Authors: Michelle Paver,Geoff Taylor
Tags: #Good and evil, #Death, #Animals, #Wolves & Coyotes, #Juvenile Fiction, #Philosophy, #Prehistoric peoples, #Battles, #Fiction, #Voyages and travels, #Good & Evil, #Prehistory, #Adventure fiction, #Historical, #Fantasy & Magic, #Demoniac possession, #Friendship, #Murder, #Enemies
Sometimes there's no warning. Nothing at all. Your skinboat is flying like a cormorant over the waves, your paddle sending silver capelin darting through the kelp, and everything's just right: the choppy Sea, the sun in your eyes, the cold wind at your back. Then a rock rears out of the water, bigger than a whale, and you're heading straight for it, you're going to smash....
Torak threw himself sideways and stabbed hard with his paddle. His skinboat lurched--nearly flipped over-- and hissed past the rock with a finger to spare. Streaming wet and coughing up seawater, he struggled to regain his balance. 6 "You all right?" shouted Bale, circling back. "Didn't see the rock," muttered Torak, feeling stupid.
Bale grinned. "Couple of beginners in camp. You want to go and join them?"
"You first!" retorted Torak, slapping the water with his paddle and drenching Bale. "Race you past the Crag!"
The Seal boy gave a whoop and they were off: freezing, wet, exhilarated. High overhead, Torak spotted two black specks. He whistled, and Rip and Rek hurtled down to fly alongside him, their wing tips nearly touching the waves. Torak swerved to avoid a slab of ice, and the ravens swerved with him, sunlight glinting purple and green on their glossy black feathers. They edged ahead. Torak raced to keep up. His muscles burned. Salt stung his cheeks. He laughed aloud. This was almost as good as flying.
Seal Clan's humped shelters, and the long racks of salt-rimed cod glittered like frost. He saw Fin-Kedinn, his dark-red hair a fiery beacon among the fairer Seals; and there was Renn, giving an archery lesson to a gaggle of admiring children. Torak grinned. Seals were better with a harpoon than a bow and arrow, and Renn was not a patient teacher.
Once past the Crag, they realized they were famished, and put in at a small bay, where they woke up a fire of driftwood and seaweed. Before eating, Bale threw a morsel of dried cod into the shallows for the Sea Mother and his clan guardian, while Torak, who didn't have a guardian, stuck a chunk of elk-blood sausage in a juniper bush as an offering to the Forest. It felt a bit odd, as the Forest was a day's skinboating to the east, but it would have felt even odder not to have done it.
After that, Bale shared the rest of the dried cod-- sweet, chewy, and surprisingly un-fishy--and Torak pulled clumps of mussels from the rocks. These they ate raw, prizing off a half shell and using it to scrape out the deliciously rich, slippery orange meat. Then Bale helped finish the elk sausage. Like the rest of his clan, he'd become more relaxed about mixing the Forest with the Sea, which made things easier for everyone.
Still hungry, they decided to make a stew. Torak
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filled his cooking-skin with water from a stream, hung it from sticks beside the fire, and added pebbles which had been heating in the embers. Bale tossed in handfuls of purple sea moss he'd found in a rock pool, and a pile of shellworms he'd dug from the sand, and Torak threw in a bunch of sea kale, because he wanted something green to remind him of the Forest.
"Good fishing to you!" called a voice from the Sea, making them jump.
It was a Cormorant fisherman in a skinboat. His walrus-hide net bulged with herring.
"And good fishing to you!" Bale returned the greeting common among the Sea clans.
Torak opened his mouth to reply, but Bale got in first. "He's my kinsman. Fin-Kedinn's foster son. He hunts with the Ravens."
"And I'm not Wolf Clan," said Torak. "I'm clanless."
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His stare told the man to make of that what he would.
The man's hand went to the clan-creature feathers on his shoulder. "I've heard of you. You're the one they cast out."
"The clans took him back," said Bale. "So they say," said the man. "Well. Good fishing, then." He spoke only to Bale, giving Torak a doubtful glance before paddling away. "Don't mind him," said Bale after a moment's silence.
Torak didn't reply.
"Here." Bale tossed him the spoon. "You left yours in camp. And cheer up! He's a Cormorant. What do they know?"
Torak's lip curled. "About as much as a Seal."
Bale lunged for him and they wrestled, laughing, rolling over the pebbles until Torak got Bale in an armlock and made him beg for mercy.
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ravens were fascinated by Bale's long fair hair, which he wore threaded with blue slate beads and the tiny bones of capelin.
Torak smiled. It was good to be with Bale again. He was like a brother; or how Torak imagined a brother would be. They enjoyed the same things, laughed at the same jokes. But they were different. Bale was nearly seventeen summers old, and soon he would find a mate and build his own shelter. As the Seals never moved camp, this meant that apart from trading trips to the Forest, he would live out his days on the narrow beach of the Bay of Seals.
Bale sensed the change in him and asked if he was missing the Forest.
Torak shrugged.
"And Wolf?"
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Thinking of Wolf made him restless. "It's getting late," he said. "We need to be on the Crag by dusk."
That was why he and Renn and Fin-Kedinn had come. The disturbances on the island had started again after the winter, and they suspected it was the Soul-Eaters, searching for the last piece of the fire-opal, which had lain hidden since the death of the Seal Mage. For the past half-moon, they'd taken turns to keep watch. Tonight it was the turn of Torak and Bale.
Bale looked preoccupied as he scoured the cooking-skin with sand. He opened his mouth to say something, then shook his head and frowned. It wasn't like him to hesitate, so it must be important. Torak twisted a frond of oarweed in his fingers and waited.
"When you go back to the Forest," said Bale without meeting his eyes, "I'm going to ask Renn to stay here. With me. I want to know what you think about that." Torak became very still.
"Torak?"
"But you. What do you think?"
Torak sprang to his feet. Anger made his skin prickle and his heart bump unpleasantly in his chest. He stared
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down at Bale, who was handsome, older, and part of a clan. He knew that if he stayed, they would fight, and this time it would be for real. "I'm off," he said. "Back to camp?" said Bale, studiedly calm.
"No."
"Then where?"
"Just off."
"What about keeping watch?"
"You do it."
"Torak. Don't be--"
"I said,
you
do it!"
"Right. Right." Bale stared at the fire. Torak turned on his heel and ran to his boat. He headed up the north coast, away from the Bay of Seals. His anger had gone, leaving a cold, churning confusion. He longed for Wolf. But Wolf was far away.
Torak lay watching the flames. It was nine moons since he'd been outcast, but it still felt strange to be in the open and not hiding his fire. He should go back. But he couldn't face Bale. Or Fin-Kedinn. Or Renn.
He blew out a long breath. He would go back in the morning and say sorry. Bale would understand. He was good that way; he never sulked. Torak slept badly. In his dreams he heard an owl calling, and Renn telling him something he didn't understand.
Some time after middle-night, he woke. It was the
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Feeling groggy and unrested, he dismantled the shelter and poured water on the fire to put it to sleep. Rip and Rek reluctantly stretched their wings and fluffed up their head-feathers to show their dislike of such an early start; but when Torak carried his boat into the shallows and set off, he heard the strong, steady whisper of raven wings.
Rek gave an eager cark--she'd spotted carrion--and both ravens flew to the rocks at the foot of the Crag.
It was too dark for Torak to see what they'd found, but something made the skin on the back of his neck tighten.
Whatever it was, Rip and Rek approached cautiously,
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as ravens do, hopping nearer, then flying away.
No. No.
He must have shouted it, because the ravens flew off with caws of alarm.
No.