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
"What's he saying?" asked Renn uneasily.
"Same as before. 'Shadow. Hunted.' I wonder what it means."
Renn cleaned her knife in the ashes. "Is that why you left? Because he warned you in a dream?"
"What?" said Torak.
"Is that why you left without telling anyone? Without telling me." She couldn't keep the edge out of her voice.
"I left," he said steadily, "to find the cure. I didn't tell you because if you'd come with me you'd have been in danger."
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Renn stared at him. "I was already in danger! We all were. Are! What could be worse than the sickness?"
He hesitated. "The Follower."
"What's that?"
"I don't know. It's small. Filthy. It's got claws."
"The tokoroth," Renn said in a low voice.
He sat up. "That's what the Forest Horses said. Is that what it's called?"
She nodded. "Saeunn told me after you left. That's why I came to find you. She says they're among the most feared creatures in the Forest." "They?"
said Torak. "You mean there's more than oner
Again she nodded.
He considered that. "It crossed the Sea hidden in Asrif's skinboat--"
"It's
here!"
cried Renn. "Here on the island?"
"Like I said, it hid in Asrif's boat. And if one could do it--"
"--maybe others could too. They could have hidden in one of the Sea Eagles' canoes, or with the other clans."
They were silent, thinking about that.
"But are you
sure
it's here?" said Renn.
"Oh, yes," Torak said grimly. "I saw it. It set the trap that nearly got me drowned." He paused. "I was trying to find proof--a track or something--to show the Seals." 222
"To show the Seals? Why were you doing that?"
"They're helping me make the cure."
"They're
helping you?
I don't understand. They beat you up, they took you prisoner--"
"Then they let me go." He told her his story: about being followed through the Forest, and turned away from the Deep Forest; then being captured by the Seals, and talking his way out of punishment. "I'm sure the tokoroth is causing the sickness," he said, "but the odd thing is, it hasn't given it to me. It's as if it's-- testing me. I can't work out why."
Renn was still trying to understand. "And you say you're
not
their prisoner?"
Renn reached for a stalk of goosefoot, and chewed. "This feels wrong. First they beat you up, and now they're
helping you?"
"They need the cure too."
She was unconvinced. "This cure. I've heard of selik root, but never of its being used in Magecraft."
"So?" Torak said sharply. "Tenris knows what he's doing."
"Who's Tenris?"
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"Their Mage. Renn, they've had the sickness before, and he cured them! He can do it again."
"Even if he can, what's to stop the Soul-Eaters sending more tokoroth?"
Torak stared at her. He got up and paced, then returned to the fire. "The tokoroth," he said. "What
are
they?"
Renn winced. Then she took a deep breath and told him everything Saeunn had told her.
As he listened, his face drained of color.
"Saeunn says they aren't children anymore," said Renn. "They're demon. Utterly demon."
"Like the bear that killed Fa," said Torak.
"What?"
said Renn.
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Renn was bewildered. "What fish? What are you talking about?"
Suddenly Wolf gave a grunt and trotted to the edge of the firelight, snuffing the air and standing with his tail extended. Even Renn knew that meant a possible threat. She jumped up and reached for her bow.
Torak was already on his feet, pulling on his jerkin.
In the distance, a boy was calling Torak's name.
"It's Bale," said Torak. "I must go, or he'll get suspicious."
"Who's Bale?" said Renn.
"He's--Bale," said Torak unhelpfully. "He caught me in the Forest, but he--"
"And you want to go
back?"
"Renn, I've got to. It's only three days till Midsummer."
Again that voice, calling for Torak.
"But you don't even trust them!" she cried.
"I trust--some of them," he said. "I think."
"What does that mean?"
"What I do know," he said, suddenly fierce, "is that my friends get hurt--or killed--when they're with me.
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It happened to Oslak, and to the boar. You're better off staying here with Wolf."
"Torak, no, I--"
"Keep him with you, and don't let the Seals see either of you."
"So you're determined to go with them to the Heights."
"Renn, I've got to."
Her thoughts raced. "Then we'll follow overland. Me and Wolf. You might need help."
He met her eyes, saw that he couldn't dissuade her, and nodded once.
"Torak!" shouted Bale.
Swiftly, Torak went down on one knee and put his forehead against Wolf's, murmuring something Renn didn't understand. Wolf nosed his chin and whined. Then Torak rose and started up the slope, heading back the way they'd come. "Stay hidden," he told Renn over his shoulder, "and watch out for tokoroth." Uneasily, Renn glanced about her. She didn't want him to leave her here on this lonely hillside.
But he'd already gone, melting into the trees as silently as a wolf.
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Chapter TWENTY-FOUR
In the ghostly twilight, the beach glowed faintly. He made out his own erratic tracks where he'd staggered
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from the birch trees--and then, to his horror, the tracks of Wolf and Renn. If Bale saw them . . .
Among the birches he caught a glimmer of torchlight. Bale was coming. He'd better move fast.
Torak drew back behind the boulder to listen.
"Maybe," said Bale, "or maybe he's in trouble." To Torak's surprise, he sounded worried. "I didn't see him get ashore."
"So?" said Asrif. "You don't have to look after him. I know you think you should because he's younger, but Bale, he's not your brother." "I know that," snapped Bale. "I just should've made sure he got back. It's not safe on the water for a beginner, especially not now. If the Cormorants are right--" "Let's hope they're not," said Asrif.
Torak stepped out from behind the boulder. "Right about what?" he called, walking toward them and scuffing the tracks as he went.
"What
happened
to you?" cried Bale. Like Asrif, he was holding a torch of twisted kelp dipped in seal oil. In the flickering light his face was drawn. "Where have you been?" 228
"Finding proof," said Torak. "Proof that I'm not a liar."
Bale's face closed. "Think of a better story. You've been gone most of the night."
"I got caught in a seal net."
"A seal net?" Asrif snorted. "Now we know you're lying. We never lay them this close to camp; there aren't any seals!"
"Maybe not," said Torak, "but that's what happened. I'll show you."
Praying that the tide hadn't carried it away, he led them through the birches and onto the main beach. Then he had an idea, and led them farther up the sand. "I thought you said there was a net," said Bale.
"There is, but there's a track, too. I'll show you that first."
He was in luck. The tide hadn't reached as far as the tokoroth footprint, which was clearly visible in the torchlight.
Bale knelt over it. "What made this?"
Torak hesitated. "Something bad."
"They weren't after seals," said Torak. "They were after me."
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Again Asrif snorted. "You're making that up!"
"No, I don't think he is," said Bale, kneeling to study the net. With his free hand he turned it over. "Whoever did this knew what they were doing." "Why do you say that?" said Torak.
The older boy raised his head. "The way to set a seal net is to fix the upper part to a line that you attach to the rocks, leaving the lower part hanging free in the water. And you've got to make sure that only one of the upper corners is firmly tied to the rock, so that when the seal swims in, it pulls the other side free, and the net collapses around it."
Torak nodded. "I wondered how I'd got in, but couldn't get out."
Bale stood up. "How
did you
get out?"
Again Torak hesitated. "A limpet shell. I cut myself free with a limpet shell."
Bale glanced from Torak to the ripped and tattered net, and raised his eyebrows.
Torak stared stubbornly back. He didn't like lying
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to Bale, but he didn't trust him enough to tell him the truth. The only way to keep Wolf and Renn safe was to keep them hidden.
are
you?"
Torak dodged the question. "I don't know what it wants any more than you do."
"Are you sure about that?" said Bale.
"Quite sure." He paused. "So what were you and Asrif talking about just now? You said something about the Cormorants."
Asrif and Bale exchanged glances.
Then Bale said, "Something happened today in the strait between our island and theirs. A party of Cormorants were fishing. They were attacked." "Attacked?" said Torak.
"By a Hunter," said Bale.
"A lone one," said Asrif. "With a notched fin."
Torak thought of the black fins circling beneath a sky filled with seabirds; the towering fin with the notch in the tip. He thought of the terror of the capelin. . . . 231
"Was anyone killed?" said Torak.
Bale shook his head. "It smashed three skinboats, then dived. They didn't see it again. Their Mage thinks it let them live because they weren't who it was looking for." "Maybe it's after you, Forest boy," said Asrif.
"Why?" said Torak with more defiance than he felt. "Because I trailed some fishhooks in the Sea?"
Torak shook his head.
"Or to put it another way," said Asrif, "are you sure you want to come with us to the Heights?"
"I'm sure," said Torak. But as he watched the dark waves sucking at the rocks, he wasn't sure at all. Maybe he'd done something wrong without even knowing it.
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the camp. "Get something to eat. We're heading out soon."
Shadow. Hunted.
Hunted--or
Hunter*.
Was that what Wolf had been trying to say?
Long after Torak had gone, Renn sat by the fire, thinking over everything he'd told her. That dream of his. She wished she'd asked him more.
Renn knew about dreams, because her own sometimes came true. When she was little, that had frightened her, so to dispel her fear, Fin-Kedinn had asked Saeunn to teach her about them. The Raven Mage had shown her how to find the hidden meaning. "Dreams don't always mean what they seem to," she'd said. "You need to look at them sideways, as if you were searching for a dew trail."
Shadow. Hunted.
Did that mean the sickness? Or the tokoroth? Or perhaps neither; perhaps it meant the Hunter that Torak had mentioned.
The thought made her shiver. On the journey across the Sea, the Sea Eagles had been wary, having heard from the Kelp Clan that there was a lone Hunter 233
roaming the Sea: an angry one. She should have told Torak, but there'd been so little time. . . .