Authors: Erin Hunter
Kallik ignored him and kept whispering to the spirits. It was the only thing she could think of to do. With an irritated growl, Toklo shoved his way in front of her and padded off through the trees.
Kallik climbed to her paws and followed him. She didn't want to lose sight of him again.
They had gone only a few pawsteps when it started to rain, a drenching downpour that soaked Toklo and Kallik in moments.
âPerfect,' Toklo grumbled. He walked faster, his paws sloshing and splashing in the wet mud that quickly formed underpaw. Kallik could feel the mud sticking to her white fur.
She remembered what Lusa had said about reading signs. Perhaps if there were bad spirits in these mountains, there might be good spirits too.
She stopped and looked around. The trees were thinner here, and she could see bare rocks off to the right. The rain made everything look blurred and slick.
Ice spirits? Are you there?
Her eyes opened wide and she gasped. âToklo!'
The brown bear came galloping back, skidding on the wet pine needles. âWhat? What is it?'
âI think we should go that way,' Kallik said, pointing to the rocks.
Toklo stared at the slick grey stones. âWhy?'
âLook here, at this tree,' Kallik said, nudging it with her snout. âDo you see it?'
âSee what?' Toklo growled.
âThe sign!'
Toklo huffed. âYou're getting as bad as Lusa, seeing signs in everything!'
Kallik shook her head impatiently. âLook at these four branches. They're all new little branches, and they're all growing off the tree trunk in the same direction â pointing towards those rocks!'
âWhat?' Toklo spluttered. âThat makes as much sense as trying to follow a butterfly!'
âNo, it does make sense,' Kallik insisted. âDon't you see? The four branches are us â we're cubs, so
we're like new branches, and we're all travelling together. It's pointing the way back so we can be together again.'
âWho told you that?' Toklo challenged. âYour ice spirits?'
âNo, it must have been Lusa's spirits â the spirits of the black bears who live in these trees,' Kallik said. She had felt so sure, but after she explained herself to Toklo, her fur prickled with doubts. Would the black bear spirits really speak to her?
Well, there was no ice here â this was the best she could do.
Toklo opened his mouth to argue some more, but Kallik cut him off. âJust trust me,' she said. âI'll get us back to the cave.' She bounded in front of him, leading the way out of the pine forest and on to the wide, flat rocks. She hoped she sounded confident.
Thank you, tree spirits. I put my faith in you.
The rocks were slippery underpaw, and the bears had to move carefully, stepping from boulder to boulder. Kallik kept searching the blank rocky terrain in front of her for more signs.
Help me, please.
She was beginning to worry that she'd gone the wrong way when she spotted something else.
âAha! See that?'
âNo,' said Toklo.
âThat little black stone!' Kallik said. Tucked in among the giant grey boulders was a tiny, perfectly round, dark black stone. It looked as if it were sparkling with speckles of starlight â as if an ice spirit were trapped inside. Kallik trotted up to it and pointed with her nose. âDon't you get it? That's
Lusa
. She's a little black bear, but she isn't like any other bear around her. It's like she's sparkling on the inside.'
Toklo rolled his eyes. âSo we go that way.'
âWe go that way,' Kallik agreed. It was encouraging that âthat way' was downhill, since they'd gone uphill from the cave. She picked up the stone in her mouth and brought it with her. She wanted to show Lusa. If they got back safely, Kallik thought it would be a powerful sign that the good spirits here were stronger than the bad spirits, as long as bears were willing to listen to them.
The rocks ended at a scrabbly stretch of earth and dry grass with ragged bushes clinging to it. Tall peaks surrounded them, and wind whistled up from the canyons, driving the rain into their eyes. A few
lone trees were scattered near the cliff walls.
Kallik squinted at the cliffs rising up some distance to their right. Were those the ones they'd followed the stream through? She put the little black stone on the ground to speak. âI think â'
âHang on!' Toklo said. And suddenly he was bounding away, racing across the dirt towards one of the trees. His powerful shoulders propelled him forward at a startling speed. Kallik blinked after him in surprise.
Then she saw what he'd spotted: a moving ball of fur pelting across the rocks to the safety of a tree. She held her breath as Toklo got closer and closer. And then . . . he pounced!
When he turned round, she saw the animal hanging limply from his jaws. It looked like a long, low fox with a bushy tail and a face like a weasel. Kallik padded closer. âNice catch,' she said. âWhat is it?'
He gave her an odd look and put the animal down to say, âIt's a pine marten, of course.'
âDon't you “of course” me,' Kallik said. âWe don't have pine martens on the ice.'
Toklo snorted. âWell I suppose at least now we
have something to take back for Lusa.'
âWe're going this way,' Kallik said, pointing with her nose to a gully that led downhill and dipped between two large, blocky boulders. Rainwater was running along the bottom of it, but they could follow it along the top.
âWhy?' Toklo asked. âBecause there are four big rocks over there?'
âWell . . . yes,' Kallik said. âBut not just any four rocks! Look how they're leaning against one another. It's like the way the four of us have to support one another too.'
Right, spirits? Is that what you're trying to tell me?
Toklo heaved a sigh. âI hope you're right about this.' Toklo picked the pine marten up again. Kallik could tell he thought she was being seal-brained. She sent another prayer to the spirits.
Please let this work
.
They edged along the lip of the gully, peeking down at the river that was starting to form below them. Suddenly Kallik felt the mud crumbling under her paws. The ground was giving way underneath her! She let out a yelp of terror, dropping the black stone from her jaws as she scrabbled for a pawhold.
Toklo dropped the newkill, lunged forward, and sank his teeth into her scruff as the bank collapsed into the stream and her paws were left dangling in space.
With a heave, Toklo dragged her back to safety. Kallik was shaking.
âI dropped Lusa's stone,' she said. âMaybe we're going the wrong way. This could be a bad sign.'
âDon't think like that,' Toklo said quietly. He picked up the marten again and poked her side with his snout. âLet's keep going,' he mumbled.
Kallik plodded on, staying on the rocks now, even though their hard surface scratched the pads of her paws. Doubt churned inside her. She shouldn't have lost Lusa's stone! Was she taking them the wrong way?
But a few steps later, the ravine turned and slanted downwards, and the water raced through it to merge with a fast-flowing stream that ran down the mountain. Kallik lifted her nose.
Now
she smelled familiar scents. She even thought she could pick up the warm, furry smells of Lusa and Ujurak.
âThat's our stream!' she said. âThat's the one that runs by the cave! Come on, Toklo; we're almost
there!' She wasn't being led by bad spirits after all!
She sprinted ahead, slipping and sliding down the muddy slope with the rain pattering around her. Sure enough, soon she spotted the dark mouth of the cave overlooking the river.
Kallik stumbled into the semidarkness and inhaled the comforting scents of Lusa and Ujurak. The brown bear trotted forward to greet her.
âYou made it back!' Ujurak said. âWe were worried when the storm got so bad.'
Toklo crowded in behind Kallik and dropped the pine marten on the floor of the cave. âFor Lusa,' he mumbled. His stomach growled loudly, as if it were arguing with him.
âShe's asleep, but I'll wake her,' Ujurak said. âAnd then we can share this.' He dragged the newkill to the back of the cave.
Toklo and Kallik stood in the entranceway for a moment, catching their breath. Kallik realised how exhausted she was. Her heavy fur seemed to be pulling her down to the ground.
âYou believe me now, don't you?' she said to Toklo. âThere are spirits looking out for us. Lusa's tree spirits rescued us from the evil spirits of the mountains.'
Toklo grunted. âWell, I suppose something worked,' he admitted, and stalked after Ujurak.
Despite her tiredness, Kallik felt a flutter of happiness in her chest. The spirits had brought them home to Lusa and Ujurak. Maybe they'd even helped to save Lusa's life.
Will they be strong enough to help us cross Smoke Mountain?
I
t rained for days. Toklo lost track of time; it was hard to tell what was morning and what was night, between the constant grey fog of the storm and the dripping, still darkness of the cave. Whenever he went hunting with Kallik, they were swallowed up by a blur of smoke and strange shapes in the mist, although they were careful not to go as far as they had the first time.
Lusa was awake more often now, but Toklo felt as though something were missing. She didn't tease him the way she had before, and he kept finding her staring into space with a tired, thoughtful look.
Kallik had noticed too. âI'm worried about Lusa,' she said as they picked their way back to the cave one evening.
Two rabbits were dangling from Toklo's jaws; they'd had a lucky hunt. âWhy?' Toklo mumbled around them.
âShe's just not the same. I'm afraid the firebeast hurt her more badly than we can tell. It's like something is still hurting her.'
âMaybe it's just her leg.' Toklo put down the rabbits to speak. âI'm sure she'll be fine.'
He picked up the rabbits and followed Kallik into the cave and padded to the back, where Lusa was resting on a pile of leaves. He dropped one of the rabbits at her paws.
âThanks, Toklo,' Lusa said quietly. She didn't lift her head off the floor or reach for the rabbit. Toklo glanced around at Ujurak, who was scraping herbs into piles nearby, and put down the other rabbit.
âHow's your leg?' Toklo asked Lusa.
âAll right,' Lusa said. âI mean . . . it still hurts.' She shifted on the leaves and peeked back at the wound. Toklo hated seeing the sharp cut like a lightning strike through her fur.
Ujurak shook his head. âI can't find anything wrong with it. It should be feeling better.'
âYou need to exercise it,' Toklo said. âCome on; I'll exercise with you.'
âOh dear,' Lusa said, wrinkling her snout at him. âThat sounds like a bunch of fun.'
Toklo was encouraged by even this faint glimmer of her old sense of humour. âHere we go!' he said. âStretch your front toes!' He slid his front paws far out in front of him and wiggled his claws.
âHmm,' said Lusa, but she heaved herself up to a sitting position and did the same thing.
âAll right, now your back toes,' Toklo said, flexing his hind paws.
Lusa copied him and winced. Toklo felt a stab of guilt, but he was sure she needed to get her leg moving again. It was the only way to heal it.
âNow lie down and kick your paws like you're swimming,' he said.
Lusa looked at him as if feathers had just sprouted from his nose. âWithout any water?'
âYes,' Toklo said. âLike this.' He lay down on his belly and began paddling in the air.
When he looked up, he caught Kallik and Ujurak exchanging amused glances. âGo ahead and laugh,' he grumbled. âBut it might help! Go on, Lusa.'
Reluctantly, Lusa lay down and imitated his movements. âOw,' she grunted between clenched teeth. âThat hurts.'
âIt won't if you keep doing it,' Toklo said encouragingly.
âI'm tired,' Lusa complained.
âOK, when did you two switch brains?' Kallik asked.
That made Lusa chuff with laughter a little bit, and Toklo decided that was enough for the day.
But he tried again the next day and the next. He couldn't understand why sweet, enthusiastic Lusa was resisting so hard. He nudged her to her paws and helped her take a few pawsteps, leaning against him. They took a few more each night before Lusa had to lie down again. He was sure she was getting stronger. But she wasn't getting happier, and that was what worried him the most.
Several days later, shortly after sunrise, Ujurak padded back from the front of the cave and sniffed Lusa from ears to tail. Toklo watched him anxiously.
âIs she all right?' he asked. Lusa looked up at Ujurak with bright eyes.
âYes,' Ujurak said. âI think it's healed. You should be OK to travel, Lusa.'
âNo!' she said with such force that Toklo blinked in surprise. âIt's not healed, Ujurak; really it's not. I think . . . I think you should all go on without me.' She looked down at her claws.