Authors: Michelle Paver
Tags: #Social Issues, #Prehistory, #Animals, #Demoniac possession, #Wolves & Coyotes, #Juvenile Fiction, #Prehistoric peoples, #Fantasy & Magic, #General, #Horror & Ghost Stories, #Historical, #Fiction, #Values & Virtues, #Good and evil
"What did this?" said Bale with a grimace. "Kill it," said Renn. "No!" ordered a voice behind them. "Throw it back. Don't touch!" They turned to face a cluster of sharp green faces and sharper spears. Bale moved in front of Renn, but she stepped aside. With her fists on her heart, she addressed the
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woman who--to judge from her armlet of otter fur-was the Leader.
"I'm Raven Clan," she said. "My friend is Seal. We mean no harm."
"No talk!" admonished the woman. Then to the others, "Return that accursed thing to the Lake. We're taking the strangers to camp."
"But Ananda, why?" protested a man. "At a time like this--"
"At a time like this, Yolun," cut in the Leader, "we can't let them go free; they'd only make it worse."
The man called Yolun lapsed into tight-lipped silence while two others broke up the trap and set the monster free.
They headed south. Beside her, Renn felt Bale shaking with rage. She threw him an urgent glance and shook her head. Fighting was useless. The Otters bristled with greenstone spears and arrows tipped with the beaks of diverbirds. Trying to escape would be futile. The only reason they hadn't been tied up was because there was no need.
Renn studied Yolun as he sat hunched in the prow, stabbing the water with his paddle. His fish-skin jerkin was fringed at neck and hem, evoking the reeds. His eyes were outlined with earthblood to imitate the red glare of the diverbird. He kept glancing resentfully over his shoulder, but beneath his hostility, Renn sensed something else.
Bale bent and whispered in her ear. "Their craft are heavy and slow. If we could reach my skinboat, we could outrun them."
"And go where?" she whispered back. "They know the Lake; we don't. Besides, I don't think they're angry so much as frightened."
"That makes them even more dangerous."
He was right.
Like Bale, Renn was seeing it for the first time. Like him, she gasped.
"Why do they live like this?" he murmured.
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resentment returned. "We don't expect strangers to understand."
"I'm no stranger," said Renn. "I'm Open Forest, like you."
"You're not Otter Clan!" he snapped. "No more talk."
Wreathed in greenish smoke, the camp of the Otters floated above the Lake, linked to land by a single narrow walkway.
"It's built on stilts," said Bale, amazed.
Yolun's companion moored the craft to one of the
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outer piles, and a hatch opened overhead. A rope ladder dropped down, and Yolun ordered them to climb.
Yolun snorted, as if he'd had proof enough.
"We're not enemies," said Bale.
"So you say," said Ananda. "Eat."
Renn recognized the young woman as a Raven who'd mated with an Otter the previous summer. "Dyrati?"
Dyrati avoided her eyes. "Eat," she said, ladling a
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gray sludge over Renn's gruel. It looked like thick honey, but the stench of rotten fish made Renn's eyes water.
"Stickleback grease," said Dyrati. "Eat!"
"Eat!" commanded Yolun. "Or do you scorn our food?"
They were all watching her.
She prodded the stinking mess and felt her gorge rise.
"How
can
you?" whispered Renn.
"I like it," he mumbled with a shrug. "We make the same thing in the islands, but with cod."
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began." She shuddered. "People would fall into a deathlike sleep and wake screaming, bitten by slithering demons in their dreams. Then the catch failed."
At the mention of Torak, Renn and Bale stiffened. Neither dared meet the other's glance.
The Leader was on it at once. "You know the outcast. Who are you?"
"I'm Bale of the Seal Clan," Bale said proudly.
"And I'm Renn of the Raven Clan. I'm Fin-Kedinn's brother's daughter. Dyrati knows me."
Dyrati folded her arms and said not a word.
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Renn showed them her wrist-guard. "See this? It's greenstone. Fin-Kedinn made it for me in the Otter way, which he learned when he lived with your clan." An old man lifted rheumy eyes from his bowl. "I remember. An angry young man, but he honored the Lake." "Even if the girl is who she says," said Yolun, "what of the boy? A Seal on the Lake? How can that be right?" "He has the waterskill," Renn said quickly. "And look at the reeds tattooed on his arms." Bale's tattoos were of seaweed, but he had the sense to keep quiet.
"None of this matters!" exclaimed Yolun. "You all saw how they started when I mentioned the outcast!"
The Leader searched Bale's face. "Do you know the outcast?"
Bale lifted his chin. "Yes. But that's no crime."
"Helping him is," snarled Yolun. Bale tensed.
"You see that?" cried Yolun. "They're in league with him; that makes them outcast too! Ananda, we must kill them, or the troubles will get worse!" "No!" protested Renn. "We have nothing to do with your troubles. But--but I do know who's causing them."
"How can you know? Why are you here?" Ananda leaned closer. She had strange, gray-green eyes that
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seemed to hold the light of the Lake.
Renn's heart began to race. If she lied, the Leader would know it. If she admitted their purpose ...
There was stillness in the shelter. The only sounds were the sputter of rushlights and the splash of water far below.
"She's lying," said Yolun. "A Soul-Eater? Where's the proof?"
The Leader never took her eyes off Renn. "She speaks the truth," she said at last. "But not the whole truth." She gave a curt nod. "The Mage will uncover the rest." 166
"Say nothing," Renn whispered to Bale as Yolun pushed them along a walkway wreathed in smoke. Bale bent his head to hers. "You heard Ananda. Their Mage will find out the truth. How do we stop him?"
"Keep your thoughts away from Torak," she replied. "Fix your mind on the strongest feeling you know. Anger. Hatred. Grief."
He frowned. "Those are all bad."
The smoke parted, and they found themselves on a round platform on which stood a small reed shelter. The doorway was edged with the teeth of an enormous pike. 167
Above it swam an otter, beautifully carved in gleaming alder wood.
Yolun forced them to their knees, and Ananda motioned them to enter. Filled with misgiving, they crawled inside.
Twins, thought Renn. Dread stole through her. First the twin fawns, then the two-headed fish. Now this. What did it mean?
Ananda and Yolun forced her and Bale lower, then touched their own foreheads to the floor. "Mage," they said.
As one, the twins raised their heads.
"She sees the world of the spirit," said Yolun with reverence.
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"How can this be?" said Bale. "They can't be more than ten summers old."
The boy's lips drew back from pointed gray teeth. "Age has no meaning," he said in a thin, piping voice. "We are the spirit reborn. We are the Mage." Renn felt a shiver run down her spine.
"We were here at the Beginning," said the boy. "We saw the Great Flood wash the land clean. We saw the Lake become."
The blind girl moaned. The boy's face tightened in distress. "But now evil dishonors the Lake! The terror comes in the night!" Ananda spoke. "Mage, these strangers admit to knowing the outcast who took the sacred clay." "The outcast didn't take it," said the boy. "He caused it to be taken." "But Mage," said Yolun, "it's the same thing." "No," said the boy. "Then tell us," said Ananda. "Why have they come? What should we do with them?"
Yolun untied a rolled-up mat, covering the doorway.
Renn felt trapped. If these weird children
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discovered that they wanted to help Torak--if they really
could
see her thoughts ...
She shook herself awake.
"Soft, soft," whispered the boy. "
It comes."
First they heard it, swooshing and gurgling into the shelter. Then they felt it: water swirling around their legs.
Renn gave a start. Bale shifted in alarm.
"Don't move," warned the boy.
She could only watch as the blind girl reached both hands toward Bale. He tried to pull away, but the unseen waterweed held him fast.
The tips of the girl's fingers were white and
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puckered, as if they'd been too long in the water. Like minnows they flickered over his face, tracing the line of his jaw, the muscles of his throat.
Bale gasped.
The white fingers darted to the nape of his neck-- and she drew back with a moan. "Ah! You must use your time well!"
She released him--and Bale bowed his head, breathing hard.
She saw him not as she'd seen him last, huddled in the willow thicket, but on a day in spring when they'd been hunting. He was down on one knee, examining the bitten-off end of a hazel twig. His dark hair flopped in his eyes, and his face wore the rapt expression it always did when he was tracking. He caught her watching and flashed one of his rare, wolfish grins.