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
It
was
Renn.
She sat with her back to him, tending the fire. In the gloom he made out her pale arms and her long, loose hair.
To make sure she was real, he put out a clumsy hand and grasped her wrist.
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Her bones were light and small. Yes, real.
"I knew you'd find me," he said. It didn't begin to express what he felt.
Her skin was warm and smooth; he didn't want to let go.
Smooth.
No zigzag tattoos. "I knew I'd find you, too," said Seshru the Viper Mage. 229
Torak tried to move, but he couldn't. He wasn't tied up; his limbs simply refused to obey. He said, "The crowberries. You poisoned them." Her eyes glinted. "But I'm not going to hurt you." "Why would I believe that?"
"Because I would have done it by now. I could have cut out your heart and eaten it. Not even your wolves
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could have reached you up here." She leaned down and whispered in his ear. "But I want you alive!"
His heart was thumping so hard that she must be able to hear it. "Why?" he said.
But she only laughed and licked her lips with her little pointed black tongue.
As she twisted to tend the fire, her tunic of supple buckskin fell about her like water. It was fringed with snakeskin, which caressed her naked arms and calves, shimmering with every move. Torak couldn't take his eyes off her. Fear and revulsion burned in him--this woman was evil, she'd helped kill his father--but he couldn't look away.
He watched her pass her hand over the lid of a basket, evoking a rustle from whatever lived within. He watched her twist a garland of herbs and set it on her brow, and paint long, wavering stripes on her arms: green snakes which wriggled to life on her pale skin. Fascinated and repelled, he watched--and she smiled her knowing smile, enjoying her power.
With a forked stick, she dropped a stone from the fire into a rawhide pot, sending up a hiss of steam.
"What's that?" he said.
Her lip curled. "Hot water. I was a Healer, remember?"
Wringing out a piece of buckskin, she bathed his chest, then smoothed on a cooling salve. It felt good.
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The pain was gone.
"It won't fester anymore," she told him. "I no longer need it to draw you to me. Though it's as well I summoned you when I did."
I summoned you.
The voice he'd heard in his sleep hadn't been Renn, but Seshru. "What do you want?" he said between his teeth.
As if she'd called to Wolf, a howl rang out from below.
Come down!
Seshru smiled. "Now he knows me! I've shed my mask. He knows who has defeated him!"
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was too strong. For a moment, he despaired.
He heard wings. Rip and Rek alighted on a boulder behind her.
She was trying to flatter him. She wouldn't succeed. And yet--her touch was gentle. He struggled to keep his thoughts together.
"You--stole the red deer antlers," he said. "You poisoned the drink when I did the rite. You made me spirit walk in the elk." She smiled her beautiful, maddening smile. "So strong. And to fight off soul-sickness!"
She laughed. "Ah, we're so alike, you and I! Both outcasts, both unimaginably strong. That's why the clans hunt us. The weak will always fear the strong." Rip and Rek flew away. Torak scarcely noticed.
"So alike," breathed Seshru. "Why fight it? Why not accept it?"
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"No," he said with an effort. "We're not alike. You've killed people. You've broken clan law."
"But that's all it is," she countered, "the law of the clans. Only the Soul-Eaters know the law of the World Spirit. That's why it delivered the spirit walker to me." She paused. "But why didn't I know you at once for what you are? How did you conceal yourself from me? The answer must lie somewhere." With a supple movement, she reached for his gear.
"Your father's knife," she said with distaste. "A traitor's knife. Slate, antler, sinew. Nothing there. The axe, then. Not yours, I think." Taking his hand, she measured it against the axehead. How clever she was! If the axe had been made for him, its head would have spanned from the heel of his palm to the tip of his middle finger. It was slightly longer.
"It has the Raven mark on the handle," she mused, "but the head is greenstone.... They say that Fin-Kedinn lived with the frog-eaters for a time." She read the truth in his face. "So it
is
his! You stole Fin-Kedinn's axe.
You
broke clan law!"
Next, she took his medicine pouch and drew out his medicine horn. Her lips thinned. "Your mother's." She set it down. "Nothing. The answer lies elsewhere." With a shudder of relief, Torak remembered that the
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strand of Renn's hair was inside the pouch. Seshru hadn't found it. She was not all-powerful. She could make mistakes.
Seshru sensed the change in him, and her features turned colder than wind-carved ice. "Do not imagine you can hide from me."
Torak met her stare and held it.
Torak's belly turned over. The pebble he'd made for Renn.
"Have you any idea of the power this gives me?" she hissed. "With this I blighted your souls! You have no will of your own. You belong to me!" Her fist tightened on the pebble--and Torak's heart clenched.
She opened her fist--and he breathed again.
Now she was casting off the lid of the basket, and a viper was sliding over the edge. Silently, silently it
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flowed into her lap. Its zigzag markings were stark down its glistening silver length, and its lidless red eye was fixed on its mistress.
"You wanted this, spirit walker," breathed the Viper Mage. "You put yourself in my power. You left the stone for me to find."
"No," he whispered.
Her eyes pierced his souls. "Then why make it?"
"A--a present," he stammered.
"For whom?"
"... A girl."
"Why take it back?"
"To tell her I was gone." He tried to push Renn's image from his mind, but the Viper Mage was faster.
"Her name is Renn," she said. "Who is she?"
With a huge effort, he dragged his gaze from hers-- only to settle on the greenstone axe. Seshru was on it in a heartbeat. "Fin-Kedinn's. She's Fin-Kedinn's child." 236 "... His brother's."
"... His brother's child," she said tonelessly. "Of course. He would have cared for his brother's child."
Torak couldn't bear to hear her mention Renn.
But Renn is far away, he told himself. Renn is safe.
"No." Seshru twisted around again. "She is here on the Lake. I saw her in a boat with a boy, a tall boy with yellow hair. But they can't help you now." Was she telling the truth? Were Renn and Bale looking for him, or was it another of her lies?
"Why do you want me alive?" he said. "What do you
want?"
"You know what I want."
"My power. You want to be the spirit walker."
"I have that already. I can make you spirit walk whenever I wish. I want more. I want--the fire-opal."
To hear her name it... Her voice breathed life into the image in his mind. He saw its pulsing red heart.
"It--it was lost in the ice," he said.
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remains. Your father must have told you before he died."
"No."
"He hid it. He hid it and he told you where, as he lay dying--"
"No--"
"--as he lay in agony, his life bleeding away, his guts ripped out by the demon bear--"
"No!" he screamed.
Clawing the nightshade from her brow, she flung it on the fire. Blue smoke wound about her, pungent, dizzying.
"Your body can't move, but your souls can. Your souls will go wherever I command. Your souls will do whatever I want."
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The black sludge was bitter in his mouth. Lights flashed behind his eyes, sickening spirals of light.
He saw the dark hair of the Viper Mage floating like snakes about her white face. He felt his souls ripped from his marrow. He screamed ... ... silently, his black tongue tasted the air.
The last thing he heard before he became snake was the voice of the Viper Mage, commanding him to find Renn.
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Faster than thought, the snake slithered down the rock face. It tasted the scent of cricket and fern. It felt the scurrying of ant and shrew. Air, leaf, water, prey, light-- it ignored them all. Its mistress had sent it after richer quarry.
The snake felt this change, but that was
all
it felt. No pleasure or discomfort, eagerness or fear. Those
240 feelings it recognized, because it tasted them on the struggling prey and on the mountains of warm meat which shook the earth--but such feelings were not snake.
This made the souls of the snake very strong: pure intent, unclouded by emotion. Torak would not have believed such strength could exist in so slender a body. His own souls were weak from the poison; he couldn't turn the snake from its purpose. He could only shiver inside its small, cold brain as it sped through the Lake, deadly as an arrow.
When the threat was past, he emerged. He crested the mossy hillside of a log, slithered under bracken taller than trees. At last he caught the scent of 241 slumbering male, and beyond it, the sweeter scent of female.
Bite, bite.
The voice of his mistress wove in and out of his snake mind. Again the part of him that was Torak tried to turn the creature, but his muscles would not obey.
Bite, bite.
No!
shouted Torak in the cold snake brain.
No! This is Renn!
The snake stretched its jaws wide--its fangs unfolded from the roof of its mouth and pointed down--they filled with venom, ready to strike....
Bite, bite.
Torak woke.
Above him the clouds spun, jolting him on a sea of sickness. Gradually, he became aware of the sound of
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the spring. At his side the Viper Mage sat motionless, her face as white as bone. The vipers were gone.
"It is done?" she said.
He nodded.