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
The mesh was small--he couldn't force his fist
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If only he had his knife. . . . What else could he use?
Again he smacked against the rocks, scraping painfully over the limpets.
Limpets.
They had sharp edges, didn't they? If he could prize one off, maybe . . .
The swell drew him back, then battered him once more. As he kicked his way to the surface, the Sea's endless laughter rippled through him. Don't listen to her, he told himself. Listen to yourself, listen to the blood drumming in your ears-- anything but her. . . .
Still kicking to stay above the waves, he pushed his thumb and two fingers through the meshing and grabbed the nearest limpet.
The creature clamped hard to the rock and refused to let go. Snarling, Torak clawed at its shell, but it stuck fast. It had become part of the rock.
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bird had struck the limpet with its beak: abruptly, giving it no time to cling on.
Again the Sea's vast laughter shuddered through him.
You cannot win,
she seemed to whisper.
Give up, give up!
No! he shouted in his head. It's too soon!
The shout became a sob. Too
soon.
He had to find the cure, and make sure that the clans were safe. He had to see Wolf again, and Renn, and Fin-Kedinn. . . .
If that stone weren't dragging down the net, he'd have a chance.
So why are you wasting time with limpets? he thought frantically. Get under the water and deal with that rock!
He took a deep breath and dived.
"Help!"
he yelled. "Somebody!" His cry ended in a gurgle that was horrible to hear.
A wave washed over him, and he coughed seawater.
I
am beyond pity or malice,
the Sea Mother seemed to murmur in his ear,
beyond good and evil. I am stronger than the sun. I am eternal. I am the Sea.
He was so tired. He couldn't keep treading water, he had to stop, just for a little while, to rest.
He sank, and the Sea Mother wrapped her arms about him--tight, tight, until his chest was bursting. . . .
A silver flicker in the darkness.
A fish, he thought hazily. A small one, maybe a capelin?
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And now there were more of them, a whole shimmering shoal, come to watch this big creature dying in their midst.
Down he sank, and the silver darts divided and flowed about him like a sparkling river, as the Sea crushed him in her arms. . . .
A sickening jolt deep in his belly, as if his guts were being pulled loose. And now, quite suddenly, he was free of that crushing embrace; free of the cold and the darkness. He could no longer feel the net dragging him down, or the salt burning his throat. He couldn't even hear his own blood thumping in his head. He was light and nimble as a fish--and like a fish, he was neither cold nor warm, but part of the Sea.
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What is it? asked Torak, fighting to master their terror, which had become his own. What is it that hunts us?
. . . and he was Torak again, watching the capelin vanish into the dark.
His chest was bursting, the blood roaring in his ears. No time to wonder what had just happened. He was drowning.
Blindly he kicked out, fighting the Sea Mother's lethal embrace--and the net fought him, holding him back.
At that moment, a column of white water sent him spinning sideways, and something big plunged in beside him. Powerful teeth savaged the net--tearing him free.
. . .
Then hands were reaching down for him, trying to pull him out. They weren't strong enough--he was slipping back again, scraping his palms on limpets. With his last shred of strength he gave a tremendous kick. It pushed him a little farther out of the water: enough for the hands to grab him and wrench him out. The Sea Mother gave a sigh, and let him go.
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"What were you
doing?"
whispered a voice that was oddly familiar.
He rolled onto his side, then onto his knees, and spewed up what felt like half the Sea. "D-drowning," he gasped.
"I could see that!" said the voice, managing to sound both angry and shaken. "But what were you
doing?
Why didn't you just climb out?"
Torak raised his head.
"Renn?
Is that you?"
"Sh! Someone might come! Can you stand? Come on! Follow me!"
Together they scrambled between huge tumbled boulders and straggly birch, emerging at last onto a little white beach shadowed by a looming hillside. Torak sank to his knees in the sand. "How--did you find me?" he panted.
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"It wasn't me," said Renn. "It was-"
A shadow bounded from behind a boulder and knocked Torak backward into the sand, covering his face in hot, rasping licks.
"It was Wolf," said Renn.
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Chapter TWENTY-THREE
Her hands shook as she retrieved her quiver and
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bow from where she'd hidden them behind a boulder, and shouldered her wovengrass bag of limpets. "Can you walk?" she said more abruptly than she'd intended.
believe . .
." His voice was rough with unshed tears.
"Torak, we've got to get out of here! We're too close to the camp, someone might come!"
But she could see that he wasn't taking it in.
"Come
on!"
she said, pulling him to his feet.
Just below the ridge, they had to stop for breath.
"How did you find me?" panted Torak, bent double with his hands on his knees.
"I--was caught in a seal net."
"A
net?"
"I tried to get out, but I couldn't. Wolf
bit
through it. He saved my life."
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"How did you manage?"
From inside her jerkin she drew out the thong on which hung the grouse-bone whistle.
They crested the ridge, startling a pair of ravens who flew off with indignant caws. When Torak saw what lay before him, he cried out. "But there's a forestl"
"They're not very tall," said Renn, "but at least they're trees. The Seals don't seem to come inland, so hiding's been easy. But yesterday I found someone's 218
tracks down by the lake. A man's or a boy's, I think."
"I miss the Forest so much," said Torak, gazing at the trees.
"Me too," said Renn. "I miss salmon, and the taste of reindeer. And the nights are so
light
here. You don't notice it in the Forest, but here ... I can't sleep."
"Neither can I," murmured Torak.
"You can dry off by the fire," she told him. "I'll cook the limpets. They won't take long."
Hanging up her quiver and bow, she knelt by the embers. They gave almost no smoke because she'd used ash, and peeled off the bark.
"What have you done for food?" asked Torak as he huddled by the fire, with Wolf leaning against him.
"Birds' eggs, mostly," said Renn. "A bit of hunting, but only small prey. There don't seem to be any elk or
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deer. There must be fish in the lake, but it's too exposed. That's why I went to the beach." She paused. "I'm all right, but I'm worried about Wolf. Those ravens led him to carrion, but it wasn't enough. And he won't go near seabirds, because he got spat at by a fulmar." She gave a slight smile. "He was so miserable. I had to find some soapwort and give him a wash. He hated that too." She stopped, aware that she was talking too much.
Torak was frowning at the fire. "Renn, I'm really glad you're here."
Renn looked at him. "Oh. Well, good."
The limpets were cooked. With her knife she knocked them off the slate and onto a large goosefoot leaf. After tucking a limpet in a fork of the rowan tree for the clan guardian, she divided the rest into three. She put a third in the grass a short distance away for Wolf, then showed Torak how to cut away the black, blistered guts to get at the chewy orange meat. He eyed the limpets thoughtfully, then started to eat.
"It's a bite," she said, rubbing it against her thigh.
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She didn't want to mention the tokoroth just yet.
"Bad," said Renn. She told him about the clans leaving, and the man in the Sea Eagles' camp.
Torak's frown deepened. "I dreamed about Wolf, you know. He was warning me. 'Shadow. Hunted.' I think that's what he was saying." "Did he mean the sickness?" said Renn.