The Longest Day (28 page)

Read The Longest Day Online

Authors: Erin Hunter

BOOK: The Longest Day
10.14Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Nothing else should matter,
Lusa repeated to herself.

CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO
Toklo

The sun beat down on Toklo's
fur as he waited for Shesh to start the final trial. He stared into the forest where the bears would be hunting, a shiver running along his spine despite the heat. Elki's wounds hadn't seemed as bad once the blood had been washed away, but she still hadn't been able to explain what had happened. Fear had haunted her eyes, and Toklo suspected that she had been frightened into silence. Wolves hadn't done this. The bears had searched the forest and found no sign.
Who could have hurt her?
Toklo scanned the shadows. Was someone watching now? Suddenly he remembered Akocha. A strange bear had frightened the cub. Was a rogue bear roaming the woods? It couldn't be Hakan, could it, still out for revenge? Toklo flexed his claws.

Aiyanna brushed against him. “Are you nervous about the hunt?”

“No,” Toklo grunted.

Aiyanna followed his gaze toward the trees. “The cubs are
safe,” she reminded him. “They won't wander off by themselves.”

“We need to find out who hurt Elki.”

“We can't do that now,” Aiyanna soothed. “Focus on the hunt. If you win, you'll be leading the ceremony.”

“It's not fair,” Holata huffed beside him. “Akocha spoiled the fishing trial.”

“I did not.” Akocha marched forward, looking sulky. “I won it. Now I'm not allowed to take part in the hunt in case I win again.”

Tayanita cuffed him over the ear. “You're not allowed to take part because it's not safe in the forest for cubs.”

Before Akocha could argue, Shesh climbed onto a rock. “Is everyone ready?”

The brown bears grew still. Only the trees moved, swishing as the scorching wind tugged at them. Toklo shifted his paws. The strange heat seemed to signal danger.
You have made enemies, Toklo.
Ujurak's words echoed in his mind.

Shesh lifted his muzzle. “The first bear to return with prey will be the bear who leads the ceremony. . . .
Go!

Holata plunged forward, barging through the crowd of bears who were swarming into the forest.

Toklo hesitated and looked at Aiyanna. She had agreed to take part in this trial so that she could bring back food for the cubs. He nodded toward an inlet farther along the shore. The stone tower loomed beyond. “Let's head that way,” he suggested. “There'll be no prey left in this part of the forest.”

He led the way down the shore, heading into the trees as they neared the inlet. Aiyanna slid past him and vanished into the shade of the branches. Toklo followed, hoping the forest would be cooler than the sun-baked shore, but the air beneath the trees was stifling.

Aiyanna was standing beside a bramble, her ears pricked. “I see a squirrel trail,” she whispered over her shoulder. “I'm going to follow it.”

“Good luck.” Toklo veered the other way, scanning the undergrowth for signs of life. He clambered up a slope, dry leaves crunching beneath his paws, and crossed a patch of dappled sunlight. Following a deer track, he climbed higher. As he trampled a shriveled bilberry patch, he saw movement ahead. Pausing, he narrowed his eyes. A grouse was pecking through leaf litter beneath a gnarled pine. Toklo trod more softly, avoiding a patch of ferns that would rustle if he crossed it. Excitement flickered in his belly. The scent of the grouse touched his nose. Closing in, he broke into a run and leaped.

The grouse heaved itself up and Toklo flung his paws into the flurry of wings, feeling the plumpness of its body as he knocked it to the earth. Gripping it with one paw, he killed it quickly, snapping its neck between his jaws. He couldn't hold back a bellow of triumph. If he raced back to the shore now, he was sure he would win.
I'll lead the ceremony!

As he began to head for the lake, Aiyanna's bark rang through the trees.

“Leave me alone!”

Toklo dropped the grouse. Was it a rogue bear, as he had
wondered earlier? The same rogue bear who might have frightened Akocha and hurt Elki? He charged toward Aiyanna, fur bristling.

“Stop talking to me!” he heard her growl.

Toklo burst into a clearing. A flat-face den stood in the middle. Dry ferns and brambles smothered the dusty log walls. Aiyanna stood at one end of the den. Toklo strained to see who she was talking to, but the corner of the den blocked his view.

“You must be wrong!” Aiyanna gasped. “Toklo would never do anything like that!”

Toklo's hackles rose. Who was she talking to? What was the other bear saying?

Hakan!
His thoughts flashed to the grieving black bear. It
must
be him. He'd tried to spoil the trials, and now he was telling Aiyanna they'd killed Chenoa!

Toklo charged forward. “It was an accident!” he snarled.

Aiyanna swung her muzzle toward him. Shock gleamed in her eyes. “Then it's true? You did kill them?”

Kill them?
Toklo halted, confused. What was she talking about?

A scent touched his nose that turned his blood cold, and he stared in horror as a half-brown, half-white bear stepped from behind the den. It was Nanulak from the Island of Shadows. The bear Toklo had once called a friend.

“What are you doing here?” Toklo hissed.

Nanulak stared at him with pure hatred in his eyes. His mottled brown-and-white fur was ragged and coarse with leaf
scraps, and there was a deep scratch above one eye, as if he had been fighting.

Beside him, Aiyanna whimpered. Toklo turned to look at her. She was gazing at him as though she hardly knew him. “You killed his family!” she whispered. “Then you left him. He nearly died.”

“Is that what he told you?”

“I know your journey has been hard. I know you had to fight to survive. But did you really—”

Toklo cut her off. “Of course not! Nanulak's always been a good liar. I don't think he's ever told the truth in his life.” He tried to ignore the pain jabbing at his heart.
How could Aiyanna believe I'd kill a bear's family?
“We met him on the Island of Shadows. He pretended his family had abandoned him. So we looked after him and let him travel with us. But then he tried to trick me into killing his father, who had only ever loved him!” Toklo shuddered as he remembered. Nanulak's mother—a brown bear—had come looking for her son, too, but Nanulak had turned on her, driven crazy by his belief that he didn't belong to any group of bears.

Toklo turned back to Nanulak. “You attacked Elki, didn't you? You tried to spoil the trials, not Hakan! Is that why you came?” He didn't give Nanulak a chance to answer. “Did you want to ruin the gathering for everyone? The Longest Day should be peaceful. You don't belong here. You don't belong anywhere that decent bears meet.” He flexed his claws. “You have only ever hated those who love you.”

Nanulak growled. “You left me! You rejected me just like
everyone else. As soon as you found out I was half-brown, half-white, you turned your tail on me!”

“That's not why I left you—” Toklo began angrily.

Nanulak raged on. “You must have known I'd hunt you down. I'm going to make you sorry you abandoned me. I thought you were different. But you're just as cruel as the others. I'm going to make you suffer like every other bear who has ever hurt me.” His gaze flicked toward Aiyanna. “And when I've finished with you, I'm going to make her suffer, too.”

Blind fury blazed through Toklo. Rearing, he lunged for Nanulak. The bear ducked beneath his outstretched paws and rammed his head hard into Toklo's belly. Winded, Toklo staggered backward. Dropping onto all fours, he felt a violent blow to his shoulder. For a heartbeat, his leg went numb, and he lurched against the wall of the flat-face den.

Claws raked along his side. Then he felt the weight of Nanulak on his back. Teeth sank into his neck. Panic spiraling, Toklo tried to shake him off. Backing along the side of the den, he felt the wood yield behind him, and he crashed backward through the wall.

Surprise flashed beneath his pelt as he found himself inside. Nanulak must've been surprised, too, because his grip faltered. Toklo staggered clear and swung a hefty blow at Nanulak's muzzle. Wood splintered as Nanulak crashed sideways into a pile of flat-face clutter. Toklo hit him again, feeling flesh rip beneath his claws.

With a roar, Nanulak turned on him. He reared up and gripped Toklo's head with his front paws. Wrestling, they
lurched across the den. Toklo grabbed Nanulak's throat between his jaws and heaved with his hind legs until Nanulak began to stumble. Toklo tasted the salt tang of blood and bit harder. Roaring with pain, Nanulak swung him around with strength Toklo had never felt in a bear before. Unbalanced, he let go and fell onto something hot and jagged with a bright light inside. Pain seared Toklo's flank, and he glanced around to see flames leaping beside him. The fire caught some pelts fluttering beside an opening in the wooden wall and bloomed like huge yellow flowers.

Toklo swung his gaze back to Nanulak. The brown-and-white bear was staring in horror as the fire licked the wood above his head. Turning, he fled toward the opening. Toklo raced after him, crunching over the shattered flat-face mess.

As he burst from the den, he saw Nanulak push past Aiyanna and flee into the forest. Behind Toklo, flames started to reach through the opening, lapping hungrily at the dry wooden walls.

“What happened?” Aiyanna stared past him toward the den.

“We spilled fire on the ground!” Toklo nosed Aiyanna toward the trees. Pain throbbed where Nanulak had torn his pelt. Toklo knew that in a moment the flames would touch the dried ferns and brambles and spread faster than they could run. Blood roared in his ears as he chased after Aiyanna.

“Keep going!” he roared as an explosion ripped through the air behind him.

CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE
Kallik

A loud blast echoed from the
pine-covered hillside.

“What was that?” Kallik lifted her head from the fish she was sharing with Yakone.

Beside her, Yakone tensed. “It sounded like a huge firestick.”

Kallik narrowed her eyes. Smoke was rising from the trees at the top of the slope. Then she glimpsed flames leaping through the branches.

The hot wind, whipping fiercely down to the lake, tugged at Kallik's fur. She saw the fire flare and brighten. Horror hollowed her belly as she watched flames spring from treetop to treetop, growing taller as the wind drove them toward the shore. The scent of smoke touched her nose. “We have to get out of here!”

Farther along the shore, the brown bears were watching the fire, too. Barking with alarm, they backed toward the water. Suddenly Kallik saw Toklo and Aiyanna burst from the trees near the edge of the white bears' territory. Terror shone in their eyes.

“Get the others into the water!” Kallik ordered Yakone. Smoke was starting to gust over the shore. It stung her eyes as she swung her muzzle toward the nearest island. “Tell everyone to head there!”

“Quick! Everyone! We have to swim!”

As Yakone began to bark at the others, Kallik raced toward Toklo.

“It was Nanulak!” Toklo snarled. “He's here! We fought in a flat-face den. It caught fire.”

“Nanulak?” Kallik could hear the flames now. They were swallowing the forest, as hungry as wolves. She stared at Toklo in panic. “Have you seen Lusa?”

“No!”

Aiyanna was staring at the trees. The fire was roaring closer and closer to the shore.

“The black bears will be heading for the lake.” Toklo blinked against the smoke billowing from the trees. “I'll go see if they need help.”

“Wait!” Aiyanna jerked her muzzle toward the brown bears. Panicked, they were crashing into one another as they backed into the shallows. “Can you see Wapi and Yas? Where's Flo? I can't see Flo!”

“Kissimi!” Illa's terrified wail sounded from the white bears' shore.

Other books

High Spirits at Harroweby by Comstock, Mary Chase
Redneck Nation by Michael Graham
Time and Again by Clifford D. Simak
ToxicHaven by Gabriella Bradley
Climate of Change by Piers Anthony