The Tiger and the Wolf

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  follow it, there are the Horse traders.’

  The old priest frowned. ‘But your people . . .’

  ‘We would brave the Wolf’s jaws to do it, yes.’ She closed her

  eyes, breathing in the land around her. ‘Winter Runners or Swift

  Backs – if there were Wolf scouts at the doors of the Shining

  Halls, then they will be everywhere south as well. We could run

  into them at any time, but more and more so, the further south

  we tread.’

  ‘Then what?’Venater demanded, sounding as though running

  into a few enemies on the road would be just the thing for him. ‘North,’ she said.

  ‘What is north?’ Asmander asked her.

  ‘Cold, is what’s north,’ put in Venater. ‘More cold even than

  this.’

  She looked at him blankly, because this was a warm spring

  promising a fierce summer. ‘Do you think Loud Thunder would

  help us, Hesprec?’

  The old Serpent looked troubled. ‘The Cave Dweller we wintered with, yes. The man he now is, after his Mother has taken

  him to task – that is a different man.’

  ‘But?’

  ‘But these are quite the most hostile lands I have ever travelled,’ he admitted, and then added, ‘Yes, even including the

  Plains, Laughing Child: your people have no monopoly on

  unpleasantness. So we will see if the Bear will take in the Tiger’s

  quarry . . . and the Wolf’s.’

  ‘And then, Messenger?’ Asmander demanded.

  The old man plainly knew what he meant, though he looked

  so weary at the thought that Maniye could feel the weight of his age dragging at her, too. ‘Then it will be time to look to the

  south’s needs, Champion. And whatever I can do, I will do.’ They set out again, and this time Maniye, as wolf, led them.

  Shyri relinquished the vanguard with nothing more than a shrug

  of her shoulders. Her scent, when she Stepped, was harsh and

  strange in Maniye’s nose.

  Their path took them into broken ground, where the cover of

  the trees was patchy and unreliable. That was her error, she realized in retrospect. She was trying to find the shortest path, and

  thought this must also be the best.

  When the attack came, it was unheralded: not a scent, not a

  sound until it was too late. She was running their little band

  across a rugged stretch of land creased deeply by the path of a

  stream that was still swelled by late meltwater from the northern

  reaches of the highlands. The crossing was difficult, the waters

  high and fast and hungry, too much so to swim in any shape.

  Shyri and Venater were already across, and Asmander was just

  about to make the jump, with Hesprec slung inside his tunic.

  Then there was a rush of wind – she assumed it was just that at

  first, but it grew louder and louder far too swiftly. Abruptly the

  sun was blotted from the sky by a vast shadow.

  The great bird struck, coursing at head height over the

  uneven land, angling its wings as it took her, its talons, hot and

  strong as metal from the forge, seizing her about the body. She

  had time for one shriek – more of surprise than pain or fear –

  and she was airborne.

  There were other birds, lesser creatures circling overhead, but

  the vast-winged eagle made them seem sparrows. It hoisted her

  into the air with ease, and the blustering beat of its feathers sent

  Asmander toppling from the stream’s edge. She caught a wheeling glimpse of him kicking away from the rock, one arm out for

  the others to catch him, and then she was already too far from

  them, jolting and jostling in the air as the eagle shifted its grip

  on her. The points of its hooked claws snagged in her clothing

  and pierced through all her furs and hide, to prick at her skin. In mid-air she had tried striking out at the eagle, thinking that

  she might be able to hurt him, and so bring him down. At the

  first blow, though, he simply let go with one claw, leaving her

  dangling wildly from the other over what was now a fatal drop.

  The message was clear.

  She was not carried so very far, and she could feel the eagle

  beginning to labour, for all the great span of his wings. Could he

  have plucked up someone larger – Asmander or Shyri, perhaps?

  Venater? Surely not. But Maniye had always been small. Abruptly the hard grip of those talons loosened and she

  yelled out in terror, before landing on hard rocks. The drop had

  just been a second’s worth, and she found she had taken her

  tiger shape, four legs cushioning the landing as best they could.

  For a moment she was snarling, swiping at those around her,

  full of fighting spirit. Then the eagle landed on her back, driving

  her savagely to the unyielding ground. She twisted and clawed at

  him, but his grip was horrifyingly strong. A second later he had

  effortlessly shifted a claw to her neck, choking her, and she was

  again in her fragile human form beneath him.

  He keened and shrieked, deafeningly loud, and people nearby

  were hurrying forwards. Even as she gasped and gagged, a

  noose was about her neck, pulling tight, and then his wings

  boomed in the air, lifting him up and then dropping him down

  a handful of paces away. She reached for the noose instantly, but

  hands were laid on her, hauling her to her feet. There was an

  Eyrieman on either side of her, twisting her arms back painfully:

  lean, hard men with half-painted faces.

  The eagle stretched its neck back and spread its wings, a gesture of triumph beyond mistaking, and became a man: Yellow

  Claw. Of course, it was Yellow Claw.

  ‘What do you want?’ she shouted at him. Surely it was

  enough that her mother’s people and her father’s would be

  hunting her, and that neither meant her well? What did this

  creature want with her? ‘Did she send you? Did the priesthood

  send you?’

  ‘Nobody sendsYellow Claw,’ the Eyrieman leader scoffed.

  ‘Yellow Claw is his own master. Yellow Claw is a Champion,

  Many Tracks Wolf girl.Your people do not even know what that

  means.’

  He spoke the word as Hesprec had, when referring to

  Asmander. There was something about the big Eyrieman, and

  there had been a similar sense about the black southerner,

  although the general strangeness of the latter’s appearance had

  taken more of her attention.They both cast greater shadows than

  other men. As though a greater spirit stands behind them? Yellow Claw’s wings had taken them north to a high place, a

  stony shelf jutting high and sheer out of the trees, with the

  mountain slopes above. Here the Eyrie had carved out a roost

  for themselves within Tiger lands. There were at least a dozen

  warriors in her sight, and a handful of women. The former were

  eyeing her with brash stares; the latter had eyes downcast, some

  cooking, some mending or making things. With a jolt, Maniye

  saw that each woman’s long hair was looped about her own neck

  like a halter: nothing they could not have undone with a little

  effort, but a mark of slavery nonetheless.

  ‘As for what I want?’ Yellow Claw muscled closer to her, so

  that she could smell the raw-flesh stink of him, feel the heat

 
; rising from his body. ‘I want you, girl, and so I have you. So it is

  with all that the Eyrie’s gaze lights on.’ He was glaring at her

  from his war-eye. ‘I have the little mongrel girl that Stone River

  is hunting, and that the Queen of the Tigers demands back. But

  I do not think I will give you to her, not yet. Not until I know

  what is so important about such a meagre-looking morsel. And

  then I will decide whether you should return to our faithful

  allies, or whether I fly you to the Eyrie as my prize, or whether

  I cast you from the heights to see if the Hawk will save you. I do

  not think that he would.’

  He cocked his head at some of the women. ‘Make sure that

  collar stays on her, or you’ll feel my talons, every one of you.

  She’s a valuable cur, this one – for now, she is. Fleeting Light, fly to the Shining Halls, see what they say about their missing mongrel. But don’t take too long.You know how easily I grow bored. I might give this one the Hawk’s test.’ He thrust his tattooed face into hers, close enough that she could have bitten him, had she dared. ‘Do you fly well, Wolf girl, Tiger girl? Do you leave many tracks in air? I didn’t think so. Whatever god you speak to, ask him to make you useful to me.’

  33

  Maniye sat miserably, with a braided collar tight about her neck. A day had passed since her capture, and Yellow Claw was still awaiting the return of the man he had sent off to the Shining Halls. In the meantime she had been held here under the watch of the women, eating thin stew once a day. Right now she was watching two of the warriors play some sort of game. The Eyriemen had plainly camped here for some time. They had a row of wood-framed hides to shelter in, lined up against the rising rock furthest from the edge, and there were jagged stakes bristling at the one place where their bluff could be approached on foot from below.

  Then there was their testing ground – or whatever name they had for it. They had hauled up a dozen tree trunks and then wedged or roped them to the rock so that they projected out over the sheer drop, jutting at various angles. The task must have involved a considerable effort, but then Yellow Claw would have had a band of fractious warriors on his hands, and an urgent need to find them something to do. She watched the Eyriemen play a game where they fought and wrestled at the ends of those precarious posts, darting and dancing to tag each other without having to resort to their wings.

  A shadow fell across her: one of the women, come to check on her – or check that she was not escaping the rope. Not that I would have anywhere to go. Yellow Claw was right. I can’t make tracks on air.

  There came another little wooden bowl of stew, containing the last scraps of whatever the hunters had caught. The Eyriemen had a strict hierarchy of eating:Yellow Claw would be first, or whoever he had left in charge. Then, if he was present, would be the sinister Grey Herald, although Maniye had seen little of him, and he had shown no sign of knowing her. After that, the other warriors ate, jostling to be first with much joking and cursing.

  Maniye ate next, and the women of the Eyrie were left to satisfy their hunger with whatever remained. A prisoner ranked above them, it seemed. At first Maniye assumed they must forage for themselves, but it was plain they were forbidden to Step, prisoners of this plateau even as she was.

  ‘You were at the Shining Halls?’ Maniye asked one. In truth they all had a similar look to them, these women: not in the features so much as the downtrodden expression that gripped them.

  She thought the woman would ignore her, but the Eyrie girl paused and then shook her head quickly.

  ‘But one of you was?’ Maniye pressed. ‘She even spoke for you. So she’s your leader?’

  The Eyriewoman’s eyes widened in shock. Maniye was ready for her to flee, but instead she dipped her head closer and murmured, ‘Yellow Claw cannot speak direct to the Tiger. There are only certain ways a Champion of the Eyrie may speak to such a woman, and still retain his dignity.’

  ‘Threats and bullying?’ The words came out before Maniye could plan them.

  The Eyriewoman’s look was solemn, though. ‘If you anger him, you will find out.’

  ‘Do you have a name?’

  The question, coming out of the blue, seemed to take the woman completely by surprise. Maniye hoped perhaps she might have an ally here: a fellow sufferer under the tyranny of Yellow Claw.

  ‘I am Many Tracks – that is my hunter name.’ She had so little to barter with. ‘I am Maniye . . . I was born Maniye.’ It was a great gesture of trust for her to tell that to a stranger.

  For a moment words formed on the Eyriewoman’s lips, but then they died and she backed off, as though Maniye carried something contagious.

  Yellow Claw came back towards evening, strutting through his men, giving some of them a shove to remind them of who he was. Maniye had hated a lot of people in her time, not least her own father and the priest Kalameshli, but she decided there was nobody she had come to dislike quite so swiftly as this Eyrieman. He was strong, and marked out in that odd way that lent him a fierce grandeur, and his Stepped form was majestic and proud enough to put the other hawks to shame. And yet it was wasted, Maniye thought: great gifts given to a small man.

  He stared at her with something of a sneer on his face, and she found she could read the sequence of his thoughts there quite easily. He was impatient; he wanted to start on her. He was

  – she realized, with a mouth abruptly dry with fear – wondering if there was sufficient chance that she was unimportant. If she was just being pursued as a criminal, a thief or oathbreaker or the like, then nobody would complain at her fate.

  ‘So what are you?’ he murmured.

  She wasn’t sure if he was speaking to her, or just to himself. There was a great temptation to blurt it all out: I am the daughter of the Winter Runners; I am the daughter of the Shining Halls! I am not for you! She could save herself the horrors of his touch, for this night at least. But if he learned that, how would he then use her? Would he sell her back to her father, or turn her against her mother? Or would he take her, anyway, and crow to his men how he’d had a Wolf chief’s daughter and the child of the Tiger Queen all in one night?

  That last seemed very plausible.

  But his patience held, for now. The chance that there was some great value in her, which could be bartered for his own advantage, lent him a fraying line of restraint. A cruel man and a bully he might be, but no fool.

  That night she did not dare sleep in case it was the hard hands of Yellow Claw that woke her. She lay and shivered, and tried to pick at her collar where it had been woven together. Or she made plans to creep to the edge of the bluff and find a way down, human hands and feet grappling with the jagged rock. And she did none of these things, because she knew that defiance from her, the wrong look, the wrong word, would cut that straining thread that held Yellow Claw back. An excuse was all he needed.

  Late that night, with the moon high in a chill and cloudless sky, someone moved very close to her, sending a shock of fear through her. Yellow Claw? Or one of the women? The thought of rescue did not even occur to her.

  And it was not rescue. Instead it was Grey Herald. She could make out his cloaked form, the moonlight pale on his bare barrel chest. He had sat down within arm’s reach of her, and had done so with only one small scuff to betray him. His eyes watched her from their white-stripe mask.

  ‘In the Other Lands dwelt all the People once,’ he said, his deep voice soft, the intonation one of ritual and rote-learning. ‘Where there was always game for a hunter’s bow, and the water was sweet, where every tree bore ripe fruit, and there was no summer nor winter.’

  She craned her neck to blink at him, because this fierce warrior was crouching there reciting children’s stories with great gravity. His eyes were fixed on her so fiercely that she thought this bizarre recounting must somehow be the prelude to an assault.

  ‘In those days the People
had many shapes between them, and many souls, and great was the number of their Steppings and their forms, and all were of one people,’ Grey Herald informed her sincerely. ‘But there were some amongst them for whom all these forms and all these souls were not enough and, in seeking more, they grew less and less, until they had no souls at all.’

  ‘The Plague People,’ Maniye breathed. The disconnection between this man and his words was fading with the intensity of his telling. She felt like a child again.

  ‘They had no souls,’ he went on, ‘but power they had, for they became sorcerers and bent the world and the spirits to their will. And they consorted with monsters that had come into the world, and that sought to devour all the People, all the mute brothers, every living thing. And so they were called a plague.’

  He paused at that, as though lamenting the loss of such paradise days, and then sighed. ‘Those of the People who escaped their devouring tide realized that the Other Lands were lost to them, and they begged the sun to lead them to a land where they might be safe from the Plague People. And the sun bent low and red to the earth, and those people who yet lived followed that light into another place that is these lands that are ours.’

  He paused, and Maniye had to restrain herself from urging him to continue. It was an old tale, and she had heard it many times, in various incarnations. Not like this, though. Grey Herald spoke as though it was a true article of faith to him, deeply and direly relevant to every day of his living. This ancient tale had no dust on it, for him.

  And she realized he was waiting for her to speak the next words and, though she did not know his precise way of telling it, she could bridge that gap.

  ‘But the Plague People came after,’ she said, and he nodded briefly.

  ‘The Plague People came after,’ he echoed, ‘for they could not abide the thought of there being a land free of their hungers, be it never so cold, never so dry, never so barren. And as the last of the people crossed from the other lands to the lands that are ours, three there were, who turned to face them and hold them back. And these three fought them from sunset to sunrise, and stood against all the monsters that the Plague People had compacted with. And on the next morning, the sun arose with such a fierce fire that it scorched the land away, all that stood between the other lands and our lands. And the sea rushed in, of such depth and such width that even the monsters of the Plague People could not cross it.’

 

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