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
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Outside, he found the remains of a branch, savaged to pieces. A shred of chewed raven feather. A paw print.
Frowning, he squatted to examine it.
The sun sank below the trees, and the Lake turned a dark wolf gray. Wolf gray ...
Slowly Torak rose to his feet. "Wolf," he said out loud.
The guilt was almost more than he could bear. "I've got to find him!" he cried. "I've got to make it all right!"
He hadn't been in the Forest since his madness, and it felt unnervingly dark and still. He wondered if, like Wolf, it was angry with him for having forsaken it. But trees live longer than people, and are slower to anger. The Forest welcomed him back. It gave him
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With shocking suddenness, a large wolf emerged from behind the boulder. Its muzzle wrinkled in a snarl as it stalked toward him.
Hardly daring to breathe, Torak edged back. The
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pack had left someone to guard the cubs. He should have thought.
The cub-watcher advanced on him.
Torak averted his gaze and whined distressfully.
Sorry! Don't attack!
The cub-watcher growled.
Go away!
Slowly Torak withdrew to the far side of the water lily lake. To be threatened by a wolf! He was still far from full recovery.
The short summer night descended as he waited. Frogs piped in the reeds. An otter surfaced and stared at him, then flipped under, leaving the lily pads gently rocking. He nodded off.
His dreams were troubled by strange yowls, and he woke with a start. He felt hot and thickheaded, and his throat was so sore that it hurt to swallow. The night was unusually quiet.
Too quiet.
Vaguely troubled, he decided to check the Den-- even though it wasn't yet dawn, and the pack wouldn't be back.
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badger, too low for bear.
He felt a prickling between his shoulder blades. He knew that feeling; everyone does, who lives in a Forest. It's the feeling of being watched. Drawing his knife, he moved as silently as his labored breathing would allow.
Something lay at the foot of the boulder.
The cub-watcher. Its flank had been ripped open, its throat chewed to pulp. It had put up a desperate fight to save the cubs.
Torak knelt and placed his hand above one white paw. "Go in peace. May you find the First Tree, and hunt forever beneath its boughs." In the earth around the carcass he found tracks: rounder than a wolf's, their outline blurred by fur.
Lynx.
Rising, Torak looked about him.
Couldn't see anything. He must've scared it away.
A whine from the Den told him that the wolf had done its job well. Sheathing his knife, Torak crawled inside.
The tunnel was just big enough to admit him. As he
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He whined to reassure the cubs, but they were terrified. He was a stranger, and they'd just lost their uncle.
Backing out, he emerged from the Den--to see a large shadow bound away from the slaughtered wolf.
"Be off!" he shouted, waving his arms. His shouts ended in a coughing fit which bent him double.
The lynx leaped into a tree and sat, lashing its tail.
Drawing his knife, Torak took his place by the dead wolf at the foot of the boulder. He would guard the cubs till the pack returned.
It was strange, though, that his arrival hadn't frightened the lynx away. Lynx rarely attack people, and when they hunt, they target the young and the sick. More coughing seized him. When it was over, he was
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sweating. His breath sounded like the crisping of dry leaves.
Then it came to him. The lynx knew he was sick. It heard it in his voice and smelled it on his skin. Like the cubs, he was simply prey.
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The lynx dropped soundlessly from the branch and began to prowl. Torak tried howling for Wolf, but only managed a croak. The night was warm, the stink of the slaughtered cub-watcher thick in his throat. The carcass lay so close that he could touch it.
Too close. He should drag it farther off, so the lynx could feed in peace. Let it take the dead, and leave the living.
But while he was doing that, it might come for the
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cubs. He pictured the small souls padding about, nosing their corpses. He tightened his grip on his knife.
A noise behind him. He spun around. Saw only the boulder. But lynx are superb climbers: They leap on their prey from above.
If only he had his axe. Why had he left it at the shelter? To have left without food, axe, or tinder ...
No tinder.
Another spasm of coughing gripped. When it was over, his ribs ached, and black spots darted before his eyes.
The lynx crouched in the shadows, just out of reach. He saw its blank silver eyes, smelled its rank cat smell.
Then he saw something that made his belly turn over. At the mouth of the Den, directly behind the lynx, two stubby muzzles were emerging. Torak barked a warning.
Uff!
Danger!
The muzzles edged back inside.
The lynx caught the movement and turned its head.
"Here! Here!" shouted Torak to distract it. Yelling, throwing stones, he edged away from the Den.
The lynx bared its teeth and hissed at him. But 208
Lashing its tail, the lynx slunk back to the carcass.
Torak stood with legs braced, shaking with fever. The scab on his breastbone had reopened, and warmth seeped down his chest.
He could see no sign of the cubs. But he knew that soon they would be nosing their way out again.
When they did, the lynx would be on them.
Wolf loped through the trees. He recognized those caws! What were the ravens doing at the Den?
The wind turned, carrying scents of lynx and wolf flesh and Tall Tailless. He quickened his pace, and the pack ran with him.
The females were fastest and reached the Den before him. He saw the lead female leap at the lynx and chase it into the Forest, with Darkfur and the others in pursuit. Wolf skittered to a halt. He saw Whitepaw lying Not-Breath by the Den. He saw Tall Tailless clutching his great claw in his forepaw. He knew at once what had 209
happened. Anger, joy, and sorrow fought within him.
Blackear, Prowler, and the lead wolf were staring at Tall Tailless, hackles raised.
Wolf trembled with longing to go to him; but it was for the lead wolf to decide if Tall Tailless was a friend of the pack.
The lead wolf went to the meat that had been Whitepaw, then walked stiffly toward Tall Tailless.
Tall Tailless stood quietly, with eyes averted, as a stranger should. Wolf was troubled to see that he swayed.
Still with hackles raised, the lead wolf sniffed Tall Tailless.
The cubs appeared at the jaws of the Den, whining, but they didn't come out. They were waiting to see what would happen.
The hackles of the lead wolf went down, and he rubbed his flank against Tall Tailless's leg. Then he ran to greet the cubs.
Prowler and Blackear bounded past Tall Tailless to
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do the same, and he sank to the ground--ignoring the ravens, Wolf noticed happily.
Dropping his ears, Wolf wagged his tail.
Pack-brother,
said Tall Tailless. Wolf gave a whine and raced toward him. 211
Safe with the pack, Torak had his first good sleep in two moons. He woke in the afternoon, curled up at the edge of the denning place. The wound on his chest hurt, but his cough was almost gone, and he felt much better.
Sensing Torak was awake, Wolf bounded over to
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him, and they licked muzzles in a playful, everyday way, as if all the bitterness had never happened.
I'm sorry,
Torak said in wolf talk--although it was only a tiny part of what he felt.
I know,
said Wolf. And that was that.
It was a hot afternoon and the dead wolf stank, so Torak dragged it into the Forest. Let the ravens peck it undisturbed; and if the lynx returned for its kill, let it feed. Then he went to find food for himself. After cutting a spear from a hazel tree, he woke up a fire and hardened the tip, then went to try his luck in the water lily lake. It wasn't long before he speared a pike. Watched by 213
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everything was just
right.
On the other side of the lake, the reeds parted, as if for an unseen presence, and the lead wolf turned his head to watch. Idly, Torak wondered what he saw.