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
Detlan and Bale chewed theirs, but Torak eyed his suspiciously. "What is it?"
"Cliffwort," said Bale with his mouth full. "Takes away giddiness."
"I thought only Asrif was going up."
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"He is," said Bale. "But you can get just as giddy looking up as you can looking down."
The stalk was bitter, but almost immediately Torak's head cleared.
"What can I do?" he asked.
Asrif flashed him a grin that was more of a grimace. "Catch me if I fall."
"Just keep out of the way," muttered Bale.
Torak ground his teeth. They wouldn't even let him help.
Stifling his frustration, he watched Bale draw back his arm and throw the rope. The hook floated high, then dropped neatly over a peg about ten paces up. Asrif caught the hook and fixed it to the one at his back, and Detlan took the other end of the rope and pulled it taut. Asrif began to climb, finding cracks and climbing pegs with his hands and feet, while Detlan braced himself to take his weight if he fell.
A solitary eagle circled the peak. Renn thought of Torak on the other side, and quickened her pace.
Although the sun was getting low, it was still hot on the trail, and the breeze wafting from the lake did little
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She wondered if he knew where Torak was, or if he'd picked up the trail of the skinboater she'd seen on the lake. She had found no trace of him, except for a second skinboat hidden under some brush at the edge of the lake. The boat had been empty. A spare, maybe. But that told her nothing about what the skinboater had been doing in this part of the island.
"These days, the Seals don't go inland," Tiu had told her. "They used to, but they've become much stricter about keeping Forest and Sea apart." "Doesn't anyone live on the west coast?" Renn had asked.
Tiu had shaken his head. "It belongs to the eagles. You can see their home from far away: a great red peak shaped like a Hunter's fin." Renn had first glimpsed the peak at midday. Now, as she left the lake behind her, she stood directly beneath it.
From this side it was unscaleable: a treacherous scree slope on which not even crowberry could gain a hold. To her left, though, among some straggly rowan 250
trees, there might be a way around its southern foot, and down to the Sea. She would need that if she was to find Torak.
Pushing through the thicket, she found herself climbing a rocky slope that soon had her breathless and scratched. It was a relief to come out on a windy ridge high above a beach of glittering black sand. To the north the beach came to an abrupt end where a cliff had fallen into the Sea, leaving a tumbled mass of boulders. In the midst of these, screaming flocks of birds squabbled over something large and dead.
Carrion, thought Renn, watching Wolf race down the slope to the beach. No wonder he's excited. Now he'll have enough to eat.
She'd come this far, so she decided to see what it was.
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good snaps. The wiser ravens settled on the rocks to wait their turn.
She stumbled backward. She'd seen enough.
The young Hunter had been trapped in a kelp net, and killed with an axe. Then its carcass had been left for the birds. Only its teeth had been hacked out. Feeling sick, Renn sank to her knees in the sand,
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staring at the small black fin covered in peck marks. Why would anyone do such a thing?
Then she remembered the Kelp Clan's warning about the lone Hunter.
No wonder it's angry, she thought.
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Chapter TWENTY-SIX
On the Heights, Asrif was in trouble. He'd reached a ledge just beneath the eyrie, but the back of his harness had caught on a rock, and he couldn't unsnag it. "He could cut himself free," said Detlan, craning his neck.
"Then what does he do for a harness?" said Bale.
Torak said, "If he's really caught, then--"
"--then he can't get down," snapped Bale. "Yes, we've already thought of that."
"What I mean," said Torak, "is I could go up and help him."
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Just when he was beginning to wonder if he would ever get there, he heaved himself onto a ledge that brought him level with Asrif.
"I think I can unhook you," said Torak. He began edging sideways along a narrow crack that led from his ledge to Asrif's.
"Watch out for the eagles," warned Asrif.
chink chink
of nestlings. But of their parents he could see no sign.
"Where are they?" he murmured.
"Circling higher up," said Asrif. "I think they know I'm stuck. It won't be the same for you."
Torak swallowed, and glanced back to the ledge he'd just left. His rope was securely looped over the final peg, a short way above it. If he missed his footing, 255
that should stop him falling too far. If, of course, the rope didn't break, or his harness didn't snap, or the peg didn't crack . . .
If, if, if, he told himself impatiently. Get on with it.
He moved farther along the crack. But even straining as far as he could, he couldn't reach Asrif's harness.
He tried to get closer--but his rope held him back. He tugged at it--the signal for Bale to feed him more slack--but nothing happened. "He can't give you any more," said Asrif. "There's none left."
Torak glanced down--a dizzying drop to the upturned faces far below--and saw Bale shaking his head.
He thought for a moment. Then he wriggled out of his harness, and let it swing free from the final peg. Now there would be nothing to hold him if he fell. "What are you
doing"
whispered Asrif in horror.
"Try to keep the birds off me," said Torak as he edged closer.
Again he reached out for Asrif's harness--and this time his fingers brushed it.
A shadow slid across the rock--and he ducked as a herring gull flew at him with a strident
kyow.
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one eye. He spat out the worst and tried again.
Asrif shuffled back.
With a jerk that nearly took him with it, Torak yanked the harness free of the rock.
Asrif was still on hands and knees, openmouthed with shock. He turned and met Torak's eyes. "Thanks," he muttered.
Torak gave a curt nod. "The root. Did you get the root?"
Asrif shook his head.
"What?"
"I couldn't reach." His face puckered with shame. "I chose the wrong pegs, climbed myself to a dead end. Should've taken your route instead."
He thought about going back to the ledge he'd just come from, and putting on his harness. But there was no more slack in the rope; it wouldn't allow him to 257
reach the eyrie. He would have to do without.
"I should be able to make it," he said, with more confidence than he felt.
He edged farther up the crack toward the selik root.
"Look out!" whispered Asrif below him.
A menacing
klek klek
echoed off the cliff--then a shadow sped toward him--and he looked around to see an eagle coming straight at him, its vicious talons reaching for his face. He needed both hands to cling on, he couldn't even shield his head, could only flatten himself against the rock. He caught a fleeting glimpse of fierce golden eyes and a sharp black tongue--heard
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one eye. He spat out the worst and tried again.
Asrif shuffled back.
With a jerk that nearly took him with it, Torak yanked the harness free of the rock.
Asrif was still on hands and knees, openmouthed with shock. He turned and met Torak's eyes. "Thanks," he muttered.
Torak gave a curt nod. "The root. Did you get the root?"
Asrif shook his head.
"What?"
"I couldn't reach." His face puckered with shame. "I chose the wrong pegs, climbed myself to a dead end. Should've taken your route instead."
He thought about going back to the ledge he'd just come from, and putting on his harness. But there was no more slack in the rope; it wouldn't allow him to 259
reach the eyrie. He would have to do without.
"I should be able to make it," he said, with more confidence than he felt.
He edged farther up the crack toward the selik root.
"Look out!" whispered Asrif below him.
A menacing
klek klek
echoed off the cliff--then a shadow sped toward him--and he looked around to see an eagle coming straight at him, its vicious talons reaching for his face. He needed both hands to cling on, he couldn't even shield his head, could only flatten himself against the rock. He caught a fleeting glimpse of fierce golden eyes and a sharp black tongue--heard
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the hiss of wings wider than a skinboat. . . .
A stone struck the eagle on the breast, and it wheeled away with a screech.
Torak glanced down at Asrif, who'd found another pebble and was fitting it to his slingshot.
Torak couldn't see where the eagle had gone. Maybe it had been frightened off, but he didn't think so. More likely it was circling for another attack.