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
Apprehensively he watched the Mage circle the altar rock, then take up the final Sea egg and move toward him.
"Did you plan this?" said Tenris.
Torak was horrified. "Of course not!"
"Because there's something you should know, Torak. I don't like tricks."
"It wasn't a trick! I had no idea the Follower had crossed the Sea. Tenris, I'm only asking you to make the cure because--"
Torak licked his lips. "Midsummer is only four days away."
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Tenris stared at him. "You don't give up, do you?"
"I can't," said Torak. "The clans are sick."
Tenris turned the Sea egg in his hand, and his eyes glinted dangerously. "What's to stop me putting you on the Rock, and keeping the cure for the Seals?" Torak opened his mouth, then shut it again. He hadn't thought of that.
"Learn from this, Torak," warned Tenris. "Never try to lock wills with a Mage. Especially not with me."
Torak raised his chin. "I thought Mages were supposed to help people."
"What do you know about Mages? You're only a hunter."
"The Ravens
need
you! So do the Otters and the Willows and the Boars, and for all I know, the other clans too! If you put me on the Rock, who will take the cure to the Forest?" Tenris set down the final Sea egg at his feet. "if I made the cure, you'd have to help."
Torak held his breath.
"I'll do whatever it takes," said Torak.
To his surprise, Tenris laughed. "So hasty! You don't even know what it involves!"
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"I'll do what it takes," Torak said again.
Torak glanced down, and at last he saw the pattern that Tenris had been making with the Sea eggs.
It was an enormous spiral, and they were standing at its center, like two flies caught in a web.
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Chapter TWENTY
Renn had searched the shore, but she was no closer to discovering where Torak had gone.
Wolf had followed the scent for a day and a night, weaving tirelessly through the trees, but always running back for her so that she didn't get left behind.
Her search had revealed the remains of two fires: a big, messy one on the rocks, and a smaller one that was definitely Torak's, as well as a line of his double-barbed 183
fishhooks. But of Torak himself, she could find no trace. It was as if he'd vanished into the Sea.
He was still there in the morning. He wouldn't eat, wouldn't hunt, and showed only a fleeting interest in the fulmars nesting on the cliff--which was probably just as well, as fulmar chicks spit a foul-smelling oil, and Renn had no way of warning him. Now it was noon, and she knew she couldn't stay any longer. "I have to find help," she told Wolf, knowing he wouldn't understand, but needing to talk for her own sake. "Are you coming?"
Wolf flicked his ears in her direction, but stayed where he was.
"Somebody may have seen him," said Renn. "A hunting party, or--someone. Come on, let's go!"
Wolf leaped onto the rocks and gazed out to Sea.
"Wolf.
Please.
I don't want to go without you."
Wolf did not even turn his head.
She had her answer. She would be going alone. With
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a pang she shouldered her pack and headed toward the Forest.
Behind her, Wolf put up his muzzle and howled.
Wolf didn't know what to do.
He needed to stay in this terrible place and wait for his pack-brother; but he also needed to follow the female into the Forest.
Wolf ran in circles, wondering what to do.
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Renn hadn't expected to miss Wolf quite so much.
She missed his warmth as he leaned against her, and his impatient little whine when he wanted a salmon cake. She even missed his enthusiasm for chasing ducks.
It hurt that he'd chosen not to follow her, and she felt lonely as she crossed the stepping-stones over the Widewater, into the birchwood on the other side. Not for the first time, she asked herself what she was doing so far from her clan, in a Forest haunted by sickness. If Torak had wanted her with him, he would have asked. She was chasing a friend who didn't want her.
There should be people here, too. She knew this part of the Forest. When she was nine, Fin-Kedinn had put her to foster with the Whale Clan, to learn the ways of the Sea. She knew that many other clans hunted along the coast: Sea Eagle, Salmon, Willow. They came for the cod in spring and the salmon in summer, and for the seals and the herring that sheltered here from the winter gales. But now the Forest felt eerily quiet.
Behind her, something breathed.
She wheeled around.
It was coming from that shelter over there.
Drawing her knife, she moved toward it. "Is anyone there?"
From the dark within came a guttural snarl.
She froze.
The darkness exploded.
With a cry she jumped back.
The creature sprang at her--then jerked to a halt. In a daze she saw that it was tethered at the wrists by sturdy bindings of braided rawhide. "What are you
doing?"
"A b-bite," she stammered. "It's a bite, I'm not sick. . . ."
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Ignoring her, he turned her head roughly to examine her face and scalp. Only when he found no sores did he release her.
"I'm not sick!" she repeated. "What's
happened
here?"
"Same as everywhere," he muttered.
"The sickness," said Renn.
"I'm Renn," she said. "Raven Clan. Who are you?"
"Tiu." He held up his left hand, and on the back she saw his clan-tattoo: the four-clawed mark of the Sea Eagle.
"What will happen to your friend?" asked Renn.
Tiu went to retrieve a fishing spear propped against a tree. "In a couple of days he'll chew through the ropes. He'll have as much chance as any of us." "But--he'll hurt someone."
Tiu shook his head. "We'll be long gone."
"You're leaving the Forest?" said Renn.
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With a last look at his friend, Tiu left the clearing, heading west.
Renn followed at a run.
"The island of the Cormorants," he told her. "It's their turn for the Midsummer rites; and unlike some, they're not afraid to let us come." "What about the other clans?" said Renn as they reached a sheltered bay where people hurried to load sturdy hide canoes.
"I'm looking for my friend. Have you seen him? His name's Torak. Thin, a little taller than me, with black hair and ..."
"No," said Tiu, turning away to help a woman with a bundle.
"I saw him," called a young man loading rope into a canoe.
"When?" cried Renn. "Where? Is he all right?"
"The Seals took him," came the reply. "You won't be seeing him again."
"Three Seal boys came a few days ago," said the young man, whose name was Kyo. "They had flint and seal-hide clothes, but I was in no mood to trade, so I didn't 189
"What about Torak?" broke in Renn. "You said you saw them take him."
"All I saw was a boy in a skinboat," said Kyo. "Dark, like you said. Thin, angry face. Lots of bruises. He didn't go without a fight."
Renn's fists clenched. "Why did they take him?"
Kyo shrugged. "With the Seals, who knows? They're not like us, they've never learned to live in peace with the Forest."
"I've got to get to their island," said Renn.
Tiu snorted. "Not possible."
"But you're going to the Cormorants," she said, "and their island isn't far from the Seals, is it?"
"You don't understand," Tiu said angrily. "We have no quarrel with the Seals, and we want to keep it that way!"
"But my friend is in danger!"
"We're all in danger!" snapped Tiu.
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Tiu crossed his arms across his chest. "You're making that up."
People stopped what they were doing and drew nearer to listen.
"It killed some of our people," Renn went on. "It killed people here too, didn't it? Two from the Willow Clan. And we heard that among your clan it took a child." Tiu flinched. "Why talk of this? What good does it do?"
"Because," said Renn, "my friend is the one who rid the Forest of the bear."
Tiu stared at her. "You said he's just a boy--"
"I said he's more than that. Fin-Kedinn would tell you if he was here. You know Fin-Kedinn?"
Tiu nodded. "He has the respect of many clans."
"He's my uncle. He'd tell you that what I'm saying is true."
Anxiously Renn watched Tiu draw the others aside to talk. Moments later he returned. "I'm sorry. We don't want to quarrel with the Seals." "Then don't take me to their camp," she said.
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"Leave me somewhere on their island, I'll find my own way."
Kyo spoke to Tiu. "There's that little bay to the southwest of their camp. We could put in there, and they'd never know."
"And I could give her seaworthy clothes," said a woman, "and purify her for the journey. Tiu, she's just a girl, we can't leave her here on her own." Tiu sighed. "You're asking a lot," he told Renn.
"I know," she replied.
She was about to go on, when--behind a juniper bush--she spotted a gleam of eyes. Amber eyes watching her.
Her heart leaped.
Excitedly she turned to Tiu. "And I'm about to ask even more."
"What?"
"There's someone else who needs to come too."
The shore rang with laughter.
"You won't need to purify him," someone remarked. "It looks as if he's done that by himself!"
Fulmar spit or no, Renn wanted to fling her arms
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around Wolf--but she contented herself with greeting him quietly, and scratching his flank.
"I thought you
liked
strong smells," Renn told him.
Wolf rubbed his face against her jerkin in a vain attempt to rid himself of the troublesome oil.
"I'm not leaving him," said Renn.
"Then be quick! We're leaving!"
"Come on, Wolf," said Renn, running down to the canoe.
Wolf didn't move. He stood with his big paws splayed and his hackles up, eyeing the canoe rocking in the shallows.
Renn's heart sank.
You didn't need to speak wolf talk to know what he was saying.
I
am not going in that. Not ever, ever, ever.
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Chapter TWENTY-ONE
Torak dreamed of Wolf again, but this time Wolf was warning him.
Uff! Uff! Danger! Shadow! Hunted!
What shadow? asked Torak. Where?
But Wolf was getting farther and farther away--and Torak couldn't run after him, because someone was holding him back.
"Let me go!" he shouted, lashing out with his fists.
"Wake up!" said Bale.
"What?" Torak opened his eyes. He was in the Seal shelter, and daylight was streaming in through the door flaps.
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