Authors: Michelle Paver
Tags: #Prehistory, #Animals, #Action & Adventure, #Wolves & Coyotes, #Juvenile Fiction, #Prehistoric peoples, #Fantasy & Magic, #General, #Fiction, #Voyages and travels, #Historical, #Wolves, #Demoniac possession
Spirit Walker (Chronicles of Ancient Darkness #2)
Michelle Paver
Chapter ONE
The auroch appeared quite suddenly from the trees on the other side of the stream.
Then he saw the calf peering from the bracken, and his belly turned over. Aurochs are gentle creatures-
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except
when they have calves.
Without a sound, Torak drew back into the shade. If he didn't startle her, maybe she wouldn't charge.
Torak blew out a long breath.
The calf wobbled toward its mother, slipped, bleated, and fell over. The cow auroch raised her head and nosed it to its feet, then lay back to enjoy herself.
It was a hot day at the beginning of the Moon of No Dark, and the Forest was drowsy with sun. The trees echoed with birdsong; a warm southeasterly breeze carried the sweetness of lime blossom. After a while, Torak's heartbeats slowed. He heard a clutch of young greenfinches squealing for food in a hazel thicket. He watched a viper basking on a rock. He tried to fix his thoughts on that, but as so often happened, they drifted to Wolf.
Wolf would be nearly full-grown by now, but he'd
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been a cub when Torak had known him: falling over his paws, and pestering Torak for lingonberries. . . .
Don't
think about Wolf, Torak told himself fiercely. He's gone. He's never coming back, never. Think about the auroch, or the viper, or-
That was when he saw the hunter.
And he was stalking the auroch.
Two slate throwing axes were stuck in his belt--and as Torak watched in disbelief, he pulled one out and hefted it in his hand.
Was he insane? No man hunts an auroch on his own. An auroch is the biggest, strongest prey in the Forest. To attack one on your own is asking to be killed. The auroch, happily unaware, grunted and rubbed deeper into the mud, relishing the relief from the
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troublesome midges. Her calf nosed a clump of willowherb, waiting for her to finish.
Torak rose to his feet and warned the hunter with urgent slicing motions of his palm:
Danger! Go back!
The hunter didn't see him. Flexing his brawny arm, he took aim--and hurled the axe.
It whistled through the air and thudded into the ground a hand's breadth from the calf.
Incredibly, he was reaching for his second axe.
"No!"
Torak whispered hoarsely. "You'll only hurt her and get us both killed!"
The hunter wrenched the axe from his belt.
No time to climb it--she was almost upon him. He
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heard her grunt as she heaved herself up the bank--he felt her heat on the other side of the tree trunk. . . .
At the last moment she swerved, flicking up her tail and blundering off into the Forest, her calf galloping after her.
The silence when she'd gone was deafening.
Sweat poured down Torak's face as he leaned against the oak.
The hunter stood with his head down, rocking from side to side.
"What were you
doing?"
panted Torak. "We could've been killed!"
Suddenly the hunter stumbled against a beech tree and began to retch.
Torak forgot his alarm and ran to help him.
hair.
A gust of wind stirred the branches, and in a shaft of sunlight Torak saw him clearly for the first time.
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Torak edged backward, his hand moving to his clan-creature skin: the strip of wolf fur sewn to his jerkin. What
was
this?
"Don't!" cried Torak.
With a snarl, the man sprang at him, pinning him down.
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Torak stared up into a mass of crusted sores; into two dull eyes filmed with pus. "Don't--hurt me!" he gasped. "My name--is Torak! I'm--Wolf Clan, I--" The man leaned closer.
"It
-
is
-
coming,"
he hissed in a blast of putrid breath.
Torak tried to swallow. "What--is?"
The cankered face twisted in terror. "Can't you see?" he whispered, flecking Torak with yellow spit. "It is coming! It will take us all!"
He staggered to his feet, swaying and squinting at the sun. Then he crashed through the trees as if all the demons of the Otherworld were after him. Torak raised himself on one elbow, breathing hard.
The birds had fallen silent.
The Forest looked on, appalled.
It
is coming.
Sickness.
Torak ran to fetch his quiver and bow. No time to retrieve the willow bark. He had to get back to camp, and warn the Ravens.
Chapter TWO
Where's Fin-Kedinn?" cried Torak when he reached the Raven camp.
"In the next valley," said a man gutting salmon, "gathering dogwood for arrowshafts."
"What about Saeunn? Where's the Mage?"
"Casting the bones," said a girl threading fish heads on sinew. "She's on the Rock; you'd better wait till she comes down."
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and uttered a harsh
cark!
Who else could he tell?
Renn was out hunting. Oslak, whose shelter he shared, was nowhere in sight. By the smoking-racks he spotted Sialot and Poi, the Raven boys closest to him in age-but they were the last ones he'd approach; they didn't like him because he was an outsider. Everyone else was too busy getting in the salmon to listen to some wild tale about a sick man in the Forest. And as Torak looked about, he almost began to doubt it himself. Everything seemed so normal.
The Ravens had built their camp where the Widewater crashes out of a shadowy gorge and thunders past the Rock, then over the rapids. It was up these rapids that the salmon fought their way each summer on their mysterious journey from the Sea to the Mountains. Always they were driven back by the fury of the river, and always they tried again, hurtling through the foaming chaos in twisting, shining leaps--until they died of exhaustion, or reached the calmer waters beyond the gorge, or were speared by the Ravens.
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teeth. But the prize was great.
The Ravens' shelters stood empty; everybody was at the smoking-racks, getting in the day's haul before it spoiled. Men, women and children scraped off scales and gutted fish, while others sliced strips of orange flesh from the bones, leaving them joined at the tail for easy hanging on the racks. Sialot and Poi pounded juniper berries, which would be mixed with the dried, shredded meat to keep it sweet--or mask its taste if it was not.
This was how it had always been since the Beginning. Surely, thought Torak, one sick man couldn't change all that.
Then he remembered the cankered face and the pus-filmed eyes.
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At that moment, Oslak emerged from their shelter, and Torak's heart leaped. Oslak would know what to do.
But to his astonishment, Oslak hardly listened as he blurted out his story, seeming more engrossed in retying the binding on his fishing spear. "You say the man was Boar Clan," he said, frowning and scratching the back of his hand. "Well then, his Mage will take care of him. Here." He tossed Torak the spear. "Get down to the stepping-stones and let me see you take a salmon."
Torak was bewildered. "But Oslak--"
"Go on, go!" snapped Oslak.
Torak gave a start. It was unlike Oslak to get cross. In fact, it never happened. He was a huge, gentle man with a tangled beard and a slightly alarming face, having lost one ear and a chunk of cheek in a misunderstanding with a wolverine. It was just like him not to blame the wolverine. "My fault," he'd say if anyone asked. "I gave her a fright."
As he did, he saw something that stopped him dead.
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The back of Oslak's hand was covered in blisters.
"What's--that on your hand?" he said.
"Midge bites," said Oslak, scratching harder. "Worst I've ever had. Kept me awake all night."
"They don't look like midge bites," said Torak. "Do they--hurt?"
Torak swallowed. "I don't think you can lose your name-soul through a cut; only through your mouth, if you're dreaming, or--sick." He paused. "Are you sick?" "Sick? Why would I be sick?" A shiver shook Oslak's whole body. "But I can't hold on to my souls."
Torak's hand tightened on the spear. "I'll fetch Saeunn."
Oslak scowled. "I don't need Saeunn! Now go!" Suddenly he wasn't Oslak anymore. He was a big man looming over Torak, clenching his fists. Then he seemed to come to himself. "Just--leave me be, eh? Go on. Thull's waiting."
"All right, Oslak," said Torak as levelly as he could.
He was halfway to the river's edge when he turned and looked back.
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Oslak was still scratching. "Leaking
out"