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
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down, so Renn's fears began to ebb, and she let her mind drift.
It felt as if I were being pulled loose,
Torak had said.
I felt as if I were the fish.
That troubled her almost more than the tokoroth. And it had troubled Torak, too.
Suddenly she stopped.
I felt as if I were the fish.
That had nudged something in her memory--something just out of reach.
She knew it was connected to the sickness, but when she tried to grasp it, it sank beneath the surface. . . .
Uff!
Wolf's warning dragged her back to the present.
He was standing motionless, gazing down at the lake.
Renn dropped to the ground and crawled behind a juniper bush.
There. Sliding through the water. A skinboat.
Something in the turn of his head indicated stealth, and even though she was forty paces above him, Renn held her breath as she watched him reach the end of 235
the lake and step into the shallows.
As she stood up, she saw that Wolf had left her, in the noiseless way that wolves do. No doubt he'd simply gone off on one of his hunts, but she wished he'd stayed. 236
Treading as quietly as she could, and placing one hand on her clan-creature skin for protection, she started west.
Settling into the lope and trying to ignore the hunger gnawing his belly, Wolf raced up to the ridge, where the smells wafting from the valley were many and fascinating--then down the other side, past his friends the ravens, and on toward the Great Wet. The crunchy white ground scratched his pads, and the stink of the salt-grass made him sneeze, but Tall Tailless's scent was strong, and Wolf followed it easily to the Den.
Keeping to the shadows, he pricked his ears and
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Taking long, deep sniffs, he sorted the different smells. Then he shook himself in frustration. Taillesses were so
complicated.
One of the pale-pelted ones spoke as a friend, but hid a terrible hunger. And Tall Tailless himself didn't say all that he felt, not even to his own pack-brother.
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Tall Tailless, of course, was not helpless--but the strange thing was, he didn't know it.
Wolf had been astonished when he'd sensed this in his pack-brother as they'd sat together by the Bright Beast-That-Bites-Hot.
Tall Tailless didn't know what he was.
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TWENTY-FIVE
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Chapter TWENTY-FIVE
Torak shook his head. He wanted to tell the Seal Mage about the net and the tokoroth, but there was no time. Already the others were loading their boats. It was a hot day, and the Sea was deceptively smooth. But Torak kept thinking of the terror of the capelin; of black fins slicing the waves. Tenris guessed his thoughts. "I've put a masking
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charm on your hull. The Hunter won't even know you're there."
"I wish you were coming," said Torak.
Tenris smiled. "So do I." With his good hand he touched Torak's shoulder. "Be careful." Then he walked off up the beach.
Detlan approached, holding out a gutskin parka. "You'll need this," he said.
"Thanks," said Torak. The gutskin felt stiff as he pulled it on over his jerkin, and it chafed his throat and wrists. But it would keep him dry. "And tuck this inside your jerkin," said Detlan, handing him a small roll of dried whale meat. "But
don't vat
it."
"What's it for?" said Torak.
"Always carry food on a Sea journey," said Detlan, his brow creasing. "Then if you go down, you don't go empty-handed."
Torak stared at the whale meat, then tucked it in his jerkin.
On the beach, those Seals who hadn't yet left for the Cormorant island were waiting to see them off.
Detlan's little sister was trying not to cry. She was old enough to remember the last time the sickness had struck, and now, in her terror that her family would be taken,
she was making a nuisance of herself by checking everyone's hands for sores.
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Asrif's mother was subdued as she patted her son's chest, and told him for the tenth time to be careful.
Bale's father pressed something small into his son's hand. Bale murmured his thanks. His father's smile lit up his blue eyes.
Torak felt a pang, seeing them together. Then he thought of Wolf and Renn, and he didn't feel so bad.
"Is that an amulet?" he asked Bale when the older boy came over to check his skinboat.
Without ceremony they got under way. At first Torak had his hands full merely keeping his balance, but as they rounded the headland, he risked a glance 242
He was gazing blearily over the side when, almost directly beneath him, he saw a small dark shape rising--growing rapidly bigger.
He snapped awake, his skinboat rocking dangerously. He tried to shout a warning, but it stuck in his throat.
A sleek gray head broke the surface beside his paddle, and shook the droplets from its whiskers. Then
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the seal yawned--baring lots of very sharp teeth--and gazed up at him with mild, curious eyes.
Torak blew out a long, shaky breath.
The seal blew out too, opening its nostrils wide. Its smooth gray fur was dotted with dark rings, which explained why it was so friendly; it knew it wouldn't be hunted. Bale had seen it too. He was grinning as he brought his boat about. "The guardian! Now I know we'll be all right!"
The seal floated lazily on its back with its tail flippers curled over its belly, watching him go by. Then, with a soft
oof,
it shut its nostrils, and disappeared beneath the waves.
Maybe because of the guardian, they saw no sign of Notched Fin, and made such good speed that in the midafternoon they put in at a little bay to rest.
The tide was out, and the sand was webbed with seaweed and the three-toed tracks of oystercatchers. Bale and Asrif built a fire, then went to refill their waterskins, while Detlan showed Torak how to catch shellworms. Soon they had a pile of the long brown shells, which they baked in the embers. Torak thought the shellworms tasted slightly better than they had the first time. He must be getting used to them.
With the shellworms they ate the crunchy stems of
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a sea plant that Asrif had gathered. It tasted like salty green ice, and Torak only ate it because the others did; more to his liking were the baked marshmallow roots that oozed a gluey sweetness. Nobody spoke while they ate, and it struck Torak as odd that he should feel almost at ease with the same boys who'd hunted him only four days before.
Eagles, he thought.
"And you're really going up there?" said Torak, craning his neck at the Heights.
"I've done it before," said Asrif with a shrug. But his face had gone the color of wet sand.
"Once," muttered Bale, "you did it once. And never all the way to the eyries."
They were standing right beneath the Heights, on a
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And if he'd thought the cliffs at the Bay of Seals were crowded, this was far worse. You couldn't slip a feather between the cormorants huddled on the lowest rocks; farther up, hordes of guillemots jostled for space, while kittiwakes and herring gulls squabbled above them. The highest crags of all held the huge, shapeless eyries of the eagles.
"Some of those eyries are hundreds of winters old," murmured Bale, "and some of the eagles are over fifty." Despite the noise he spoke softly, and Torak understood why. It wasn't just the eagles they had to watch out for. The Heights themselves were awake, and would shrug off an unwanted intruder. At his feet lay fragments of shattered stone, which meant only one thing. Rockfalls.
And yet according to Bale, the Seals did sometimes climb the Heights, if other prey was scarce, and they couldn't get enough eggs closer to camp. That 246
explained the short stone pegs jutting at intervals from the rock all the way to the lowest eyrie, dizzyingly high above.
Torak's neck was getting sore, and he rubbed it. "Who put in the climbing pegs?" he asked.
"My grandfather's grandfather," said Bale. "Although we have to replace them when the cliffs move."
"And we don't usually go as far as the eyries," said Asrif.
"And it's a bad time to be trying it," said Detlan. "They've got nestlings. They'll think Asrif's after them."