helpless, bound forms.
Lenk cared not, did not hear them, did not look at them. He watched the boat bearing Kataria slide out of view, vanishing into the darkness. He swallowed hard, felt his voice dry and weak in his throat.
‘Tell me,’ he whispered, ‘can you … can either of you save her?’
No more heat. No more fever. Something cold coursed through his blood, sent his muscles tightening against bonds that suddenly felt weak. Something frigid crept into his mind. Something dark spoke within him.
‘
Twenty-Nine
The grandfather wasn’t speaking to him anymore.
Unfortunately, that didn’t mean he wasn’t still there.
Gariath could see him at the corner of his eyes, held the scent of him in his nostrils. And it certainly didn’t mean he had stopped making noise.
‘We had to have known,’ he muttered from somewhere, Gariath not knowing or caring where. ‘At some point, we had to have known how it would all end. The
Of all the aimless babble, Gariath recognised only the word
The shift had begun after they had left the shadow of the giant skeleton and its great grave of a ravine behind them. The grandfather suddenly became as the wind: elusive, difficult to see, and constantly flitting about.
He had long given up any hopes for communication. The grandfather vanished if Gariath tried to look at him, met his questions with silence, nonsensical murmurs or bellowing songs.
‘We used to sing back then, too,’ the grandfather muttered. ‘We had reason to in those days. More births, more pups. We killed only for food. Survival wasn’t the worry it is today.’
Granted, Gariath admitted to himself, he wasn’t
The grandfather had faded from his concerns, if not from his ear-frills, hours ago. Now, the forest opened up into beach and the trees lost ground to encroaching sand. Now, he ignored sight and sound alike, focused only on scent.
Now, he hunted a memory.
It was faint, only a hint of it grazing his nostrils with the deepest of breaths, an afterthought muttered from the withered lips of an ancestor long dead. But it was there, the scent of the
And he wanted to scream at it.
He craved to feel hope again, the desperate yearning that had infected him when he had last breathed such a scent. He wanted to roar and chase it down the beach. He resisted the urge. He denied the hope. The scent was a passing thought. He dared not hope until he tracked it and felt the memories in his nostrils.
There would be time enough to hope when he found the
‘Wisest,’ the grandfather whispered.
Gariath paused, if only because this was the first time he had heard his name pass through the spirit’s spectral lips in hours.
‘Your path is behind you,’ he whispered. ‘You will find only death ahead.’
Gariath ignored him, resuming his trek down the beach. Even if it wasn’t idle babble, Gariath had been told such a thing before. Everyone certain of his inevitable and impending death had, to his endless frustration, been wrong thus far.
And yet, what his ears refused to acknowledge, his snout had difficulty denying.
Broken rocks, dried-up rivers, dead leaves, rotting bark — the scents crept into his nostrils unbidden, tugged at his senses and demanded his attention. The scent he sought was difficult to track, the source he followed difficult to concentrate on.
Each time they passed his nostrils, with every whiff of decay and age, he was reminded of the hours before this moment, of the battle at the ledge.
His mind leapt to that moment time and again, no matter how much he resisted it, of the tall, green reptile- man coated in tattoos, holding a bow in one hand, raising a palm to him. He saw the creature’s single, yellow eye. He heard the creature’s voice, understood its language. He drew in the creature’s scent and knew its name.
How could he have known that? How could he
And yet, it had intervened on his behalf, saved him from death. Twice, Gariath admitted to himself; once with an arrow and again with the surge of violent resolve that had swept through him afterwards. That vigour had waned, dissolving into uncomfortable itches and irritating questions.
‘Find what, Wisest?’ the grandfather murmured. ‘The beach is barren. There is nothing for us here.’
‘There must be a sign, a trace of where they went,’ Gariath replied, instantly regretting it.
‘There are no
‘You’re here.’
‘I am dead.’
‘The scent is strong.’
‘You have smelled it before.’
‘And I found Grahta.’
‘Grahta is dead.’
The grandfather’s words were heavy. He ignored them. He could not afford to be burdened now. He pressed on, nose in the air and eyes upon the cloud-shrouded moon.
Thought was something he could not carry now. It would bow his head low, force his eyes upon the ground and he would never see where he was going.
‘The answer lies behind you, Wisest,’ the grandfather said. ‘Continue, and you will find something to fear.’
The spirit was but one more thing to ignore, one more thing he couldn’t afford to pay attention to. So long as he had a scent to track, answers to seek, he didn’t have to think.
He wouldn’t have to think about how the beach sprawled endlessly before him, how the clouds shifted to paint moonlight on the shore. Still, he made the mistake of glancing down and seeing the shadows rising up in great, curving shards farther down the beach.
