aga silenced him by raising a paw. “No bears will be driven from this island,” she announced. “Especially not when we have waited so long for Tungulria to come.”

“But what do we need to do now?” Illa asked. Kallik could tell that the young she-bear was puzzled rather than hostile. “If we move over to the other bay, how will that help? The seals are still poisoned.”

“That’s right,” another bear muttered in the background. “I like my den here. I don’t want to leave.”

Kallik listened anxiously as the white bears clustered together, casting doubtful glances at Lusa. What would happen
if they agreed with Unalaq and decided not to believe Lusa?

“Yeah, but if the water’s poisoned here . . .” another of them began.

“We
know
it’s poisoned. Haven’t you smelled that stuff? Yuck!”

“I was really sick until I ate that moss, but I feel fine now.” That was Yakone. “I say we should trust them.”

Kallik focused her attention on Aga. Her decision was the one that would count. Toklo and Ujurak were watching Aga closely, too, while Lusa held the ancient she-bear’s gaze without flinching.

She knows Aga will listen to her because of the prophecy about Tungulria,
thought Kallik.

Pride in her friend’s courage coursed through Kallik, but all the while it was battling with her longing to return to Kissimi. She had hidden the cub in the shallow hole in the valley where she had placed him the first time she and her friends had gone to talk to the white bears. She knew he would be safe there, but her need to be with him was like a constant tug on her fur.

Did my mother feel like this?
Kallik asked herself.
How terrible that she had to die and be separated from her cubs forever!

“It’s not far to the new hunting ground,” Toklo began, stepping up to stand beside Lusa. “Just follow the cliffs until you get to the gorge. The bay is on the other side. Then—”

“We know our own island, cloud-brain!” Unalaq interrupted.

“Then you’ll need to wait a while until the seals are free of the poison,” Toklo went on. He glared at the big white bear but otherwise ignored him. “Meanwhile you should be careful to just eat seals that smell of clear water and nothing else.”

Aga shook her head uncertainly. “How long will that take? And what are we going to eat in the meantime?”

“You’ll have to hunt other prey,” Lusa replied. “If you like, we’ll teach you how to catch a musk ox.”

“What?” Unalaq let out a snort of contempt. “A puny scrap of fur like you, killing a musk ox? I’d like to see that!”

“You can see it.” Toklo took a pace forward and confronted the big white bear, showing his teeth. “I’ll lead a group of you and show you.” Dipping his head respectfully to the old she-bear, he added, “With your permission, Aga.”

A touch on her shoulder made Kallik jump. She had been so busy thinking about Kissimi that she hadn’t noticed Yakone padding quietly up to her. Even though she was glad to see the bear with the reddish pelt, she found it hard to drag her thoughts away from her cub.

Kallik turned to Yakone and dipped her head politely. “Hi. I’m glad you’re feeling better now that—”

She was interrupted by a huffed complaint from Unalaq, and Aga’s sharp voice reprimanding him.

Yakone’s eyes glimmered with amusement. “Sometimes Unalaq doesn’t know when to keep quiet!”

“At least he listens to Aga,” Kallik responded.

The amusement faded from Yakone’s eyes, and he shook his head uncertainly. “I’m not sure how much longer Aga will be in charge,” he said. “She’s growing old and frail—frailer than any other bear on the island. Besides, she might not want to go on being leader now that the prophecy about Tungulria has been fulfilled.”

“I don’t understand all that,” Kallik told him, a powerful sense of strangeness sweeping over her. “Has Aga really been waiting for Lusa to come?”

Instead of answering right away, Yakone gestured with one paw, drawing Kallik away from the group of bears gathered around Aga. He led her to the crest of the hill, from where they could look down over one side of the island. The snow-covered hillside fell away in front of them as far as the cliff edge and the frozen surface of the poisoned cove. By now night had fallen; lights glimmered in the no-claw denning place, and stars glittered in the sky, though there was still no sign of the dancing spirits.

“It’s weird,” Yakone murmured. “White bears have always eaten seals. It’s hard to accept that they were making us sick.” He fell silent with a sigh.

Kallik nodded sympathetically. She remembered how her mother had taught her and Taqqiq how to crouch beside a breathing hole and wait for the seal to appear. None of them had ever dreamed that seal might not be good to eat.

“We white bears have been getting sick for a long time now,” Yakone began again. “Ever since the pale no-claws came to the island. At first we thought the sickness was a curse from the Iqniq because we hadn’t chased the no-claws away.”

“But chasing them away would be too hard.” Kallik touched the young male’s shoulder sympathetically with her snout. “No-claws go where they want.”

Yakone nodded. “But then Aga had a dream,” he went on. “The Iqniq came down to the ground and told her that we had to wait for a black bear, Tungulria, who would save us.” He sighed and glanced away from Kallik, staring at his paws. “Not many of us believed her,” he confessed.

“I can understand that. I don’t suppose any of you had ever
seen
a black bear before!”

“None of us had,” Yakone agreed. “I couldn’t believe it when I saw the four of you coming across the ice.” He hesitated, then added, “Has Tungulria done other special things before now?”

Kallik stared at him, not sure how to reply. In one way their whole journey had been special.
I’m traveling with black and brown bears, for a start!
But she didn’t think that was the kind of answer Yakone wanted.

“I think we’ve all come here for a reason,” she responded thoughtfully. “Moving the seals was part of it. Maybe we each have our own role to play.”

Could my role be to become Kissimi’s mother?
she wondered. A shiver of mingled fear and delight ran through her as she realized that she wasn’t a young cub anymore.
Could I really care for Kissimi as Nisa cared for me?
Oh, spirits, I do hope so!

“How did you four meet?” Yakone asked.

Kallik looked into his eyes and saw nothing there except honest curiosity. Surprising herself, she realized how much she liked the young white bear.
He’s friendly, and I can talk to him.

But as she became aware of her feelings, she realized that she didn’t want to tell Yakone everything. She was afraid that he would think she was strange for coming all this way in search of her mother’s spirit, or for leaving the white bears behind at Great Bear Lake.

And now Nisa’s spirit seems to have faded away,
Kallik thought sadly.
Was the whole journey about Lusa all along?

“I was born on the Frozen Sea,” she told Yakone. “And when my mother died, I set out in search of the Endless Ice. I was so lucky to find Toklo and Lusa and Ujurak to travel with.”

Yakone bent his head closer to Kallik’s. “And now that you’ve found the Ice, will you stay?” he asked.

Kallik’s belly lurched in surprise.
Is Yakone asking me to stay with him?
Then she told herself not to be so cloud-brained. He was just being friendly.

“I don’t know,” she admitted hesitantly.

She couldn’t make that decision without thinking of Kissimi. Part of her wanted to blurt out to Yakone that she had found the dead Sura’s cub. She had to bite the words back like a hard mouthful of prey. If Yakone knew, he might force her to stay or take Kissimi away from her.

Kissimi must have family here. Sura is dead, but she must have had brothers and sisters. Didn’t Illa say she was her sister?

“Hey, Kallik!” Toklo’s voice interrupted her thoughts. “We’re leaving!”

Glancing back the way she and Yakone had come, Kallik saw Toklo waiting at the bottom of the slope with Lusa and Ujurak. Illa and Tunerq were with them. Trailing a few pawsteps behind them, clearly reluctant, was Unalaq.

“Sorry, I have to go,” she said to Yakone, running down toward her friends.

She could feel Yakone staring after her. Suddenly there was a flurry of pawsteps, and the young male caught up with her in a shower of snow. Kallik stopped and turned to him.

“Kallik, will you come hunting with me?” Yakone asked. “You can show me around the new place.”

“Yes!” Kallik replied without thinking. “I’ll meet you at the new bay at first light.”

Yakone blinked happily, and Kallik gazed into his eyes, not sure whether she needed to say any more.

“Kallik, come
on
!” Lusa barked impatiently behind her.

With a swift nod to Yakone, Kallik headed down the slope again.

“See you tomorrow!” Yakone called after her.

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