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
"Is it all right if it's from ordinary trees instead of driftwood?" he asked, his voice carrying over the rocks.
The burned man nodded, and Torak started moving across the rocks.
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Renn forgot her jealousy. Maybe he'd heard her signal after all.
She watched him stoop for a stick of driftwood, then wander down to the Sea; then turn and start toward the boulders.
"Where are you?" he said softly.
"The rowan trees," she whispered. "Up here--no, farther along."
"Where's Wolf?" he said abruptly.
"In the next bay, feeding. That's what I--"
"You'd better gather some wood too," he muttered. "I can't go back empty-handed."
"What? Oh. Yes, of course." Close up, she saw that he was still pale, and not meeting her eyes. "Torak, are you all right?" He shook his head. "What about you?"
"But--why would anyone do that?" said Torak.
"I don't know, but it's got to be some kind of spell. Although who would dare do anything that evil. To break clan law--to kill a
Hunter. .
."
"Revenge," murmured Torak to himself. "Yes, that would be it." He sounded sad as well as angry.
Renn was puzzled. "Who did?"
His face contracted as if in pain. "When I was in the water. It was so ... I don't--I can't--"
"Torak, don't you see what this means?" she broke in. "The skinboater who did this-
he was a Seal!"
"What? What are you saying?"
"Something is terribly, terribly wrong-
and the Seals are part of it!
Who knows, maybe they're even causing the sickness! Maybe that's why he needed the teeth!"
Torak took a step back from her. In disbelief he shook his head.
"Haven't you ever wondered," she went on, "why none of them has fallen sick, and yet you've been on the island for days, and so has the tokoroth?" "That doesn't mean anything," he whispered.
"Then why did they send only boys to fetch the root? If they really thought they were threatened, why not send men?"
"Because Asrif is the best at climbing, and--"
"And you believe that?"
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Torak hesitated, then shook himself. "Ever since they knew about the sickness, the Seals have been trying to
help."
"Torak--"
He turned on her. "Tenris kept me off the Rock! Asrif defended me from the eagles! Detlan and Bale were coming to
rescue
me when the Hunter attacked! Bale lost his
brother to
the sickness three summers ago!"
"Why are you so keen to defend them?"
"Why are you so keen to condemn them?"
"Because the skinboater had fair hair! Because his tracks show that he was the one who murdered the Hunter!"
make
any noise! The man you saw could have been anyone. A Cormorant, or one of your friends the Sea Eagles--"
"But not one of your friends the Seals," Renn said bitterly.
"They're not my friends," he retorted. "They're my kin."
She flinched.
Stonily he took the firewood she'd gathered and added it to his own. "I've got to go back," he said without looking at her.
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Renn was horrified. "Haven't you been listening?"
"Renn, it's nearly Midsummer. We've only got a day to reach the camp."
"By
Sea}
With a storm coming, and a vengeful Hunter--"
"Tenris has a masking charm, and he says--"
"And Tenris is never wrong."
Torak did not reply.
"If I'm right about this," said Renn, "you're going back into danger, and putting the clans at risk-- because you won't listen."
Torak turned on his heel and left.
It was much later, and on the cliffs, the seabirds were agitated. Many were leaving their roosts to fly inland. There was a storm on its way.
Blearily, Torak rubbed his face. He was tired, but he
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He had been a seal.
He had heard things, felt things that only a seal could. But he had also been Torak. . . .
Tenris tapped his pipe on a stone, making him jump.
A corner of the Mage's mouth lifted in a slight smile; Torak tried to smile back. Tenris had arrived without warning, saying simply that he'd "felt he was needed." Torak hadn't been able to say just how glad he was. Now he watched the Mage frown as he refilled his pipe, holding it in his twisted hand, while with his good one he tamped in another wad of aromatic leaves.
Torak hesitated. "I can't explain. I don't understand it.
Tenris raised an eyebrow. "But you know more than you told Bale. Maybe I can help."
Torak put his chin on his knees and stared into the
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fiery valleys of the embers. "The seals," he murmured. "They feel it in their whiskers; the sounds coming through the water."
From the corner of his eye, he saw Tenris tense.
"I was with the guardian," Torak went on. "She heard--no, she
felt
--the voice of the Hunter--from very far away." He swallowed. "That's how I knew it was coming."
When Tenris still said nothing, Torak raised his head.
The Seal Mage sat with his pipe forgotten in his hand. His face was open and aghast.
"What does it mean?" whispered Torak.
Torak took a deep breath--and did.
It was a relief to tell someone. He hadn't realized what a burden it had been, keeping it to himself. But the intensity in the Mage's face was frightening. When he'd finished, there was silence between them.
Tenris ran his good hand shakily over his beard.
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"Has this happened before?"
"I--think so."
"You
think
so?" Tenris spoke with unusual sharpness. "What do you mean?"
"I--I fell in a seal net. There were some capelin. . . . But only for a moment."
"For a moment? How long?"
"A few heartbeats, I don't know."
The gray eyes pierced his: as if trying to see into his souls.
"What--what is it?" faltered Torak. "What's wrong with me?"
"This creature's souls," Tenris went on, "can leave its body--leave it for much longer than any Mage ever achieves when he is curing the sick. This creature's souls can travel farther." He paused. "They can enter the bodies of others. And when that happens, this creature sees, and hears, and feels, just as the body into which it has strayed--and yet remains himself." His fists came to rest on his knees, and he turned and met Torak's horrified gaze.
"This creature,"
he whispered,
"is a spirit walker.
"
Torak couldn't breathe. "No," he said.
The gray gaze never wavered.
"No!" said Torak. "It doesn't make sense! If the souls leave, then the body is dead! I would have been dead; that's what death is!"
Tenris gave him a look full of pity and understanding. "But Torak. In spirit walking, not all the souls
do
leave the body. The Nanuak--the world-soul--always remains. It never leaves, not till the moment of death. It is only the name-soul and the clan-soul that walk." Torak had begun to shake. He'd never even heard
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of spirit walking. He didn't want to know anything about it.
Tenris put his good hand on his shoulder and gave him a little shake. "You're right to be frightened. Spirit walking is the deepest of mysteries. All we know about it has been passed down from Mage to Mage; garbled, half understood." Again he paused, as if wondering how much more Torak could take. "What we do know is that even for the spirit walker, it is very hard, and very dangerous."
didn't happen!
1 didn't get the sick feeling, or the pain and I never for one instant knew what he was feeling!"
The Seal Mage was shaking his head. "Torak, Torak, that is not how it is. Think! You know enough about Magecraft to be aware that even for ordinary Mages, when they wish to cure the sick, they need help to free their own souls. There are many ways of doing this. A trance. A soul-loosening potion. Sometimes simply going without food, or holding your breath. It is the same for the spirit walker. Being merely afraid, as
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you were of that boar, would not have been enough to loosen your souls."
"Besides," said Tenris, and Torak was surprised to see that his half smile was back, "you were lucky you
didn't
spirit walk inside that boar. His souls would have been too strong for yours. You might have been trapped in there for good."
There's so much I haven't told you}
"This is a curse," he said, his teeth chattering. "I don't want to be different. It's a curse!"
"No!" Tenris came to stand beside him. "Not a curse, but a
gift!
You may not think so now, but in time, you will see this!"
"No," said Torak. "No."
"Listen
to me," said the Seal Mage, his beautiful voice shaking with emotion. "What you did so easily-- without even trying--is something the cleverest Mages 284
"I don't want it," said Torak. "I never--"
"But Torak, this is the
very purpose
"Think
what you could do if you learned to use this! You could discover such secrets! You could know the speech of hunters and prey. You could gain such power. . . ." "But I don't want it!" cried Torak--and on the other side of the fire, Bale stirred in his sleep.
"What should I do now?" he said to the cold Sea.
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"No," said Tenris, "it doesn't change anything."
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Chapter TWENTY-NINE
At last the hunger had been chased back into its Den, and Wolf was free to seek the female and Tall Tailless.