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
He was used to the Open Forest, where the trees let in plenty of sun, and the undergrowth is usually fairly light; but now he had reached the hills that guarded the Deep Forest. Towering oaks reared before him with mighty limbs spread wide to ward him back. The undergrowth was taller than he was: dense stands of black yew and poisonous hemlock. The sky was hidden by an impenetrable canopy of leaves.
There had been no sign of the boar all day, and Torak missed him. He began to fear not only what followed him, but what lay ahead. He thought of the tales his father had told him.
In the late afternoon, with the rain still falling, Torak paused at a stream to rest. Hanging his gear on a holly tree, he went to refill his waterskin. In the mud he found fresh tracks. The boar had been here before him, and recently: the tracks were
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On the other side of the stream, the bracken parted--and there was the boar.
Something was wrong. The coarse brown fur was matted with sweat. The small eyes were dull, and rimmed with red.
Torak let fall the waterskin and backed away.
The boar gave a squeal of rage.
And charged.
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Chapter NINE
Torak leaped for the nearest tree as the boar crashed toward him.
Panic lent him strength. He caught at a branch and hauled himself up, swinging his legs out of reach as the tusks gouged the trunk where his foot had been. The tree shuddered. Torak clawed bark.
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broke with a crack. The boar threw up its head and glared.
"But I'm
youy friend"
he whispered.
The boar gave a wheezy roar and thundered off into the Forest.
The rain eased, and the sun came out. Around him he saw holly and oak trees, with an undergrowth of bracken and foamy meadowsweet. It all looked so peaceful. The boar's mustardy scent hung in the air. It could be five paces away and he'd never know it. Not till it was too late.
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Below him a redstart alighted on a clump of burdock, scattering raindrops. He thought, if
wouldn
't
have come if the boar were near.
To make sure, he drew his knife and, with a quick apology to the willow's spirit, lopped off a small branch and tossed it down.
The redstart flew off. The bracken exploded.
The boar tossed the shredded stick into the bracken, wheeled around, and lowered its head. Then it threw itself against the tree.
Its shoulder hit the trunk like a boulder thudding to earth. Willow leaves fell like rain. Grimly, Torak clung on.
Again the boar struck.
And again.
In a flood of panic, Torak saw what it was doing. It was trying to knock down the tree.
Oh, very clever, Torak, he snarled inside his head.
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Another thud--and this time, a loud splintering. Below him, a wound gaped in the bark. He saw pinkish-brown wood, and glistening tree-blood. . . . Do something. Fast.
The nearest oak was
maybe within
reach, if he edged along this branch-
smallest
tree within reach, but also the most fragile.
With startling suddenness, the boar stopped. Torak found its silence almost more terrifying than its rage.
He knew that this would be a fight to the death-- and that he would probably lose. His axe, bow and arrows hung neatly on the holly, two paces out of reach. Hope drained out of him like water into sand. There was no way out. He was going to die.
Without knowing what he was doing, he put his hands to his lips and howled.
Wolf! Where are you? Help me!
No answer came to him on the wind. Wolf was far away on the Mountain.
And this part of the Forest seemed empty of people. No one would hear his cry and come to his aid.
Howling made him feel vulnerable, but in a strange way it also gave him strength. You are a member of the
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Wolf Clan, he told himself. You are not going to die like a squirrel up a tree.
maybe
-- he could use the forked stick to hook the thong at the end of his axe, and lift it off the holly.
Beneath him, steam rose from the boar's sweat-blackened hide as it followed his every move.
Luckily, the willow branch that extended closest to the holly was also the sturdiest. Torak edged along it as far as he dared, holding the forked stick at full stretch. It didn't reach far enough.
He edged back again. Whipping off his rawhide belt, he looped it around the willow trunk, knotted it, and grasped its free end. That let him lean out farther. This time--yes! He hooked the forked stick through the axe-handle loop, and slowly lifted it off the holly branch.
The axe was heavy. The forked stick bent--and Torak watched helplessly as the axe slid off the end and thudded into the mud.
The boar squealed, hooked its tusks under the shaft, and tossed it into the bracken.
Torak could not allow himself to be disheartened.
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Still at full stretch, he moved the forked stick toward his bow. Gently,
gently
he eased it under the bowstring. The bow was much lighter than the axe--merely a strip of yew wood strung with sinew--and he lifted it easily off the branch. As soon as he had the bow slung over his shoulder, hope surged through him. "You see that?" he shouted at the boar. "You didn't think I could do it, did you?"
For a moment he felt ridiculously pleased. "Three arrows!" he yelled.
Three arrows. To kill a full-grown boar. That would be like trying to fell a bull elk with a bunch of flowers.
The boar snorted and resumed its attack on the trunk. The willow didn't have long to go.
Crouching in the shivering tree, Torak struggled to take aim. Branches hampered his draw arm--he couldn't get a clear shot. . . .
He loosed an arrow. It thudded into one shoulder. The boar roared, but went on tusking the roots. That arrow had done as much damage as a gnat bite. Clenching his teeth, Torak loosed another. It
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glanced harmlessly off the thick skull.
Use your wits, Torak. Hit a boar on the skull or the shoulder bone and you won't do any damage. Hit
behind
the shoulder, and you've got a chance at the heart.
Another splintering crunch--and the willow lurched wildly. Now Torak was barely out of reach.
The boar wheeled around for another attack. Just before it charged, Torak glimpsed paler fur behind its foreleg--took aim--and let fly. The arrow stuck deep. The boar squealed--and crashed onto its side.
Silence.
All Torak could hear was his own gasping breath, and the rain pattering in the bracken.
The boar lay still.
Torak waited as long as he could bear. When it didn't move, he lowered himself down to the ground.
Standing on the torn earth with the willow dying behind him, he felt exposed. He had no arrows and no axe; only his knife.
It
must
be dead. Its foam-flecked sides weren't moving.
But he would take no chances. The carcass was three paces away. He wouldn't go near it till he was better armed.
Stealthily, he made his way behind the wreck of the willow, searching the bracken for his axe.
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Behind him the boar staggered to its feet.
Desperately Torak scanned the bracken. It had to be somewhere. . . .
The boar threw itself into a charge.
Torak saw his axe--lunged for it--whirled around, and sank it into the massive neck.
The boar fell dead.
Torak stood, his legs braced, his chest heaving; both hands clutching his axe.
Letting go of the axe, he knelt and put a shaky hand on the hot, bristly pelt. "I'm sorry, my friend," he told the boar. "But I had to do it. May your souls ... be at peace." The glazed eye met his sightlessly. The boar's souls had already left. Torak could feel them. Close. Angry.
"I will treat you with respect," he said, caressing the sweat-soaked flank. "I promise."
In the matted fur, his hand touched something hard.
He parted the hairs--and gasped. It was a dart of some kind, buried deep in the boar's ribs.
With his knife he dug it out, and washed it in the stream. He'd never seen anything like it. It was shaped
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like a leaf, but viciously barbed, and made of fire-hardened wood.
Behind him among the trees, he heard laughter. He spun around. The laughter faded into the Forest.
The meaning of what he'd found sank in. This was why the boar had attacked. It had not been sick. It had been wounded. Terribly wounded by someone so cruel, so evil, that they had not gone after it and finished it off, as they were bound to do by all the sacred laws of the hunt, but had left it mad with pain, to savage anyone it found.
And since Torak seemed to be the only one in this part of the Forest, whoever had shot the boar must have intended its first victim to be him. 81
Chapter TEN
Torak wrapped the slab of boar's liver in burdock leaves and tucked it into the fork of an oak tree.
He limped back to the carcass. It was enormous. After a struggle, he'd managed to roll it over and slit the belly to get at the innards, but that was as far as he'd got. 82
Now to sew up the wound. He found some bone needles in his pack--which hung unharmed on the holly tree--and chose the thinnest, and a length of deer-sinew thread. The thread he'd made from the roe buck had been lumpy and thick, and when Vedna had seen it she'd pursed her lips and given him some of hers. It was as fine as spider's gossamer, and he thanked her under his breath.
The first stab of the needle was agonizing. Drawing
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A few days . . .
He would still be here, working on the carcass. If the Follower didn't get him first.
Black spots darted before his eyes, and he realized he was faint with hunger. Butchering the carcass would
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have to wait. He had to eat.
He'd finished the supplies he'd taken from the Ravens, but with the carcass, he had no shortage of meat. He'd never felt less like eating.