Read The Feverbird's Claw Online
Authors: Jane Kurtz
Quickly now. She ran to the kitchen. Threaded her way between ropes of savory and sweet herbs that shadows had braided and Mother hung here to dry. Reached for whatever she could find. She rushed out of the house and ducked into an alley. Time now to remember all the back ways to Old Tamlin's house.
In the room where Moralin had once kept her things, Figt sat rubbing her brother's hair. Nazet's head leaned against her arm. The boy appeared to be asleep or in some kind of daze.
“We must go.” Moralin felt the words burst out of her, exploding in droplets. Figt looked up with astonishment. Moralin stuttered on. “Yes, IâI'm coming with you.”
Though she ached to, she couldn't read the expression on Figt's face.
“Am I going to go into training in the temple? Knowing what I know?” The mixed Delagua and Arkera words rushed out. “Am I to watch the shadows carry wood for the fires? Impossible. And even if I survived temple service, am I going to spend my life inside this wall now that I've seen the outside world? Now that I've seen the mountains and the forests and the true sacred places.”
Figt looked down at Nazet. “Doesn't this decision want more time?” she said cautiously.
“There is no time. We have to get out.” Moralin began to fashion a bag for the supplies. “Once or twice I think I knew the truth even before we reached the city. Then I became confused. Because of what the guard said about Old Tamlin. But I figured something out tonight.”
She was a flood of impatience, herding them the way a mother bird might cluck her chicks along. As they approached the door to the tunnel, Figt said, “My brother says the shadows have tried many ways of escape. When they are caught ⦔ Her voice trailed off, sharp with fear.
“We won't fail.” Moralin looked around one last time.
“And your family?”
Moralin considered. The guard would report only to his commander. There would be good reason to keep his story secret lest fear spread in the Delagua and hope in the shadows. “My mother will question everybody. When nobody can explain it, I think she'll take the flower I left her as a message from the afterdead. I hope the message will ease her grief.”
She reached for the ivory knobs. “Together we can figure out where the cave people's path might be. And while you're rescuing that beastie, you'll need someone to stay with Nazet and keep watch at the top. How do you plan to get that barking one up the cliff?”
Figt began to laugh, and after a moment Moralin laughed, too. They put their hands over their mouths to stifle the noise. With Old Tamlin's body no longer here, someone could enter this house at any time.
“We should take more cloth.” Figt turned. “We're going to need it to make some kind of sling.”
“All right. Hurry, though.”
They didn't speak again until they were back in the dark tunnel. “Maybe we can yet explore the golden kingdom,” Figt whispered, “and see a bird that talks. Or a skulkuk egg turned to rock.”
“Why are you still whispering?” Moralin asked. “Afraid the rocks will hear you?” She laughed again, giddy with relief. “The cave people go to all those places,” she added.
“Nazet and I ⦔ Figt was suddenly serious. “We will not rest until we find a way to open this city's gates.”
L
ATE ONE AFTERNOON, AFTER THE TIME OF
little rains had come and gone and the big rains were washing the land, making everything green and new, Moralin and Figt rested on the grass in the cave garden. Moralin had been teaching Figt one of the fighting yard moves, and now sweat gleamed on their arms and dried on the backs of their necks, even though evening would be cool. “I've been wanting to ask you something,” Figt said. “When exactly did you decide to leave?”
“IâI'm not sure.” Moralin watched a feverbird floating on the currents of the wind high above them. The mist made spiderwebs glisten in the trees. “In the secret temple complex, I thought about Old Tamlin's vision. And what Cora Linga said in my dream. That humans hardly ever got it right.”
Nearby, in the soft sunlight, the beastie snorted and moved its legs in its sleep, probably chasing some small wood creature in its dreams. Nazet rubbed its ears, then turned to dip a brush in black ink again. He had been painting endlessly, it seemed, stroking peaceful scenes onto the thin reddish pots fired in the cave people's kilns. Would the beauty be enough to heal him? Moralin watched sadly.
“Old Tamlin thought he understood what his vision meant.” She paused and then continued. “But I remembered the presence on the cliff. I asked myself how saving the city might look through sacred eyes.”
“And that's when youâ”
“That's when I decided to take the silken pouches. I was thinking I should give them to you. After all, Cora Linga sent you a vision of them.”
She'd realized that if she could slip away with a few cocoons before they were put onto a tray and into the ovens, a moth would break out of each. Every moth would lay many eggs. With the information Nazet had gathered and Song-maker's skills, surely the cave people would figure out ways to care for the precious worms that would hatch from the eggs somehow already knowing how to spin silk.
She finished. “But when I saw Lan and stood in my old house again, I also realized how impossible it was for me to stay.”
Sometimes, at the strangest moments, a person might catch a glimpse of how the Great Ones might feel about their gifts to the world, gifts that were often twisted. From talking to the cave people, she now knew that once, long ago, the flightless, blind moths had lived all over this region. A blight had killed the trees the moths needed for food. Only the isolated trees on the Delagua island had survived to be transplanted within the convent walls.
Seeds, carelessly carried in a trade bundle, nurtured by Song-maker's grandfather, had brought the trees back to this garden. Although he hadn't known what he was doingâhumans rarely didâhis vision had been right. The cave dwellers would become successful people of trade. Moralin was sure that the cloth they would learn to weave would be especially exquisite.
“This theft will destroy the city, not save it,” Old Tamlin would have said. But he didn't know what she knew. Hoarding the cloth making kept the royalborn eating on plates of gold and kept all the Delagua trapped with their shadows and their secrets. It turned Delagua girls into prisoners. As Old Tamlin himself had said, without the cloth, the people would have to leave their city, a beautiful city but with the heart of a snarling wildcat.
A figure appeared, walking toward them through the trees. Moralin watched as Song-maker moved under a branch and pulled it low to the ground. He let go and it sprang back, scattering a shower of raindrops and leaves. He held up his arms to the sweet water, laughing. Moralin laughed, too.
“Think.” Figt pointed with her chin. “The power of cocoons.”
Yes. Cocoons with moths. Moths to lay eggs. Eggs to hatch into hundreds of worms. Worms that would spin more silk thread. Thread that might one day be strong enough to pull down a wall.
It was going to take years and other people's help to spread the secrets of the cloth making. Moralin sighed and then caught herself. The Great Ones would go with her wherever she wandered. She hoped Figt and the beastie and Song-maker would go, too. They were sure to see wonders she couldn't even imagine. And luckily, as the cave people often said, “The whole world is ever anybody's home.”
Mark it well.
I'm grateful to so many people who helped me shape and reshape this book:
Jane Yolen, and others who read the earliest drafts of this story years ago and encouraged me to not quit too soon.
My writer buddies, who got me back to work on Moralin's great adventure and who continually fortify me with their laughter and passion for books and words. I particularly thank Jo Stanbridge and Nancy Werlin for their smart, bold suggestions.
My Greenwillow editors, especially Rebecca Davis, without whose perceptive, careful reading, lavish use of the word “terrific,” and fearless nudging about weak spots this book would be a pale, limping wraith of what it is.
Kathy Isaacs and her class at Edmund Burke School, who were my first young readers and whose comments forced me to rethink a number of important points.
David and Leonard Goering, who cared about such things as lock mechanisms and topography.
My parents, for taking me to a new continent when I was two years old, giving me scary adventures, and inviting me to wonder “where is home, anyway?”
People who do and describe astonishing things including climbing cliffs, handling snakes, and walking on coals.
JANE KURTZ
was born in Portland, Oregon, but moved to Ethiopia when she was two years old and lived there for most of her childhood. She says, “As I was writing
The Feverbird's Claw,
I often found myself thinking about Ethiopia, where I grew up among such varied ethnic groupsâfrom hunter-gatherer people to ancient highland societies that developed Africa's only still-used alphabets. I have powerful memories of a land where many cultures clash and cooperate, and, as a girl, I developed a lifelong fascination with ancient civilizations.”
Ms. Kurtz is a highly acclaimed author of picture books, poetry, and novels covering a wide range of subjects. She recently edited the short-story collection
Memories of Sun: Stories of Africa and America,
and her novels include
The Storyteller's Beads
and
Jakarta Missing.
She now lives in Hesston, Kansas.
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COVER ART © 2004 BY DON SEEGMILLER
COVER © 2004 BY HARPERCOLLINS PUBLISHERS
COVER DESIGN BY CHAD W. BECKERMAN
The Feverbird's Claw
Copyright © 2004 by Jane Kurtz
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
The feverbird's claw / Jane Kurtz.
p. cm.
“Greenwillow Books.”
Summary: On the eve of the day she is to begin temple service, Moralin of Delagua is kidnapped by the Arkera, enduring grueling adventures as she tries to escape, and ultimately learning surprising truths about her own people.
ISBN 0-06-000820-2 (trade).
ISBN 0-06-000821-0 (lib. bdg.)
EPub Edition © JUNE 2012 ISBN 9780062239259
[1. Fantasy.] I. Title.
PZ7.K9626Su 2004 [Fic]âdc22 2003049258
First Edition 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
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