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
At last he found it, on the banks of a furious Fast Wet.
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at all,
and they were practically deaf. So Wolf went unobserved as he roamed the edge of the Den, seeking his pack-brother.
He couldn't find him.
It had rained the previous Light, and many scents had been washed away; but if Tall Tailless had been here, Wolf would have smelled him.
Maybe his pack-brother had gone hunting. Yes, that must be it. And he couldn't have gone far, because like
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all taillesses, he ran on his hind legs, which made him slow.
But though Wolf searched and searched, he found nothing.
The awful truth crashed down on him like a falling tree.
Tall Tailless was gone.
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To avoid meeting the Ravens, Torak stayed off the clan paths and kept to the hidden deer trails that wound up the Widewater valley.
The prey soon sensed that he wasn't hunting them, and relaxed. An elk munched willowherb as he passed. 59
Chapter EIGHT
The new leaves were still crinkled from the bud, and letting in plenty of sunlight. He made good speed. Like all Forest people he traveled light, carrying only 60
what he needed for hunting, fire making and sleep.
do
all day?" She'd laughed so much she'd fallen over.
At the time, that had made him cross. Now it made him miss them all the more.
"A sick man escaped from our camp last night," said one. "If you hear howling, run. He doesn't know he's a man anymore."
The other shook his head grimly. "This sickness. Where did it come from? It's as if the very breath of summer is poisoned."
As midafternoon wore on, Torak began to feel watched.
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After the Ravens' reindeer-hide shelters, he was keen to get back to the way he'd lived with Fa, so he built a shelter of living trees. He found three beech saplings and bent them inward, lashing them together with pine root to make a snug sleeping space. This he thatched with fallen branches, and covered with leaf mold, weighing that down with more branches. In the morning he would untie the saplings, and they would spring back unharmed.
After making a mattress of last autumn's crunchy beech mast, he dragged his gear inside. The shelter
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had a rich, earthy tang. "A good smell," he said out loud. His voice sounded uneasy and forced.
He was hanging his cooking-skin in a tree out of the way of foragers, when a cry echoed through the Forest.
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He froze.
It was not the yowl of a vixen, or a lynx seeking a mate. It was a man. Or something that had once been a man. Far in the west, by the sound of it.
He thought of the Ravens sitting around their long-fire. The smell of woodsmoke and baked salmon; Oslak's rumbling laugh . . .
The very breath of summer is poisoned.
Quickly he unrolled his sleeping-sack, crawled in and laid his weapons by his side. A moment ago he'd been wide awake. Now he was exhausted. He slept.
Shrill laughter tore through his dreams. Hazily he became aware of a loud groaning--both familiar and deadly. . . .
He was alert in an instant. It was the sound of a falling tree-
and it was falling his way.
His sleeping-sack was twisted around his legs, he couldn't get free. Wriggling like a caterpillar, he
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Sparks shot upward. Dark branches swayed and came to rest.
Torak lay among the ferns: heart pounding, sweat chilling his skin. He'd checked for storm-weakened trees, he knew he had. Besides, there was hardly any wind. That laughter. Malevolent, yet horribly childlike. It hadn't been only in his dreams.
Not daring to move, he waited till he was sure that nothing else was coming down. Then he went to inspect the ruins of the shelter.
And yet--if the Follower had wanted to kill him, why warn him by laughing? It was as if it was playing with him. Putting him in danger, to see what he would do. The fire was still burning. With a glowing brand in one hand and his knife in the other, he took a look at the ash tree.
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He found axe-marks. Small, crude blows. But effective.
This was odd, though. No tracks on the ground. No sign that someone had braced himself to hack at the tree.
Again he swept the ground with firelight. Nothing. Maybe he'd missed something, but he didn't think so. The one thing he knew about was tracking. With his finger he touched the oozing tree-blood. It was thickening. That meant the tree trunk had been cut some time before, then pushed over while he slept. He frowned. It's impossible to fell a tree in silence. Why hadn't he heard anything?
Then it came to him. He'd filled his waterskin at the river--which had drowned out other sounds.
But Wolf isn't here,
Torak told himself savagely.
He's far away on the Mountain.
For the first time in six moons, he couldn't howl for his lost friend. He didn't like to think of who--or what--might answer his call.
It was past middle-night by the time he'd salvaged his gear and built another shelter, and he was numb
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It's your fault,
the older trees seemed to whisper.
You bring evil with you. . . .
Then he saw the gleam of eyes on the other side of the fire. His hand tightened on his axe. "Who are you?" he said hoarsely.
The creature grunted.
"Who are you?" Torak repeated.
It moved into the light.
Torak tensed.
A boar. An enormous male, fully two paces from snout to tail, and heavier than three sturdy men. Its large, furry brown ears were pricked, and its small 67
clever eyes met Torak's warily.
The boar took no more notice of Torak, and after a while, he got into his sleeping-sack and curled up, listening to the comforting sound of snuffling. His new companion was gruff and none too friendly, but welcome all the same. Boars have keen senses. While it stayed close, no sick man or malevolent Follower could get near him.
But soon it would be gone.
As Torak stared into the red heart of the embers, he wondered if Fin-Kedinn had been right; if he'd let himself be tricked into leaving the Ravens. Maybe 68
whoever--whatever--was after him had got him exactly where it wanted. Alone in the Forest.
Whoever it was, they'd been busy in the night.
It was raining when Torak crawled out of the shelter. The boar had gone, the fire was cold, and someone had rolled away the stones and smoothed out the ashes. Someone had taken Torak's arrows--had crept inside the shelter while he slept, withdrawn them from the quiver by his head, and planted them in the ash to make a pattern.
Torak recognized it at once. The three-pronged mark of the Soul-Eaters.
He went down on one knee and yanked out an arrow.
No one emerged from the dripping undergrowth.
"Coward!" shouted Torak.
The Forest waited.
His voice echoed through the trees.
"What do you want? Come out and face me!
What do you want?"
Rain pattered on the leaves and ran silently down
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his face. His only answer was the rattle of a woodpecker far away. .
As the afternoon wore on, their paths crossed. They drank at the same stream, and rested in the same drowsy glade. Once, as they were both searching for wood mushrooms, the boar gave a tetchy grunt and chased Torak away, then stamped on the mushroom he'd been about to eat. When Torak went to look, he saw why. It wasn't a wood mushroom at all, but a poisonous look-alike, as its bruised red flesh showed. In the boar's bad-tempered way, it had been warning him to be more careful.