Authors: Michelle Paver
Tags: #Social Issues, #Prehistory, #Animals, #Demoniac possession, #Wolves & Coyotes, #Juvenile Fiction, #Prehistoric peoples, #Fantasy & Magic, #General, #Horror & Ghost Stories, #Historical, #Fiction, #Values & Virtues, #Good and evil
"This can't be," she whispered again. "Why would he attack me?"
Feeling dizzy and sick, she gripped the handle of her axe. There was no way out. Whatever happened next, one of them would die.
Wolf stood guard while Tall Tailless huddled in the reindeer pelt, twitching and moaning in his sleep.
Wolves. Many lopes off, although he couldn't tell exactly where, because they were howling with their muzzles all pointing different ways. Wolf understood this. It was the time when the Lights get longer, eating up the Darks: the time when wolf cubs are born. This pack had cubs. It didn't want others to find its Den. The pack that Wolf had run with on the Mountain had used the same trick.
The pack fell silent.
Wolf's tail stilled.
He wished Tall Tailless would wake up. But he went
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on twitching and moaning in his sleep.
Wolf pawed Tall Tailless to wake him. His pack-brother didn't stir.
Wolf snapped at his over-pelt and tugged at the long dark fur on his head. When that didn't work, he barked in his ears. That never failed. It did now.
Wolf's pelt tightened as he realized that what lay here, curled in the reindeer hide, was only the
meat
of Tall Tailless. The bit inside--the breath that walked-- was gone.
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Fast Wet, he loped toward the pack-sister's howls. He smelled her fierce resolve. He smelled fresh blood and angry elk.
In mid yowl, the pack-sister's voice broke off. Wolf quickened his pace.
Suddenly the wind swung around, carrying a new scent to his nose: the scent of Otherness.
Wolf slewed to a halt. The Otherness was heading for Tall Tailless's defenseless body.
Wolf hesitated.
What should he do?
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Torak woke with a struggle, as if fighting his way up from the bottom of a lake. Something had happened in the night--something terrible--but he couldn't remember what. He was lying in his sleeping-sack with the early sun in his eyes. His mouth tasted as if he'd been eating ash, and the wound in his chest hurt savagely.
Torak didn't answer. He never spirit walked in his sleep. And it couldn't have been the drink he'd made for the rite; Renn had told him it wouldn't make his souls wander. Besides, he'd daubed the sign of the hand on his cheek, like she'd said. With his fingers he searched his face, but the earthblood was gone. He must have rubbed it off while he slept.
It took him the whole morning to reach the clearing. He had some idea of where it lay, having noticed the badger sett and the stump on previous hunts; and Wolf helped too. But when they got there, Torak didn't recognize it. The bracken and willowherb had been flattened as if by a hailstorm, the oak kicked to splinters. Here and there he saw scarlet spatters on green leaves.
The world tilted. He tasted bile. He fought to stay calm, to piece together what had happened. 81
Maybe they had arrived in time, killed the elk, and taken it with them in the boats.
Maybe it was Renn they'd carried away.
Torak's mind refused to work. His tracker's skill deserted him.
I
did this, he thought. There is something inside me that I can't control.
What do you mean?
said Torak, but Wolf's answer was unclear. Wolves don't talk only with grunts and whines and howls, but with subtle movements of the body: a tilt of the head, a flick of the ears or tail, the fluffing up or sleeking down of fur. Not even Torak knew every sign. All he could gather was that Wolf had caught a bad scent making for his pack-brother and raced to his defense, but whatever it was had gone by the time he'd arrived.
Torak stared at the desolation around him. He
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should get under cover; at any moment a canoe might slide into view. He didn't care. He had to go to the clan meet and find out what had happened to Renn.
The Mountain Hare Clan had built their reindeer-hide shelters on the rocks above the shore, perhaps because this reminded them of home. The Rowan 83
Clans' turf domes squatted in the meadows, while the Salmon Clan had pitched their fish-skin tents on the foreshore, and the Sea Eagles, who didn't seem to care, had made their untidy stick piles wherever they'd found space. The Open Forest clans had camped nearest the trees, but Torak couldn't see the Ravens' open-fronted shelters.
"They say the Wolf Clan's headed south," said a man's voice, startlingly close.
Torak froze.
"Good riddance," snorted another man. "I never feel easy with them around."
A muffled curse as one of them tripped over a root. "Still, they should've stayed," said the first man. "It's a clan meet, that's what it's for." "What about the Deep Forest clans?" said his companion. "No sign of them, either."
"I hear there's trouble between the Aurochs and the Forest Horses...."
Their voices faded as they headed toward the river--and Torak breathed again.
The fire was made of three pine logs burning along 84
their length. A Raven long-Fire. He'd found them.
Dry mouthed, he hid in a clump of yews beyond the light.
He saw Fin-Kedinn deep in talk with the Salmon Clan Leader as they cut hunks off a glistening side of red deer and filled peoples' bowls.
Above Torak's head, a branch creaked--and a raven peered down at him with bright, unforgiving eyes. He begged it not to betray him.
The guardian spread its wings and flew, swooping low over the Mages' fire. Saeunn raised her head to follow it. Then she turned and looked straight at Torak. She can't see you, he told himself. But in the firelight, the stare of the Raven Mage was red with secret knowledge. Who knew what she could see? Just when Torak couldn't bear it any longer, Saeunn turned back to her spells.
Then Torak saw her.
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The tightness in his chest loosened as if a rawhide strap had snapped.
She's all right.
A dog padded over to him; luckily, one he knew. He shooed it away.
Next time he might not be so lucky. He had to get away before they found him.
He stayed where he was.
He stayed.
And that changed everything.
The moon made its way across the sky, and still Torak watched.
He saw men, women, and children dipping beakers in pails of brewed birch-blood. He saw them stepping into the space around the long-fire to offer a story, a song. A Willow man sang of the salmon run to the music of deer-hoof rattles and duck-bone pipes.
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A Rowan woman created a prowling shadow bear by moving her hands behind a firelit hide.
Two masked figures were now dancing around the fire: a midge with a long, pointed wooden beak, and an irascible elk. The midge--with a Viper woman behind the mask--zoomed about, whining and poking with her beak, to delighted squeals from children and laughter from their parents. But Renn had eyes only for the elk. Her mouth was a tense line as she watched it sweep the shadows with its antlers. Torak could see that she was reliving the attack.
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whine that made everybody laugh.
It was Bale. His kinsman.
Bale had put on muscle since the previous summer, and firelight glinted in the beginnings of a beard, but apart from that he hadn't changed. The same long, fair hair beaded, with shells and capelin bones, the same intelligent face. The same blue eyes that seemed to hold the light of sun on Sea.
The last time they'd seen each other, they'd talked about hunting together, and Torak had made a joke about a Seal in a Forest. It hurt to think of that now. Suddenly a horn boomed into the night.
Ravens exploded from the trees.
Dancers, watchers, all went still.
Leaning on her staff, Saeunn hobbled into the light. "A Soul-Eater!" she cried. "A Soul-Eater is come among us!"
Fear rippled through the throng.
"I read it in the bones," croaked the Raven Mage, circling the fire, searching their faces. "I see it in the smoke. A Soul-Eater is among us--a Soul-Eater to the marrow!" People clutched their children and gripped amulets
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and weapons. Fin-Kedinn's features never moved as he watched his Mage seek the evil one.
As Torak hid in the dark beneath the yews, the meaning of what Saeunn had sensed crashed upon him. A Soul-Eater to the marrow ... He had carried the mark on his chest for too long. It had gnawed its way into his bones, and he was one of them. He would never be free. The rite hadn't worked.
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