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
But where was Tall Tailless?
With all the smells whirling in the windless air, Wolf couldn't catch the one scent he longed to find.
Wolf lowered his head and crept forward, placing each paw with silent care. He had an idea. There was one thing the female always understood. A snarl.
"I'm not hungry!" snarled Renn as the Seal boy set the bowl on the ground. "And for the last time,
I'm not sick!'"
"Just eat," said the boy. Backing out of the cave, he dragged the seal hide across the cave mouth, leaving a gap a couple of hands wide for air. 314
But
you're
not sick, she reminded herself. You're just tired and hungry, and worried about Torak.
She decided to try again with the Seal boy. "Do you know
why
the Hunter attacked?" she called out.
Silence.
No reply.
She clenched her jaw. "I know it was him," she said. "I heard his belt clink as he rowed across the lake."
Still no answer, but she could tell that he was listening. She could hear him breathing on the other side of the door.
"The teeth of a Hunter?" she went on. "Only a Mage would have any use for those." She paused. "If I'm right, and he made the sickness--then he killed your brother." For a moment there was a stunned silence. "How do you know about my brother?"
"Oh, I know many things," said Renn. "He killed
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your brother," she said again. "I know what it's like to lose a brother. I lost mine not long ago."
"Be quiet," said the Seal boy.
"Think back," said Renn, "to just before your brother fell sick. Tenris had been up on that cliff top, hadn't he? Doing Magecraft."
"So?" came the reply. "He's the Mage, that's what he does."
"He did Magecraft, and then your brother got sick."
It was a guess, but a good one. She heard a sharp intake of breath.
"He did it to bring the prey," whispered the Seal boy. "He did Magecraft to bring the prey. . . ."
"That's what he told you," said Renn.
She heard the crunch of sand as he walked up and down. "No more talk," he said abruptly. But there was doubt in his voice.
"You know I'm right," she said.
"I
said no more talk!"
he shouted.
"Why won't you
Hsten!"
Renn shouted back.
The seal hide shuddered, and she knew that he'd punched it.
After that, neither of them spoke.
The smell of meat filled the cave. Renn hesitated-- then went over to examine the bowl. Smoked whale meat with juniper berries. It smelled really
good. But if she ate it, the Seal boy would think she was giving in.
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She put the bowl down. Paced the cave. Went back and picked it up.
She was just about to try a piece when the Seal boy gave a cry, and in through the gap leaped Wolf--leaped straight at her--sending her flying, sending the meat spattering against the wall--flattening her beneath him. He was snarling, his black lips drawn back from his big white fangs. She tried to scream, but his forepaws were heavy on her chest. What was
wrong
with him?
"Wolf!" she gasped. "Wolf--it's me!"
"I'm coming!" yelled the Seal boy, wrenching aside the hide and leaping in with his harpoon.
With astonishing speed, Wolf sprang off Renn and twisted around to face him.
"No!"
screamed Renn. "Don't hurt him! He must be sick--or--something!"
The Seal boy ignored her, and jabbed at Wolf with his harpoon.
Wolf sprang sideways, snapping at the shaft.
Renn saw her chance to escape--the cave mouth was wide open--but what about Wolf?
He was dodging the harpoon with ease.
She picked herself up and fled.
Behind her she heard another yell from the Seal boy--more in outrage than in pain--and glanced back to see Wolf leap from the cave and disappear. 317
Too shaken to make sense of it, she turned and raced off into the fog.
It was thicker than ever. She had no idea where she was; no idea how to find Torak.
Suddenly to the north, fire flared high in the sky.
She stopped.
Torak had said that the cure would be made in a rite on a cliff top. Although "the cure" had to be a Soul-Eater trap.
She set off at a run toward the fire.
A noise behind her. She ducked. Too late. A hand grabbed her arm and yanked her back.
On the Crag, no trace remained of Tenris the kindly Seal Mage. That mask had been burned away, leaving nothing but ashes and bitterness.
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murdered Hunter; that the pale objects set in a ring around him were its teeth.
Out of the corner of his vision, Torak caught a furtive movement.
There--beyond the wall of driftwood the girl tokoroth was building, and soaking in seal oil.
Wolf.
Torak's heart tightened with dread. Three against one. If Wolf tried to help him, he'd get himself killed.
"Uff!"
called Torak, warning him back.
"Uff! Uff!!"
Go back!
Torak tried to tell him silently.
You can't help me!
Fortunately, neither Tenris nor the tokoroth had spotted Wolf. All three were staring at Torak.
"What
did you say?" Tenris scowled.
Torak thought quickly. Jerking his head at the ring
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of teeth around him, he said, "Those teeth--they're the Hunter's, aren't they? What are they for?"
"And for that a Hunter had to die?"
"What do I care? They can't hurt me." With his twisted claw he touched the amulet at his throat. "A masking charm."
Wolf was nosing his way through the gap, perilously close to the edge.
Quickly Torak spoke to Tenris. "You said you thought I was 'the one.' What did you mean?"
The ruined face darkened. "The one who destroyed the bear."
Torak tensed. "The bear."
"I created it," Tenris said between his teeth. "I caught the demon. I trapped it in the body of the bear. You destroyed it."
For a moment, Torak forgot about Wolf. "You're lying. Whoever made the bear was crippled. A crippled wanderer."
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Tenris put back his head and laughed. Still laughing, he rose to his feet and circled the fire, limping piteously. "Easy, isn't it? Although I confess I did get very bored." Tenris had created the bear--the bear that killed Fa. . . .
Torak thought of the clearing where he and his father had camped on that final night. Fa's face, laughing at the joke Torak had made. Fa's face as he lay dying . . . "What's this?" sneered Tenris. "Tears?"
"You killed him," whispered Torak. "You killed Fa. . . ."
At that moment the boy tokoroth touched his ankle. Torak lashed out savagely.
"You killed Fa!"
he screamed, fighting his bonds with all the rage and grief inside him. The rawhide held firm.
"Wolf!" shouted Torak, struggling to push himself off the horn of rock, but held back by the bindings around his ankles.
"Ufft Uffl Uff!"
Tenris lunged with the harpoon.
Wolf gave a great twisting leap--and the vicious barbs pierced empty fog.
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Tenris threw down his harpoon and turned to Torak. "He's gone," he said. "Not even a wolf could get past that now."
"Nor can your tokoroth," said Torak. Both tokoroth were gone, clattering off down the mountain after Wolf.
Tenris shrugged. "I don't need them anymore," he said as he took up the knife that lay on Torak's chest. "I can manage this part on my own."
Torak's heart was pounding. Wolf was gone. The wall of flames cut him off from all hope of rescue. He might be able to work his feet out of the bindings--he might even be able to push his wrists over the horn and roll off the altar--but what then? He was trapped on a cliff top, pitted against a grown man with a knife and a harpoon, who meant to kill him and eat his heart.
But there was one thing he had to find out first.
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"Why did you do it?" he said as he stared up into the yellow eyes of the Soul-Eater. "Why did you kill my father?"
Tenris shook his head in wonder. "Ah, you're just like him! Always wanting to know
why.
Why, why, why."
"He wasn't worthless," said Torak.
"What do you know?" snarled Tenris.
"He was my father," said Torak.
Tenris stood over him and bared his blackened teeth. "He was my brother."
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Chapter THIRTY-TWO
"He's got a knife," she said.
"It's too far up," said the Seal boy beside her. "We'd never get there in time."
"But we can't just--"
"Look at that fire--it's right across the Neck! What are you going to do? Fly?"
Renn shot him a suspicious glance. Despite his
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professed change of heart, she still didn't trust him. But as she opened her mouth to protest, a wolf howled.
"What
is
that?" said the Seal boy.
"It's Wolf," said Renn. She cupped her ear to listen. "Oh, this is bad, he's somewhere in the west!
Why?
His jaw dropped. "I won't let you shoot him! Whatever he's done--"
"How else do we save Torak?"
"But he's still our Mage!"
"Bale," said Renn urgently, "I don't want to kill him any more than you do, but we have to do something!"
Just then the Soul-Eater moved away from the edge, and disappeared. With a cry Renn ran backward, desperate to catch sight of him again. "The overhang's too deep," said Bale. "Quick. The skinboat."
"What?" cried Renn.
Bale seized her wrist and dragged her after him. "You can't see the altar rock from the land--only from the Sea!"
Down they raced toward the water. Bale ducked into a shelter, then came out again, and tossed Renn her quiver and bow. Grabbing his skinboat from a rack, 325
"I can see them!" shouted Renn.
With astonishing skill, Bale brought his craft about. Renn lurched and would have fallen overboard if he hadn't taken hold of her jerkin and yanked her back.
On the cliff, Torak still wasn't moving. A terrible fear seized her that they were too late.
"We're too far out," muttered Bale. "No one could make that shot."
Setting her teeth, Renn forced herself to ignore him--to think only of the target, as Fin-Kedinn had taught her.
Staring hard at the target, she took aim.
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The arrow came arching out of the sky, and thudded deep into Tenris's palm. With a howl he fell to his knees, and the knife clattered away across the rock.