‘I left them when that Sikla died, as I said,’ cried Kraar, flying above her head now, ‘after the female was lost to the water. Huttser’s sister.’
‘Very well, then, Kraar.’
‘So that only leaves this young stranger ... and the family.’
Morgra’s eyes grew dark with anger, and something close to fear crept across her scarred muzzle.
‘The family,’ she hissed.
‘How shall we tell if Larka’s is really the family?’ asked Kraar.
‘Larka is already alone,’ Morgra growled, ‘but we shall see. It’s why her loved ones must all die.’
They had reached the mouth of the cave again, but rather than going inside Morgra turned to an area of open ground where there was fresh meat lying in the snow. Kraar fluttered towards it immediately but Morgra barked at him.
‘Leave it,’ she cried, ‘it’s not for you.’ The raven settled beside her.
‘Why do you keep feeding them?’ he asked jealously.
‘Because there maybe one among them,’ growled Morgra, her eyes searching the trees, ‘one who has the power too. Who can help me. Who could serve me if I can’t find Larka.’ Even as she spoke they heard a bellow from the forest beyond and the hiss, too, of a mountain lynx. The creatures had already been feeding in the night and Morgra was ready to speak with them. But as the bear’s bellow rose above the trees Morgra noticed that the Night Hunters below had turned fearfully and were looking up the slope. Wolves are high in the food chain and have few natural enemies in the wild except man, but a bear, and especially the giants that roam the Carpathians, is one dangerous exception. As Morgra saw the fear the sound instilled in the Balkar her eyes glittered.
‘You asked what Wolfbane looks like,’ she whispered coldly. ‘Well, I wonder.’
Kraar did not understand his mistress. Now Morgra turned back and inside the cave it was dark and a breeze stirred the pool.
‘Mistress,’ said Kraar as he settled on his stony perch, ‘even if the curse has broken the family. What about Larka? Might not her gift alone threaten us? Perhaps she could—’
‘Never,’ snarled Morgra furiously, reading Kraar’s thoughts. ‘Larka touch the Vision? She is nothing but a whelp. Who is there to teach her? Tsinga is dead and...’
Morgra paused. She was suddenly thinking of Tsarr. But she shook the doubt from her mind.
‘Besides, Kraar. Larka knows nothing of the world. The Sight alone cannot bring forth the Vision. There must be true knowledge too. Knowledge of the humans themselves. Knowledge that I alone possess.’
Morgra’s face was suddenly contorted with a kind of angry self-pity. Kraar had seen the look many times before.
‘You’re thinking of the village again, Mistress, aren’t you?’ he said. ‘Where the humans held you. Don’t you want to forget?’
‘Forget?’ growled Morgra.
‘What happened. The past.’
‘I shall never forget. Not a single thing, Kraar. Not like the thoughtless Lera. Every moment of my life, every injustice, every claw of pain I shall remember and it shall make me stronger. Shall bring me to truth and power.’
Morgra was quiet for a while, but when she spoke again her voice was full of cunning.
‘What can a mere cub know of human power? Of the glories and horrors of his mind? What can she know of the only true Putnar, the greatest and coldest killer of all?’
Even Kraar shivered and once again, inside the little silken pebble strung to the cave ceiling above them, a tiny creature moved. It had been alive before and had wriggled up here itself to feed on the damp moss above. It had no eyes, but its senses had taken it here, and its mouth. And now it was changing.
‘No, Kraar,’ whispered Morgra, ‘let her wander, alone and reviled. Larka will find no help among the Varg, for even Slavka has sworn to destroy all with the Sight. Let her feel the strangeness of her gift and how it cuts us off from the wolf. Let her look out on the world, for what she sees there can only fill her with bitterness and anger and hate. It shall only bring her closer to me. Which is as it should be, Kraar, for those with the Sight must choose for themselves.’
‘But would it not be better if she were with us now? I fear Slavka and these rebels, Mistress. Even the Balkar would be no match against all the free Varg. The packs are hardly an army.’
‘No, Kraar,’ hissed Morgra, ‘but when I open the pathways, then my true servants shall come. They are already being summoned, summoned by the anger and hate the Balkar are spreading throughout the forests. For they feed on it, Kraar. When Larka helps me grow strong enough to use the ancient howl then I will have an army at my back so terrible...’
Kraar was silent at the she-wolf’s words.
‘But go, Kraar,’ cried Morgra suddenly, ‘go in search of her. I shall use your eyes.’
As Kraar lifted out of the cave into the freezing air Morgra slumped to the ground. The she-wolf looked almost dead as she lay there. But Morgra was far from dead. The wolf’s hungry mind was using the first power of the Sight, using it to look out now over the snowy trees racing below the raven’s beating wings.
‘Leave me alone, Kar,’ cried Larka angrily in the gusting snows. ‘Can’t you see I want to be alone?’
‘I won’t,’ said Kar sullenly as he padded after her.
The wind was howling like a demon and the storm had come again. It was over a moon since the terrible night on the river and it had taken Kar a good week to find Larka. He had tracked her paw prints in the snow and, when at last he had caught up with her she had tried to drive him away. Since then they had argued again and again.
‘I’ll never leave you, Larka,’ Kar cried angrily. ‘We made a pact and nothing will come between us.’
‘Nothing?’ said Larka bitterly. ‘Fell made the pact too, remember, and he’s already dead. Because of me.’
‘Larka,’ muttered Kar gloomily, ‘if anyone is to blame for Fell’s death, I am. You must stop this talk.’
‘The pact was a lie,’ growled Larka. ‘Go away.’
‘No.’
Larka rounded on Kar in the snow.
‘What are you doing here anyway?’ she snarled. ‘What do you want? Following me like a little cub. You can’t help me. Nothing can. I killed them all, didn’t I? Because of the Sight. There’s nothing to help me now.’
But suddenly Larka wanted to blame someone other than herself, anyone.
‘And anyway,’ she spat scornfully, ‘what can you do, Kar?’
But there was something else in Larka’s mind again, something far deeper. She didn’t want to be responsible for the wolf, she didn’t want to be responsible for anything or anyone.
Kar felt bitterly wounded, but he was glad he had followed his friend, and in that moment he didn’t feel quite as worthless as Larka did.
‘We must have faith in each other,’ he growled, ‘that’s what Tsinga said.’
‘I’ve lost faith in us,’ snapped Larka. ‘I’ve lost faith in everything.’
‘But, Larka,’ growled Kar, ‘can’t you stop and think calmly for a while? You don’t even know where you’re going.’ ‘I do,’ cried Larka furiously, quickening her tread through the storm. Kar fell silent but still he followed the she-wolf. He looked tired and emaciated and his fur was beginning to drop out in clumps. Larka had hardly fared any better. The white wolf’s coat was already turning a yellowy grey and the skin was hanging down from her belly. The two young wolves had nearly reached their full size, but there was little of the strength and vigour in them you would have associated with healthy wolves of their age.
They hadn’t eaten in at least fifteen suns, for they had so little time to learn of real hunting from Huttser and Palla. As they travelled together they had often picked up the scents of Lera and trailed them with their black noses skimming through the snow, only to lose them again. But whenever Larka had come close to a kill, that terrible feeling had come over her again, and twice she had seen herself looking through the hunted’s eyes.
Kar was wondering what had become of Huttser and Palla now, for they had spied or heard nothing of the Dragga and Drappa. When they had fled from the river they had not seen those eyes in the trees, nor the ice beginning to crack below Huttser and Palla’s paws.
They had seen other wolves though, only three suns before, hunting through the mountains. Whether they were rebels or Balkar, they had kept well out of sight.
Ahead, Kar could see that Larka had calmed down a little.
‘Larka,’ said Kar suddenly, ‘perhaps you could try to find your parents again. Use the Sight.’
‘No, Kar,’ growled Larka bitterly, though she was suddenly glad to hear his voice behind her, ‘don’t talk of it. What good are these powers to me? I have terrible dreams and whenever I try to hunt...’
Larka kept imagining, too, that those yellow-black eyes were following her as the wolves threaded through the trees. But if fear was on their trail, something else was hunting the wolves, something quite as frightening as Wolfbane or Morgra’s curse; the most exacting and relentless predator known to Lera or to Man. Winter itself was stalking them through the land beyond the forest, and in its jaws came hunger and the pressing threat of starvation.
‘I’m hungry, Larka,’ said Kar as his paws crunched on through the thick white.
Larka looked across at Kar and she felt ashamed of what she had said to him. Though she had meant to get away from her family and find solace on her own, she, too, was hungry and secretly very frightened and she suddenly felt glad that Kar had followed her.
‘Don’t worry, Kar,’ she whispered faintly, ‘we’ll find something soon.’
‘We’ll die if we don’t.’
But in that moment Larka hardly cared. She felt as if she had been sent into exile from her own life, from her own childhood. Ahead of her lay nothing but fear. Larka lifted her head to the skies and in the distance she saw a tiny black shape moving towards them. But as she watched, it suddenly wheeled in the skies and turned north again.
Below Morgra’s cave, half the Balkar packs were gathering again, for – except for those wolves that had been sent out to find the child – Morgra had summoned them. It had taken nearly a whole moon to bring them together. Five of the wolves lay together in the darkness now, sharing the warmth of their bodies and whispering nervously in the freezing night. Again, rumours of Wolfbane were circulating and now the wolves were stirring restlessly, avoiding each others’ eyes as Huttser’s pack had done, but listening intently.
‘There’s news,’ said one of them. ‘A scouting party has returned. They brought Morgra something and they were talking to her half the night.’
‘What of it?’ asked another.
‘I don’t know,’ whispered the wolf, ‘but there is a change in Morgra. She seems more confident somehow.’
‘Yes,’ said a third wolf, ‘I heard her talking to herself last night outside her cave. She’d been leaving out that meat again.’
‘What was she saying?’
‘She kept muttering to herself. ‘‘This, I never saw this. It shall serve me well.’’ Then she growled and started to laugh out loud.’
‘But what can it mean?’
‘There’s something else. My pack only got back last night, but immediately we noticed it. There is a new breath of fear on the wind.’
Suddenly they heard a snarl behind them and they swung their heads to see a wolf standing, listening to them in the darkness. They all knew him as one of the lead Draggas and a famous fighter among the Balkar.
‘Fear,’ he snorted scornfully, ‘there is only fear for a Night Hunter if he doesn’t know his true loyalties. Know who and what he is.’
‘Why,’ said the wolf who had spoken of it, ‘what has happened?’
‘Don’t you know?’ answered the Dragga coldly, his eyes suddenly huge in the night. ‘Morgra has given orders that we kill all the cubs.’
The Balkar wolves growled guiltily.
‘Sacrifice them?’ said one.
‘No,’ snarled the newcomer, ‘we don’t need them any more.’
‘But why?’
‘Can’t you feel him, fool? Feel his very teeth on the winter?’
The Balkar stepped forward and opened his jaws and even as he did so it began to snow.
‘Wolfbane,’ he snarled. ‘Wolfbane has returned at last.’
‘Seek and ye shall find.’ Matthew, chapter 7, verse 7
To Kar and Larka it seemed as though they had been passing through a land of fables. As they rose above the river and climbed higher and higher among the jaws of the mountains, they saw the true wildness of this jagged country. Below them the forests and woods seemed to stretch on for ever, swathed in white, a strange, almost enchanted kingdom that for a wolf offered the promise of safety, of concealment and of seemingly endless mystery too. But it was the fury of the mountains that called to their young hearts. Soaring slopes and grave canyons, lonely peaks and beetling precipices rose around them and woke in the wolves the full wonder and terror of life.
Yet, in the high mountains of Transylvania, they had noticed that game grew sparser and sparser and, in between their quarrels, Kar had persuaded Larka to drop down from the heights in search of food, despite their fear of coming closer to Man’s dwellings, or other wolves whose voices they often heard now on the angry wind.
From the forests they had looked out at the humans’ castles and encampments too and seen things that made them fear the legend even more. Troops of soldiers riding out on horseback, travelling south through the winter, their bodies bound in those strange, hard skins that glinted in the frosty sunlight. Plains flecked with the humans’ burning air, as human packs met beneath fluttering banners. They shuddered as they thought of the coming of the Man Varg and a power to enslave all the Lera.
Larka stopped in the snow. Her eyes showed fear of all that lay before her, but now she was wondering about what Kar had said to her. Kar had been right. Larka had no idea where she was leading them and suddenly she realized that all she was doing was running away. It made her feel guilty and made her fear even worse.
‘Come on,’ she growled suddenly, trying to push aside the fear, ‘you must try and hunt for us, Kar.’