“They are driving him,” Phylomon said in Pwi at one point, jutting his chin in a northwesterly direction. “No matter which way the beast tries to run, they turn him north.”
“Where are they taking him?” Tull asked.
“The Mastodon Men are not smart enough to fashion spears,” Ayuvah answered, “so they club the animal, making it bleed from small wounds until it is exhausted. They will make Snail Follower walk to their camp so they can eat him.” Ayuvah leaned on his spear as he knelt to put his hand in the track of a Mastodon Man. “Even if he broke free, his pain will be great. He will be as crazy as that rogue bull that crushed Shezzah's house a few years back.”
Tull said, “Perhaps he will smell us and remember his friends.”
“Do not raise your hopes for Snail Follower,” Phylomon answered. “He has been hurt. Even should we catch him, we might not be able to harness him for weeks.” Phylomon did not say anything for a moment. “How far would we have to go to get another animal?”
Tull said, “Scandal got Snail Follower from a miner down in White Rock, but that was the only mammoth in town. The loggers down in Wellen’s Eyes have a few. Two hundred miles. That’s the closest.”
Phylomon did not say anything. Two hundred miles south, a journey that would easily take a month. They did not have a month to spend.
Chapter 16: The Challenge
The party tracked the Mastodon Men in silence. The path was so easy to follow that they did not need to watch the ground. Instead they watched the trees and brush. The Mastodon Men would be resting in their band, asleep in a bed of ferns, possibly lying under the shadow of a fallen redwood, and perhaps only one or two drowsy youngsters would be awake, ready to howl in warning if they scented a razor cat.
Fear churned Tull’s belly, constricted his breathing, like the snake that crushes its prey. He could not forget the musky scent of their hair, the smell of rotten meat that issued from them. Unlike some predators, Mastodon Men were not fastidious, and the odor of dried blood and rotting fat had been strong. To Tull, the fear now seemed fascinating. When he first saw the Mastodon Man, he feared it because it had reminded him of his father. But as Phylomon had said, his brain worked its magic after several hours, and he found that he was terrified of the beast itself.
At noon, they discovered their barrel sitting on the side of the hill deep in a bed of sword ferns. For a while, the men moved toward it slowly, fearing that they had found the camp of the Mastodon Men. Tull crept toward the barrel first. He felt the hair rise on his forehead, felt pimples of fear sprout on his arms.
They circled the barrel but found it empty except for a single tuft of brown hair.
In the early afternoon, the men entered a shallow valley, thick with wild grapes. The leaves were waxy and rigid, dried and lifeless after the heat of late summer. The men could not walk through the valley without making a sound of paper shredding.
At the north end was a steep hill. The redwoods marched up to the top of a small ridge, and there they stopped. Snail Follower’s bloody path led straight for the rise several hundred yards away.
“If Snail Follower survived the fall, his legs will be broken,” Phylomon said. “I believe we will find our quarry dining on him, there on the other side of the ridge.”
Phylomon urged the others to stay behind, and then crept up the ridge alone, moving his feet so slowly that the wild grape leaves did not rustle as they slid over his naked legs. Even Ayuvah could not have crept so silently. Phylomon reached the top of the rise, then dropped to his hands and knees and crawled to the lip of the ridge.
He watched for five minutes, and slowly returned through the grape.
To Tull, it seemed that the sky grew darker. The air thickened with the sense of impending doom. He tried to shake off his fear, to remind himself that he had lived through the first attack by the Mastodon Men, but it did no good. His tongue dried and seemed to swell.
“Snail Follower is dead,” Phylomon said when he returned. “Let’s go.”
Ayuvah sighed in relief.
“Dead?” Tull asked in disbelief. “Are you sure?”
“The Mastodon Men have got most of the carcass stripped of meat,” Phylomon said. “They have a good thirty or forty in their band.”
“What should we do?” Tull asked.
Phylomon arched a single hairless brow. “Do? Why leave, of course!”
Phylomon turned to go, and Ayuvah followed. Tull stood momentarily, stunned. Phylomon was right after all.
The Mastodon Men were dumb animals, incapable of recognizing their common ancestry to man. When they’d killed Little Chaa, they were not eating a fellow being, they were just eating an animal—the way Tull would eat a pig or a grouse.
Yet Tull wanted to punish them, wanted Phylomon and Ayuvah to run over the cliff with him, descend on the Mastodon Men, and slaughter them down to the last child. The very thought was madness. They had nothing to gain by attacking. But I have something to gain, Tull thought.
In a subtle way, kwea ruled the Pwi. If two men were angry at one another with a great wrath, then they said, “Kwea will not let us live in peace.” If the tribe was lucky, the two could find a way to reconcile that was powerful enough so that the kwea of anger would be swallowed up forever in the kwea of friendship. In the same way, Tull realized that if he did not slay the Mastodon Men, the kwea of fear would rule him, would forever make him a slave.
Tull watched Phylomon lead Ayuvah quietly back through the forest. Ayuvah turned, the muscles bunching on his thick neck as he looked over his shoulder, and gauged Tull. “You must kill them?” he asked.
Tull’s mouth became even drier; he wanted to kill the Mastodon Men, but he said only, “I must look upon them.” His legs were shaking, and he tried to hold them steady.
Phylomon stopped and turned.
Ayuvah said, “Brother, I will come with you.”
“No,” Tull said. “I already saw one friend die. I do not want to see another.”
“Evil kwea is upon me, too,” Ayuvah said. “Although I do not fear them as much as you, I must come.”
Tull grunted his assent, hefted his spear. He untied his belt and peed on a bush.
Blood was pounding in his ears, and he thought of the sickening thud he had heard when the Mastodon Man had slapped Little Chaa, the sound of a body sliding through grass.
Phylomon said, “Look quickly, while you’ve got plenty of daylight. If they catch wind of you, head for open country where the sunlight will blind them. Always approach them from downwind. If one spots you and charges while raising his arms, it is a ceremonial charge. Back off slowly.
“But if he charges you and comes in low with his shoulder forward, he means to kill you. I’ll go back and start pushing the barrel to camp.”
While Phylomon disappeared into the redwoods, Tull and Ayuvah circled the brow of the hill, heading into the forest where the shadows were deep enough so that no wild grapes grew.
When they rounded the hill, Tull found a gentle incline leading down. The foliage was thick near the ground. Because wild pigs would not eat the sour grapes in the area, the grapes had grown dense. But at eye level, the elk and deer had eaten the lower leaves of the vine maple and alder.
By looking down the slope, Tull could see Snail Follower, that giant old bull, lying on his side, gaping from a dozen wounds. The Mastodon Men had opened his belly, feeding on the liver and stomach, and white entrails had been pulled a dozen yards from the corpse. Just beyond the kill, the Mastodon Men lay sprawled in the grass beneath the trees, giant apelike beings with little body hair except on the shoulders and chest, and the long wispy manes that covered their heads. Only two juveniles seemed to be awake. One female wore the dark-yellow fur of a child and was so hairless that she almost appeared human. She sat and fondled her right nipple, pinched at a tick or a flea, then stopped and leaned back her head to taste the air through broad nostrils.
The second juvenile, a short male whose fur had turned the darke
r brown of adulthood, ripped at branches and stuffed them in his teeth as he paced through the foliage, then grunted softly as if challenging older males to combat. His forehead held a higher peak than that of others of his kind, and his eyes were sunk deeper. Once, Ayuvah stepped on a twig, and the young male turned. His gaze seemed to pierce them for a moment.
Tull watched the adults sprawled on the ground for several minutes, studying their faces, trying to decide which one had eaten Little Chaa. His throat tightened, and blood pounded in his ears as he considered how he might be able to steal into the group, put a spear through the heart of the culprit. But after several minutes, he still could not see his target.
At two hundred yards, Tull motioned for Ayuvah to wait where he was. Then Tull crept forward on his knees. He pushed his shield ahead of him, not because it would ward a blow from a Mastodon Man, but because the rust and avocado camouflage painted over it offered some hope of concealment.
Tull inched forward, brushing twigs and dead leaves from his path so he would not stumble over them, always holding his shield as steady as possible so that his movement would not attract attention. His heart hammered in his ears, and he found it difficult to believe that the Mastodon Men were unaware of him, could not smell the terror in his sweat. He did not feel the kwea of terror, where horrific memories are stirred and surface like bones in a pot of stew. It was a more controlled and logical terror, the fear one feels when, in a calculated manner, one does something undeniably stupid.
When he was a hundred and fifty yards from the camp, the young bull Mastodon Man abruptly stood and grunted a battle challenge, raising his hands above his head as if to fight. Several older bulls raised their heads from sleep. Tull was close enough to smell them strongly now, the sweat, the dried blood, the putrid fat. Snail Follower’s corpse lay not fifty yards away, and a cloud of bluebottle flies and yellow jackets had swarmed to the kill, humming softly.
The Mastodon Men were bloated. They had eaten well. One old cow got up, picked up a piece of bloody shale, and studied the mastodon. Tull did not see where the rock had come from, so he watched a moment and realized that each of the beasts had a sharp rock or pointed stick nearby, and each weapon was smeared with the Snail Follower’s blood. Often, the Mastodon Men grasped these weapons even in their sleep.
An infant mewed in its mother’s arms, and she gently cupped it in a giant hand. Suddenly, from beneath the shade of an alder, a huge bull stepped out—a large man with testicles the size of cantaloupes. The Mastodon Man had deep crevices running from his nose to his mouth, so that his face seemed stuck in a perpetual scowl. His nostrils were not as widely set as those of his companions, and his nose was short and pugged.
This one! This was the Mastodon Man that had eaten Little Chaa. Tull recognized him by the silvered hair on his chest. The Mastodon Man was probably the leader of the band.
The beast walked forward on his knuckles slowly, scowled at the younger bull, and raised his hands. The young bull barked and spun away into the brush, where he pulled the limb from an alder and then began swatting the ground.
The old bull knuckle-walked to the young female. She stroked the long hair of his mane, but the old bull just laid a hand on her belly, as if to say, “Wait until I wake up a bit.”
Four Mastodon Men had wakened now. With evening coming, the rest of them would rise soon. With such a large kill to eat, they would not need to hunt.
Tull cocked his spear arm, raised his shield, and stood up. The young bull barked a warning, and all of the Mastodon Men swirled into motion. The young female rolled off the log, put her knuckles to the dirt, and scrambled away, instinctively fleeing.
But the big bull charged forward over the log, then raised himself to full height waving his arms in the ceremonial fighting stance. All the females disappeared into the brush, while a dozen bulls loped forward and stood behind their leader.
Some of the older bulls carried great slabs of shale in their fists and raised the bloody stones in threat. The younger ones barked and shrieked and weaved from side to side as they beat their stones against the ground.
Tull knew that if the big bull charged, all of the beasts charge. Most of the monsters stood over eight feet, and he could not outrun them.
His stomach tightened and he struggled for breath. Cautious and deliberate, he walked forward. With each step he took, the bulls shuffled closer, creating a wall behind their leader. When he walked within thirty feet of the great bull, it stretched to its full height of ten feet, and raised it arms overhead.
A smothering blanket of kwea fell.
Tull was a child again, standing before his father while old Jenks held the rattling shackles he would place on Tull’s legs.
A black fog of terror and despair seemed to swell around the leader. Even the sun seemed to darken, as if a giant hand held it in shadow. Tull was smothered by a perverse and powerful kwea.
Tull expelled the air from his lungs in a single wrenching gasp, and he held his eyes steady on the beast and whimpered once before he lowered them. Tull stood full in the shadow of the Mastodon Man’s and felt his knees begin to buckle.
The kwea emanated in waves through his brain, crashing against him, and he felt that if he stood much longer in the beast’s presence, his sanity would erode like sand under his feet when waves pound the seashore.
As he stood watching the Mastodon Man’s shadow on the ground, the kwea seemed to ease, as if the waves were not driven by such a frenzied wind.
An old Pwi song rang through his head:
Dandelions at storm; dandelions at storm.
When the wind blows fierce, and wild, and warm, the white down flies.
Dandelions at storm.
The rhythm of the song coincided with waves of fear battering him.
Tull raised his spear, raised his shield overhead, and assumed the symbolic fighting stance. Then he dared to stare into the Mastodon Man’s eye.
The powerful kwea of terror rose up like a great black wall. The god Adjonai, the keeper of terror, stood at the monster’s back, and the sky became black. The Pwi said that Adjonai ruled Craal, but Tull felt the dark god’s presence, full and strong.
Tull laughed like a madman who no longer cared whether he lived or died.
The Mastodon Man watched Tull and swayed side to side, grunting his rage and bewilderment at this tiny beast that seemed determined to fight for the right to lead the band. He lowered his hands and put knuckles to the ground, as if Tull were a child from the tribe who challenged only from ignorance.
The Mastodon Man swayed again, then shrieked, a howl of warning so magnificent in volume that the leaves of the vine maples seemed to tremble.
Run, a voice whispered in the back of Tull’s head, run for the daylight. But Tull stood and laughed at the Mastodon Man, for he saw that its eyes were dull, like the eyes of Hardy Goodman, the eyes of a moron.
The leader rushed at Tull and lightly thumped him on the chest. The blow knocked Tull to the ground. Tull kept his eyes on the huge beast and let the dark kwea run through him.
Tull shouted curses at the god Adjonai, and he kept at it for a full five minutes, until the god seemed to turn his face away.
The Mastodon Man still stood over Tull, pacing back and forth, unsure what to do with this minuscule foe.
The sky around the Mastodon Man suddenly brightened, and the beast shrank and became nothing but an animal, a bewildered creature that watched Tull and did not feed on him only because its hunger was sated.
Tull felt his fear dwindle and subside, as if the crashing waves of fear were an ocean that miraculously calmed. The storm now raged only in memory.
The great bull leaned forward on his knuckles and sniffed at Tull’s face like a curious dog.
Tull still clutched his spear. He could have stabbed the beast, even mortally wounded it. Part of him wanted to. Yet looking into the eyes of this dumb animal, he knew it didn’t matter anymore. He’d spoken the truth to Phylomon: he had come only to look.
Tull growled at the Mastodon Man, and it leapt backward. The others shrieked and grunted, and one fellow threw a bloody stone. Tull ducked beneath it, knelt to a crouch and raised his spear and shield overhead. The Mastodon Men grew wary and looked around, then crept back a pace.
Tull slowly retreated. To turn his back or run would invite an attack, so Tull eased his arms lower and stepped backward a few paces, until he reached Ayuvah.
He would have continued on, but Ayuvah stopped him, pointed to the old bull and asked, “Is he the one who killed Little Chaa?”
Tull nodded.
Ayuvah raised his shield and spear overhead, in the symbolic fighting stance, and advanced on the Mastodon Men. The old bull became more confused than ever; he raised his own hands and roared.
When he was a dozen feet off, Ayuvah lunged in with his spear and slashed the beast across the belly. The Mastodon Man shrieked and lashed out with a bloody stone.
Ayuvah ducked beneath the blow; he plunged his spear into the monster’s neck.
The Mastodon Man leapt, seeking to throw its weight atop Ayuvah, but Ayuvah dodged to the left and pulled his kutow.
The Mastodon Man landed on its belly, and Ayuvah swung his kutow into the monster’s head, splitting the skull wide open.
The old bull stopped moving. Only the back of its legs twitched.
The whole tribe shrieked at Ayuvah, stomping the ground and tearing the trees and grass from the forest floor. Ayuvah raised his hands over his head, challenging the rest of the Mastodon Men. None came forward.
Ayuvah backed off slowly, then turned to Tull and they strode through the sunlight, over the thick wild grapes that cracked and tore like paper.
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