Authors: Michelle Paver
Tags: #Prehistory, #Animals, #Action & Adventure, #Wolves & Coyotes, #Juvenile Fiction, #Prehistoric peoples, #Fantasy & Magic, #General, #Fiction, #Voyages and travels, #Historical, #Wolves, #Demoniac possession
More wolf howls.
The demons are gone!
called Wolf.
"He's far away," said Tenris, snatching up his harpoon. "He can't help you anymore."
"He's helped enough," said Torak.
Tenris snorted. "You're on your own now, Torak. Your friends can't try another shot at me, or they'd risk hitting you."
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Torak did not reply. He needed all his strength just to stay standing.
"Give up, Torak," urged that beautiful, powerful voice. "You've done well, but it's time to pass your power to one who knows how to use it." Torak glanced over his shoulder. The east wind was strengthening, blowing away the fog. A shaft of silver light was pouring down onto the Sea. "I'll make it quick," said Tenris. "I promise."
"You have no choice," murmured the Soul-Eater. "You know that."
Torak squared his shoulders, and met that intense gray gaze.
Too late, Tenris realized what he meant to do--and his eyes widened in disbelief.
"There's always a choice," said Torak, and walked backward off the cliff.
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Chapter THIRTY-THREE
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He turned his face for a last look at the light--and saw, impossibly far above, a figure darkening the sun. It was swimming toward him, swimming faster than an eel. Hope kindled. Was it Wolf? Renn? Bale?
Tenris seized him by the hair and yanked him upward.
The Seal Mage wrenched Torak's hands free of the kelp, and they rose again--locked together like vipers as they spiraled up toward the light. Together they burst from the Sea.
Torak tried to bite his hand--but Tenris lashed out with his free arm, landing him a savage blow on the temple.
Stunned, Torak went under. As he surfaced, he heard a deafening
kwshsh!
--and saw an enormous black fin slicing toward them.
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Terror turned his limbs to water.
Tenris hadn't seen the Hunter; he was bent on reaching the shore. Torak had an instant in which to act. . . .
With one final burst of strength, he twisted around and lunged at the Soul-Eater, ripping the masking charm from his throat.
Tenris grunted in surprise, and lost his grip on Torak. Torak kicked with all his might, and swam out of reach.
And now Sea, sky, skinboat--were blotted out by the Hunter. Through the green water Torak saw the great blunt head looming closer . . . At the last moment the Hunter swerved, showering him with spray as it made for Tenris.
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A sudden stillness came over the Soul-Eater's ruined features as he watched his doom slicing toward him.
In the final heartbeat he turned his head and met Torak's eyes. "Ask Fin-Kedinn about your father!" he shouted. "Make him tell you the truth--" Then he was lost in a flurry of silver water.
Torak heard one terrible scream, abruptly cut off-- as the great jaws dragged the Soul-Eater down into the deep.
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Chapter THIRTY-FOUR
The fire on the Crag was burning low, and gray smoke was rising into the sky as the skinboat reached the shore.
Renn wiped the spray off her bow and hung it from a rafter, then went inside to rummage for food.
Torak took driftwood from a pile and started waking up a fire. He felt shaky and cold, but at least the Sea
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had washed the markings from his chest. Inside his head, however, the marks would not so easily be washed away.
Both of them looked at the bowl, but neither made a move to eat.
Then Torak said, "Renn. There is no cure. What he said about the selik root. He made it up."
Renn clasped her arms about her knees and frowned.
"Did you hear what I said?" said Torak.
"There is no cure."
Suddenly Renn stopped frowning and straightened up. She stared at Torak, then at the meat. "The juniper berries," she said.
"What?" said Torak.
"When I was in the cave. Bale gave me some food, and Wolf leaped at me, and knocked it over. I thought
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he'd gone mad. But he was--Torak, he was
saving
me! Warning me off the juniper berries!"
'I get sick before, even though I was eating salmon cakes, because I'd stolen Saeunn's, which were left over from last summer--"
"--and that's why I didn't get sick either," put in Torak. "Because I didn't take any with me."
They stared at each other.
"So if everyone gets rid of their juniper berries," said Renn,
"and
their salmon cakes--"
"Maybe they'll get better--"
"Maybe we won't
need
a cure."
This was the answer. Torak could feel it. It had the kind of elegance that would have appealed to Tends.
How he must have laughed as he watched them striving to find a cure that didn't exist! How clever he must have felt! How powerful.
And yet even now, Torak couldn't hate him. Tends had been his bone kin. Torak had
liked
him. He'd wanted Tenris to like him back.
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Bowing his head to his knees, he tried to shut out the pain. But that handsome, ruined face was still before him; that voice still rang in his ears. Ask Fin-Kedinn about your father! Make him tell you the truth!
What truth? What had he meant?
At that moment, Bale ran up. "Come quickly!" he panted.
He led them to the south end of the bay and across the stream to the foot of the waterfall.
The tokoroth lay on the rocks where they had fallen. Spray misted their grimy faces and their broken stick-limbs.
Craning his neck, Torak gazed at the mountainside, and wondered what had made them scramble up there. Then he remembered Wolf's howls. The demons are gone!
"What
are
they?" whispered Bale.
"Tokoroth," said Renn in a low voice.
Bale gasped. "I thought those were only in stories. I thought--"
The girl tokoroth moaned, and a spasm convulsed her scrawny frame.
"She's still alive," said Torak. He felt a twinge of pity. They looked so young. No more than eight or nine summers.
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"They're killers," Bale said grimly. Drawing his knife, he moved forward.
Wolf appeared from behind a boulder, warning him back with a growl.
Bale froze. "What. . ."
Torak went down on one knee, and Wolf trotted over to him, snuffle-grunting and nuzzling his cheek. Torak glanced at Renn. "He says he chased the demons away." "Where?" said Renn. "Where did they go?"
Torak met Wolf's eyes for a moment, then shook his head. "I'm not going to ask. They're gone. Let that be enough."
Bale was staring at him in amazement. "You can talk to it?"
"Him," said Torak. "Wolf is a him."
"So that's a wolf," said Bale. Placing one hand on his heart, he bowed. "Beautiful."
Again the tokoroth stirred.
Renn ran to kneel beside them. Her face became grave. "Not long now," she said. Then to Torak, "Your medicine horn. Do you have any earthblood?" Torak handed it to her; but Bale looked troubled. "What are you doing?"
"Death Marks," said Renn.
"They don't deserve them!" cried Bale.
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Renn turned on him. "They were children once! Their souls are still in there, deep inside! They'll need help to get free--"
"They're killers," said Bale, unmoved.
"Let her do it," said Torak. "She knows about things like this."
As they watched, Renn made the red ochre into a paste with water, then daubed the Death Marks on both tokoroth: forehead, heart, heels. Wolf came to sit beside her, whining softly and sweeping the grass with his tail. There was a light in his golden eyes. Torak wondered what he could see.
Suddenly the boy tokoroth clenched his fists. The girl tokoroth twitched, then opened her eyes.
A tear rolled down Renn's cheek. "Go in peace," she whispered. "You're free now. Free . . ."
The boy tokoroth shuddered, then lay still. The girl gave a long, rattling sigh that ended in--silence.
A breeze stirred the suncups. Wolf turned his head, as if to follow the passing of something swift.
"They're gone," said Renn.
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Next day the Seals returned from the Cormorants' island, and Torak, Renn and Bale spent a long time talking with the Clan Leader.
Surprisingly, Islinn was not as crushed by the news of his Mage's death as they had expected. In fact, the knowledge that he must now take charge seemed to imbue him with fresh vigor. He looked visibly younger as he dispatched his fleetest messengers to the Forest to warn the clans against the poison, and others to fetch Asrif and Detlan home. The bodies of the tokoroth were placed in a skinboat, taken out of sight of land, and given to the Sea Mother.
"Thank you, Leader," Torak said tonelessly.
The Leader studied him. "You are wrong to blame yourself. He tricked me too. And I have lived a good many more summers than you." Torak did not reply.
"You grieve for him," stated the old man.
Torak was surprised that he should have perceived that. "He was kind to me," he said. "I mean--before the end. Was it all a lie?"
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They left the following morning. Wolf went in Torak's skinboat, and Renn in Bale's. It was a brilliantly sunny day, with a brisk west wind to speed them on their way. As they left the Bay of Seals, Torak looked back one last time. Smoke rose above the humped shelters, and children splashed in the shallows. Rowan trees and birches lapped the feet of the mountains, where white seabirds wheeled.
They made good speed, with nothing but puffins and sea-eagles for company. Once in the distance,
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Torak thought he saw a tall, notched fin that followed them for a while. When he blinked, it was gone.
Then Torak turned and saw the Forest rising above the waves.
It was night by the time they reached the shore, although the huge amber sun still hung low over the Sea.