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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the female.
Fought!
Wolf could not believe what he was smelling! The snarling, the baring of teeth.
Mewing in distress, Wolf scrambled back up the boulders after the scent of the female. Ah, she was clever. She'd returned to the Still Wet, where there was less danger from the Thunderer, and there she'd dragged out a floating hide. She'd headed into the wind, so Wolf easily caught her scent. Now he knew what to do. He must follow her. She too was seeking Tall Tailless.
As he ran, another scent hit him, and he skittered to a halt. Raising his muzzle, he took deep sniffs to make sure.
His claws tightened. His fur stood on end.
He smelled
demon.
"Take my hand!" shouted Tenris, leaning perilously over the side of his skinboat and reaching for Torak.
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Over and over, he rolled in the crushing darkness. He couldn't see, couldn't breathe.
The Sea threw him above the waves, playing with him. His gutskin parka helped him stay afloat, and he bobbed up and down, gulping air. Tenris was gone. Bale was gone. The sky was black as basalt. Crackling flares of lightning revealed nothing but raging Sea.
"Tenris!" he yelled. "Bale!" The storm whipped his voice away.
"Tenris!"
he shouted.
But the Mage was gone.
He let go of the skinboat and hauled himself onto the rock. The boat was carried away into the gloom.
Shivering, storm-battered, he clung on.
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He didn't know where he was. If he'd been thrown onto the shore, he had a chance. If not--if this was an isolated skerry somewhere in the Sea--he was in trouble. A groping search of his haven soon told him that the rock was no bigger than a Seal's shelter, and surrounded by nothing but waves. Panic gripped him.
Bale was gone. Tenris was gone. He was stranded on a rock in the middle of the Sea.
The storm blew over as abruptly as it had arisen.
By the time Renn reached the eastern end of the lake and laid down her paddle, the water was lapping the rocks, and scarcely stirring the reeds in the shallows. She didn't want to think of how it must have been for Torak on the open Sea.
Why
hadn't he listened to her and come overland, instead of going with the Mage and the tall Seal boy?
Straightening up, she noticed that the sky wasn't clear, as it should be after a storm. Dirty white clouds
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were pouring down from the peaks, and tongues of mist were seeping toward her across the lake. Mist after a storm. She'd never seen that before.
This shouldn't
be,
she told herself. This
can't
be.
Then she remembered that it was Midsummer night. And on Midsummer night, anything is possible.
Exhausted, wet and scared, she half stumbled, half slid down the tussocky slope, and fell to her knees in the coarse white sand.
Anything is possible. . . .
Maybe it's even possible that the Seal Mage is right: that Torak really is a spirit walker.
But all through the long, hard journey on the lake, she'd been turning it over in her mind, and now she knew that it
was
true.
Torak was a spirit walker.
A spirit walker.
She had heard of such creatures, but only in the
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A wave slapped into him, nearly knocking him off the rock.
Concentrate, he told himself. You've got to get off
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this rock and back to land.
More waves buffeted the rock. He crawled higher, drawing the gutskin parka closer about him.
The gutskin parka.
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Around him the Sea swirled and the fog billowed. Somewhere out there lay the Seal island. But which way?
Far away, a wolf howled.
Torak caught his breath.
There it was again. A long howl, followed by several short, sharp barks.
Where are you?
called Wolf.
Torak put his hands to his lips and howled a reply. I'm
here! Again
the answer--faint but clear, piercing the fog--floating to him across the Sea.
Again Torak howled.
Call to me, pack-brother! Call!
Alone in the fog on the little white beach, Renn heard wolf howls, and froze.
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It sounded like--yes! Wolf! And Torak! She'd know his howl anywhere! That had to mean that he was all right!
He would be making for the Seal camp. That made her feel a bit braver about heading there too.
The trees ended. She still couldn't see. No camp. No Sea. No sounds except--somewhere nearby--the rush of wavelets on shingle. The howling had ceased. She left the trees and stumbled toward where she hoped the Seal camp lay.
With shouts of alarm they leaped apart.
"Who are you?" cried the boy.
"Where's Torak?" cried Renn.
Both were openmouthed and staring with fright.
Renn recognized the tall Seal boy who'd set out with Torak from the Heights.
"Who
are
you?" he said, his eyes narrowing.
"I'm Renn," she said with more assurance than she felt. "Where's Torak? What have you done with him?"
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His glance flicked to her bow, then back to her face. His shoulders slumped. "The storm," he muttered. "We got separated. I--I saw his skinboat go over." "What do you mean?" she said.
"I'm Renn," she said. "I'm from the Raven Clan."
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"And what are you doing here, Renn from the Raven Clan?" he asked.
"I'm--looking for Torak." She hadn't meant to say it. But his voice compelled obedience.
"So are we," he said, looking grim. "Come. We'll go up to the camp and decide what to do."
As he walked, he pulled his gutskin parka over his head, and Renn saw for the first time his magnificent Mage's belt, and heard the soft clink of its puffin-beak fringe. She stopped.
That sound sent ripples through her memory. It was the same sound she'd heard as she watched the skin-boater gliding over the lake. Sea mist settled clammily on her skin. Her heart began to race. The pattern was coming together before her eyes. The tokoroth. The sickness. The Soul-Eaters . . . The Seal Mage turned, and asked her what was wrong.
Blood thudded in her skull as she stared up into his handsome, terribly scarred face. She thought,
There is a Soul-Eater among the Seals. There is a Soul-Eater among the Seals, and his name is Tenris. And he is after Torak
-
Torak the spirit walker.
"You've gone very pale," said Tenris in his beautiful, gentle voice.
*
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"I'm--I just need to find Torak," she said.
"Come," he said, reaching out and taking her icy fingers in his. "Let's go and get something to eat."
Then he saw the scab on her hand, and his face contracted in pity. "Oh, my poor child, what's this?"
Before she could reply, he turned to the Seal boy. "Look, Bale. The poor little thing has the sickness."
Bale stared at her hand; then his own crept to his clan-creature skin.
"No I don't," protested Renn, trying to pull her hand from the strong, steady grip. "It's not the sickness, it's a--"
"You mustn't worry anymore," said the Seal Mage, taking both her hands in his. "From now on, I will look after you."
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Chapter THIRTY
quiet.
No seabirds. No wind. Just the sighing of the Sea and the beat of Wolf's heart against his own.
Lick, lick, lick.
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The licking turned to grooming-nibbles. Then a sharp, impatient nudge under his chin.
Wake up!
He opened his eyes.
Crunchy sand under his cheek; Wolf's whiskers tickling his eyelids. Beyond that--nothing. The fog was so thick that he couldn't tell Sea from sky. How long had he been asleep?
The cure.