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
"Fin-Kedinn!" called Renn. "Catch!" She threw him Torak's knife, and Fin-Kedinn caught it, then drew the blade across his forearm, raising beads of blood. Grasping Torak's wrist, he did the same to him, and they clasped hands as the Raven Leader spoke the words of fostering. Then he turned on the crowd and his blue eyes blazed. "If he stays outcast, then so do I! Kill him--and you'll have to kill me, too!"
The Boar Clan Leader gripped his spear, but made no move.
No one stirred.
Taking his knife from the Raven Leader, Torak said quietly, "I don't want your blood on my hands."
The Boar Clan Leader taunted Torak. "Hiding behind your foster father?"
301
"Fin-Kedinn," urged Torak, "I've got to face them on my own."
Reluctantly the Raven Leader moved aside.
"Where's your courage now, outcast?" jeered the Boar Leader.
"Right here," said Torak.
It was a strange relief to be confronting them at last. "No more hiding--I'm sick of it!" he cried as he circled the ring of spears, his arms spread wide. "Here I am! You can kill me if you want! Who
cares
if I'm the wrong target? Who
cares
if this is what the Soul-Eaters want? The Oak Mage--the Eagle Owl Mage--the Viper Mage--they're still out there! Kill me, and you solve
nothing!"
There was a ringing in his ears as he unwound the headband which bound the handle. The last layer came
away, and he let fall the buckskin and tilted the hilt to drop its dreadful burden into his palm. The cold red light of the fire-opal blazed out. The Boar Clan Leader gasped. Fin-Kedinn's hand tightened on his staff.
Terror and awe filled every face.
A soft voice spoke. "Give it me."
Torak turned.
A shiver ran through the crowd.
"The Soul-Eater ... The Viper Mage is come...."
"Stay back," warned Seshru, stretching out her green hand and sweeping them with her forefinger. "Death shall come to any who attempt to harm me." Such was the power of the Soul-Eaters--such the terror the Viper Mage inspired--that not one of them moved.
"Give it me," she said to Torak, and her words were a caress meant only for him.
303
He fought to look away from that perfect green face.
A movement caught his eye. Some distance behind the Viper Mage, Wolf stood watching. Silently Torak warded him back. The Soul-Eater was too strong even for Wolf. "Give it me," repeated Seshru.
"I will," he said at last. "I will give it to you." Everyone gasped.
Stooping, Torak placed the fire-opal on a boulder between himself and the Viper Mage. "Take it," he said. "It's yours."
Seshru's black lips parted in a triumphant smile.
Still stooping, Torak snatched a lump of granite in his fist. He raised it high, and the eyes of the Viper Mage widened in horror. As she whipped out her knife and leaped toward him, he shouted, "Take it! Take the fire-opal!" He saw Renn nock an arrow to her bow and aim at her mother; Bale grab the weapons from her hands and take aim in his turn. He saw Seshru give a terrible scream and fall with an arrow in her breast as he brought the granite crashing down and shattered the fire-opal to fragments.
304
Silence rang from hill to hill.
The granite fell from Torak's hand as he stared at Bale. The Seal boy stood panting, Renn's bow in his hand.
Still alive, the scarlet fragments of the fire-opal glittered in the mud.
Still alive, the Viper Mage reached for them: writhing like a snake that has been cut in two.
Grimly, Fin-Kedinn raised his staff. "The Soul-Eater is dead," he declared. "Let all bear witness: The outcast shall be outcast
no more!"
After a moment's hesitation, Maheegun bowed his assent.
Then the Boar Clan Leader. Then Yolun for the Otters.
305
Then all the others.
Renn stayed on her knees by the Viper Mage, watching the rain wash away her blood in muddy rivulets.
She's too close to the body, thought Torak. The souls of the Viper Mage must be perilously near.
The crowd parted to let someone through.
Wolf's hackles were raised, his lips peeled back in a snarl as he walked stiffly toward the corpse, stalking something no one else could see. As the rain fell, Torak watched his pack-brother leap--snap the air--and race off into the Forest, chasing the souls of the Viper Mage away from the living. 306
The pack is leaving without him, and Wolf knows this must be so--but it hurts. The full-grown wolves tread neatly in the paw prints of the leader, but the cubs jostle one another, pouncing on interesting bits of moss. Digger and Snap see that Wolf isn't following and scamper back to fetch him.
Come on! Don't get left behind!
Mournfully, Wolf wags his tail. * The lead female gathers the cubs, and they trot after her, looking back in puzzlement. Darkfur is the last to leave. A wistful glance over her shoulder, then she too disappears. 307
Wolf woke with a jolt. Lying in the mud, he felt sorrow press upon him. The pack was gone.
Through the trees came the sound of the taillesses beginning to stir. Wolf padded along the rise to sniff the scents.
Since the Big Wet had come roaring through, everything had changed. The Thunderer was gone, and the Big Wet was at peace, although it had grown, and there were fish in the trees, which was odd. The Hidden Ones were quiet, as they had their island to themselves; and the taillesses were no longer hunting Tall Tailless, but had welcomed him back. Wolf didn't understand why.
Right now he was in the Den with the other taillesses, having one of his endless sleeps. Wolf wished he would wake up and sense that his pack-brother needed him. But he didn't come.
"Time to go back," said Fin-Kedinn, and Renn, sitting on a rock above the healing spring, nodded but didn't move.
308
After bearing the body to a remote bay on the north shore, they'd washed the corpse, laid it on a Death Platform, and covered it in juniper branches so that it wouldn't walk. Then they'd led everyone to the spring, to be purified. They'd gently insisted that Renn should keep a little apart, because, as she'd put the Death Marks on the corpse, she would be unclean for the next three days. She didn't mind. It was a relief. That's what she told herself.
"She left no trace," said Torak, making her jump.
309
He stood on a boulder behind her. She couldn't see his face for the sun.
"You didn't find the name-pebble?" she said.
He shook his head. "What should I do about that?"
She noted that he said
I
, not
we,
and wondered if that meant something. Out loud she said, "We'll ask Saeunn. She'll know."
Torak looked over the Lake. "The only thing I found was her snake basket. Empty." He paused. "They didn't feel evil, those snakes. Maybe they'll like being free." Renn broke off a fern frond and tore it to bits.
Why can't you just say it? she thought. Torak, I'm sorry I never told you. But it doesn't change anything, does it? Not really?
But Torak mumbled something about helping Bale look for the wreckage of the skinboat, and then he was gone, and she'd missed her chance. Fin-Kedinn came and sat beside her.
Renn said, "He knows about the Viper Mage. I mean, about me."
"Yes, he told me."
"Did he? What did he say?"
"Just that he knows." She scrunched up the fern and threw it away.
Fin-Kedinn said, "Are you sorry she's dead?" "No....I don't know." She scowled. "I hated her for so long, and now she's gone. Somehow it feels worse."
He nodded.
311
"No I'm not," she lied.
He snorted. "When was the last time you had anything to eat?"
That night the clans held a feast to give thanks for surviving the flood.