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
Now they were singing a new song. This time Renn saw the viper who stole the sacred clay and made the Lake sick. The Lake sought the aid of the World Spirit, who loosed the waters behind the ice and washed away the evil; and the Forest people would have been swept away too, if they hadn't been warned by the Clanless Wanderer. Then the boy from the Sea killed the viper, and peace returned.
But now the Otter Leader was giving gifts, so once again she had to wait.
Bale was given a diverbird claw as an amulet--so that, like the most skilled of water creatures, he would always stay afloat.
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greenstone, precisely cut to fit.
Dawn came, and at last people went off to sleep. Suddenly there was Torak, coming toward her.
Renn stood up, scattering her bowl and spoon, which she'd forgotten were still in her lap.
Torak helped her retrieve them and gave her an awkward nod. "Renn ..."
"Yes?" she said, more sharply than she'd intended.
"Ah, Torak," said Fin-Kedinn, coming over to them.
For once in her life, Renn was
not
glad to see her uncle.
"Come with me," said the Raven Leader, unperturbed. "There's something we need to do."
Torak opened his mouth, then shut it again.
"Where are we going?" said Renn.
Fin-Kedinn motioned her back. "No, Renn," he said gently, "just Torak. This isn't for you."
Torak threw her a glance that could have meant anything. Then he followed the Raven Leader into the Forest.
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They hadn't gone far when Fin-Kedinn halted.
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Setting the pouch under a hazel tree, he told Torak to lie down.
Torak asked why.
"I need to fix your tattoo. You can't live the rest of your life with the mark of the outcast."
Torak had been wondering about that, but now he was apprehensive. "Are you going to cut it out?"
"No," said Fin-Kedinn. "Lie down."
After a while Torak shifted his gaze to Fin-Kedinn.
His foster father.
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He felt honored and pleased, but also perplexed. "There's something I don't understand," he said. Fin-Kedinn did not reply.
"When I first met you--when you found out who my father was--you were angry. Since then, sometimes I've thought you liked me. Sometimes not." Placing the earthblood on the grindstone, Fin-Kedinn crushed it with a piece of granite.
"I know you were angry with my father," Torak went on carefully. "But my mother ... You didn't hate her, too?"
Fin-Kedinn carried on grinding. "No," he said. "I was in love with her."
Birdsong echoed through the Forest. Bees buzzed among the meadowsweet.
"But she loved me as a brother," the Raven Leader went on. "Your father she loved as a woman loves her mate."
Torak swallowed. "Is that why--why you hated him?"
Fin-Kedinn sighed. "Growing up can be a kind of soul-sickness, Torak. The name-soul warns to be strongest, so it fights the clan-soul telling it what to do. You've got to find a balance, like a good knife. It took me a while." Dipping a corner of buckskin in earthblood, he rubbed it into Torak's forehead. "I stopped being jealous of your father a long time ago.
318 But I went on blaming him for your mother's death. I still do." "Why?" "He joined the Soul-Eaters. When she gave birth to you, she was in hiding, far from her clan. If he hadn't put her in danger, she might still be alive." "He didn't mean to put her in danger."
Silence. Then Torak said, "What was my mother like?" Fin-Kedinn's face tightened. "Your father must have spoken of her."
"No. It made him too sad."
"But why did she make me clanless? Why did she
do
that?"
Fin-Kedinn sighed. "I don't know, Torak. But she loved you, so--"
"But how do you know? You didn't even know that she'd had a son!"
"I knew her," Fin-Kedinn said quietly. "She loved you. So she must have done it to help you."
Torak couldn't see how being clanless was any help at all.
"Maybe," Fin-Kedinn added, "the answer lies where she came from. And where you were born."
"The Deep Forest."
A breeze stirred the trees, and they nodded agreement.
"When should I go?" said Torak.
"Not for a while," said the Raven Leader, grinding
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gypsum. "There's trouble among the Deep Forest clans; they won't let in outsiders. And it would be foolish to venture in when Thiazzi and Eostra could be anywhere."
"That could mean anything," said Torak uneasily.
"Before you came to the islands," said Bale, "when he was simply our Mage, we would sometimes see a red glow on the Crag. We didn't know what it was. I do now." "The fire-opal," said Torak.
"And before I left for the Forest," Bale went oh, "there were disturbances--in the woods and around our camp. As if someone were searching for something." Torak thought of the last words of the Viper Mage.
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Then he noticed that Fin-Kedinn didn't seem surprised.
"So we've achieved nothing!" cried Torak. "It's all to do again!"
"Not so," said Fin-Kedinn. "Step by step. Remember?"
The Raven Leader shrugged. "He's too brown. But it'll do."
"What
is
it?" said Torak. "What have you done?"
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There were smiles and murmurs of assent, and Torak could see that whatever the Raven Leader had done, it had worked.
Bale picked up what Rip had let fall, and his eyebrows rose. "Here." He handed it to Torak.
It was his name-pebble. His "clan-tattoo" could still be seen--but every speck of the green clay serpent had been pecked off.
Yolun was pleased. "The Lake will keep it safe forever."
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Torak thought so too. At first he'd been frightened of the Lake, but he'd come to understand that it was neither good nor bad, just very, very old. On reaching land again, Bale and Yolun went off to talk about boats, and Torak was finally free to go in search of Renn.
He found her on the shore, oiling her bow. He sat down beside her, but she didn't look up.
After a while she said, "It's had so many soakings, I think it may be warped."
He glanced at her. "If Bale hadn't done it--would you have killed her?"
"I don't know," Torak admitted. "And I don't know why Fa gave it to me. I suppose he guessed that someday I might need it."
"But why keep it at all? He could've destroyed it along with the rest."
Torak had wondered about that too. In his mind he saw the awful beauty of the fire-opal. Maybe Fa just couldn't bring himself to do it.
He turned to Renn. "Your mother. Have you always known?"
A flush stole up her neck. "No. Fin-Kedinn told
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me after Fa was killed."
"So you were--seven, eight summers old."
"Yes."
"That must have been hard."
She glared at him, repudiating pity.
He scooped up a handful of sand and poured it from palm to palm. "How did it happen? I mean, how did she come to ..."
Renn chewed her lip. Then she told him, staring at the sand between her bare feet, and spitting out the story like poison. "When she left my father for the Soul-Eaters, she changed her name. People thought she was dead. Not my father. Fin-Kedinn told him to forget her. He couldn't. Then she came back to him in secret. The clan never knew. She needed another child, a baby. My brother was too old for--for her purpose. So she got one. Then she left my father again. She broke his heart. She didn't care. She bore me in secret. Saeunn found her and took me from her, I don't know how. I was very small. I hadn't been named."
325 her." Her fists clenched. "Saeunn saved me. Sometimes I hate her. I owe her everything." Torak was silent. Then he said, "Why did the Viper Mage need a baby?" Renn hesitated. "Can I tell you later?"
He nodded, pouring sand from palm to palm. "Who else knew?"