SIGHTWOLF
Erin Hoffman
In Astralar, middling flint-walled city pressed against the chill bosom of
the Windsmouth Mountains, a woman will be banished for failure to pay taxes.
There are no honest cities, but I won’t bore you with my travail; the end of
it is that on a cold spring morning when the tax man came and I had fallen
short for two years running, the constables granted me what of my slim
possessions I could carry and escorted me to the southern wall.
To go straight ahead from the southern wall of Astralar is to
enter the Windsmouth. This is also suicide. The western option is not much
better: Wicklight is a dark forest of evergreens and the occasional oak, a
place where strange things nest. But the days were still cold, winter
clinging like a leech, and the forest at least offered shelter, so in I went
to die.
In this there was no uncertainty. The Astralarian
merchant-princes console themselves with some illusion of justice, but in
winter, the western road is death itself. The forest is the grey place, the
place for those who deserve to die and lack the stomach to carry it out. I
would not last until the spring.
Despite my foolishness with regard to coin, I am not entirely
stupid, and so before the tax season came ‘round I had packed a burlap sack
with basic tools as could be useful in the wild. I did not indicate I was so
prepared, of course; contrarywise I made much of my predicament. I wept and
carried on, even though it was cruel to punish those constables with tears;
I was angry at a city that had taken so much life from me and rarely given
anything back: Astralar, and its goddess-fearing taxpaying citizens.
Exile I might be, but the citizens of Astralar and I remained
bound in our cowardice. Those grey-clad guards knew well as they turned me
loose that a single sack of supplies against the dregs of winter in
Wicklight Forest is merely a colorful variation on institutional murder.
On my first afternoon in the forest I built a shelter out of
pine boughs tipped together into a rude arched roof. I lined the floor with
tender new grass pulled from between gnarled pine roots, and spread canvas
over the top to keep out some of the damp. There was only greenwood to be
found, and after wasting a third of my precious cotton tinder, I climbed
into the shelter, wrapped my single blanket around my shoulders, and slept,
hungry and without fire. It is the coldest I have ever been.
♦ ♦ ♦
The following days improved, but barely. The forest hid a pocket
of swamp whose dead trees hung heavy with branches that would burn if they
weren’t rotten. A cold stream surrendered up cattail roots and under-ripe
woolberries; their furry skins caught in my throat, but they were edible in
small portions. I ate them, and thought often of death and my failure in
finding a noble exit to however ignominious a life. Perhaps grey Wicklight
was what I deserved.
Towering red-fleshed trees between the swamp and the stream
housed the darkest part of the forest. And the darkest part of the forest
housed the woodmistress.
Once every three years or so a child of Astralar would die from
woodmistress poisoning. She came in three varieties, all of which grew
together and looked identical: the first kind was nourishing, the second
produced visions, and the third was deadly.
Hunger clawed at me, first a ravenous thing that twisted my gut,
but after the first day of sparse roots and berries settled into dull senses
and a persistent ache. And yet the thought of death at the hands of the
black witch reminded me that I was a coward.
I went back to the stream, ate too many woolberries, and spent
the night wracked with sour-belly. But I woke the next morning.
♦ ♦ ♦
By the twelfth day I had amassed a tidy pile of provisions and
was beginning to feel something that was not hope, but neither was it
misery. Regularity, perhaps. A mildly less ignoble end. But the ache in my
head and body would not be banished by roots and leaves alone. My soft city
body demanded meat.
I spent the afternoons building traps. The first fifteen were
pitiful things. Half of them succeeded only in spending my meager larder on
invisible woodland creatures, and the other half were never touched at all.
It didn’t help that I had never seen a single other warm
creature since arriving. There were distant birds, small ones; and once I
startled something that might have been a chipmunk or a vole. In the mud by
the stream I found the delicate slivered-moon prints of what must have been
a large deer. Whatever owned those hooves was more a threat to me than I to
it.
But I built the traps anyway, and I tried to be encouraged when
I found them torn apart the next day, looted.
After several days of frustration I at last decided that I would
see this creature I’d been feeding, one way or another. I went to the wild
rose meadow where my traps had been most disrupted and set up five snares.
At the meadow’s center was a strange, massive tree, the only one
of its type I’d seen in the entire forest. It had spade-shaped leaves as big
as my spread hand, a tender green of endless spring, and teardrop flowers of
woodpecker-crest red. In the way of things in Wicklight, it was dangerous;
it was covered in thorns that itched awfully if they broke skin, but they
were spaced far enough apart that a careful climber could avoid them.
I planted myself in that tree, climbing high enough to see the
entire meadow clearly, and settled in the intersection of three huge
branches. And I waited.
The sun climbed across the sky, arcing high over the silent
meadow. Birds came and went, and once, to my astonishment, one of the deer
came to graze. She was alone, but where there was a doe there must have been
more, and also a buck. And she was massive, bigger than any deer I had so
much as heard of, taller than me by a head if we had been on even footing.
Her pelt was a soft dove grey, marked with black at her points, and her head
was broad, her eyes large and soulful. The buck that would pair such a
creature must have been terrifying. I watched, rapt and fearful, as she
nibbled at the roses, delicately pulled up grass, and mercifully left my
traps untouched.
After that brief excitement, the afternoon stretched long.
Hunger scratched its familiar talons at my belly, rattling it, and I
carefully pulled some fennel root from a pocket and ate it. Thoughts of my
life in the city crept in, but I shoved them away. The quiet peace of the
meadow pressed at reflection, but no memory of a loveless past would fill my
aching ribs.
A lassitude settled over me at last as I sat cradled in the
branches, warmed by rare sun—
Then the shadows were long, the sun drifted down below the
treeline.
I thrashed with surprise, panicking. And I fell out of the tree.
Bony limbs bruised the whole way down, but my only thought was
for the quarry. Rocks and barbed seedpods scratched my hands and knees as I
pushed myself upright and staggered across the meadow.
Four of the traps were untouched, and gradually my blood began
to settle. The panic had burned through energy I didn’t have, and a wave of
blackness danced across my vision. Thus it took several second glances to
realize that my fifth trap was nowhere to be found.
The trap—my best, I had thought while building it—was gone, but
there was a trail. Whatever had made its narrow escape was hindered; it had
flailed through the grass, leaving a broken path that no hale creature would
have tolerated.
Clear sight or thought had faded long ago. There was only the
present instant, the musk of earth-loam against the back of my throat, the
sharp, bright scent of evergreen needles. With the dulling of consciousness
came a singular purpose: I had become hunger itself. And so with an animal’s
greed, and also its unthinking grace, I rushed down the trace, following it
as a hound’s nose follows its target. It twisted, dodged, wove, and I
followed it, blade by bent green blade.
And then—sound.
Just ahead, I could see the twitch of the winter-dead grasses.
It was a rabbit, a skinny one. My snare was wrapped around its midsection,
still holding tight, twine bits vibrating like festival ribbons on a
girl-child when it moved.
I would like to say that I paused then, that some percolation of
human self returned to consider the small creature, its bird-bright eyes and
coat of grey-flocked dun, to reflect on the similarities of its predicament
to my own—but that would be a lie.
One hand crept around the bone-handled hunting knife belted to
my side—the only truly valuable thing I still possessed—and I leapt, moving
even as I slipped off the knife’s scabbard-catch and pulled it free. The
rabbit looked up at me with one wide black eye, and then I cut its throat.
It died quickly, and I lay beside it on my back, knife cast
aside, vision fading in and out. We were sorry things unpitied by the world;
a stupid young rabbit not grown canny enough to flee a lumbering human, and
a castoff of a cold society, worth less than a noose and pine box.
At length that peculiarly persistent will to live sent energy
creeping back through my tired body, and I sat up, realizing that I now had
the first meat I’d seen in weeks. Sorry meat it might be, but meat
nonetheless.
The knife lay on the grass, and I cleaned it before sheathing
it, then picked up the rabbit by its stubby ears. As I set off home, my feet
quickened of their own accord, recklessly spending the energy of dwindling
muscles, imagining the thin meat roasting over my swamp-wood fire.
Some instinct the young rabbit had lacked stopped me well
outside the clearing. Was it a strange smell?
My stomach growled, protesting the delay, and when no doom
descended to answer it I crept through the brush and into the camp, one hand
clenched tight around the rabbit, the other on the hilt of the hunting
knife.
Something, or several somethings, had been here. The rabbit fell
from my hand with a soft thump. The larder was overturned, its stones
scattered, all contents gone. My sleeping place was torn apart, the canvas
rent and muddied. The small stack of dried wood had not been spared—most of
it was gone, and what remained had been ripped to small shards.
There were no tracks, no indication of what had come and done
this. I searched for any such sign until vision failed—not from fatigue,
this time, but the swiftly advancing night. I realized too late that I
should instead have been looking for my scattered supplies, on the off
chance that the tinderbox remained.
In a stunned stupor I dragged what was left of my canvas and
blanket up and into the branches of a spreading oak, the only tree I could
climb nearby. I pressed my forehead to its rough trunk, managing two last
thoughts before surrendering to the dark: could the marauders climb, and if
they could, would it be mercy?
♦ ♦ ♦
No mercy of any kind was forthcoming. Dawn woke me stiff, cold,
and wet with dew. The rabbit, so painfully won, was now beyond salvaging,
and I took time I did not have to bury it with apologies and dirt.
I had no energy left for more traps. My mind had retreated to
some far place, awaiting annihilation, and my body marched to the swamp for
more firewood. By sheerest chance I kicked the tinderbox, hidden in supple
spring grass, and picked it up with numb fingers.
When I had gathered a scant armful of dry wood I heard the
woodmistress’s call and stumbled into that dark grove to kneel before the
black patch. And try as I might, I could not get up again.
I sat in front of it as the sun crept across the sky that day.
In the delirium of oncoming starvation the woodmistress became an obsession.
It would become my last religion: staring into the dark fungi, memorizing
every crevice and bulbous white-speckled protrusion. Seeking answers.
When the shadows advanced and my eyes strained I built a fire
from the swamp wood and continued my commune. The flickering red light
casting long shadows on the black-barked trees made me think of burning the
entire forest down. It was a pleasant, if impossible, fantasy—the towers of
needles going up like armies of mad fireflies, the pugnacious Astralarians
who would come to watch the spectacle and ponder how it might affect the
day’s market. I would burn it all, an effigy to a life found beneath
measure.
But that is not what I did. Wicklight’s moldering damp drove me
to a far greater madness.
Rage and delirium had melted the candle of my mind, hollowed my
body, and so I would fill it with the woodmistress. I would eat the entire
patch, and its one-in-three arithmetic would seal even such a despondency as
mine.
The first bite was the hardest, and also the most exquisite.
Bitterness bathed my tongue, followed by a wild surge of energy that lit the
fire I so desired from heels to throat, from chin to elbow, from fingertips
to eyes. I had six arms, like the snake-goddess of far Arith Rea, and all
six carried more bulbous mistresses to the burning gullet beneath my eyes.
When the patch was gone, not even the little proto-spores left,
there ceased to be a tomorrow, or a yesterday, or an I. There was only now,
only we.
We rose, and the world rolled, undulating like the back of a
courtesan beneath our feet. We swayed, and the forest rang like temple
bells, jangling tolls that echoed through all existence. We breathed, and
were beyond life and its trivialities.
We were at the threshold, about to let go, to become air and
bell-song, when she called us back.
She had a very good reason, this maiden with wild brown hair
like rabbit’s-fur. The blinding white of her gown, which bared her shoulders
but enshrouded her feet, made us look away, and we lost our grip on
forever-now. The red, rabbit’s-blood red, that bloomed flowerlike at her
abdomen made us look again, to loose our grip on transcendence. Come back,
she said. Come back.
We would not have gone, we had urgent business to attend to off
the coil of creation, but she had a deer with her, dead, a fat doe only half
eaten. She sang to us of its deliciousness, how succulent its haunches and
how swiftly it could be eaten. How it would fill the emptiness that she knew
still lived within us.
And so we carried our fire between cupped hands, we stepped, and
we were with her. We gave the fire to her dead deer, and we made it a part
of us. We fell upon our fire, and lay our heads in the folds of her white,
white gown, and we left.
♦ ♦ ♦
Quite to my surprise, I woke again in the cold forest.
Birdsong reached my ears unusually loud and clear; the sun that
crept through the pine boughs was brighter than I had ever known. A
lightness filled my mind, an awakeness, glorious beyond consideration
of my moldering joints.
Most of the scents were familiar—earth, pine, rock, dew—but
another was not. It took me several euphoric moments to recognize it.
Death.
It was not the smell of distant death, decomposition, but the
closer, more unsettling smell of death’s advancing shadow, of injury past
the point of no return.
She watched me silently, large golden eyes unblinking as she lay
near the deer she had felled, so quiet that at first I thought her a
lingering phantom of the woodmistress-sight. But her stillness was not a
willing one; her folded legs could not completely conceal the deep wound in
her abdomen, a scent of the wrong kind of blood, of dying.
At the sight of the deer, and the remnants of the fire beside
it, the cleaned bones and half-eaten haunch that sat in the ashes, I
realized the source of my euphoria. My stomach no longer clamored, turned in
on itself. “Thank you,” I started to say, the first I’d spoken in weeks—and
then the puppies arrived.
I suppose properly they were wolf cubs, but with their large,
ungainly paws and lolling tongues, pricked ears and delicate whiskers, I
could only think of them as puppies, not unlike the ones my neighbor had
raised, guard dogs for Astralar’s merchant princes. Before he began the slow
process of turning them hard and vicious.
There were four, and three of them were colored like their
mother, little copies of her rabbit-brown with white-tipped paws and tails.
The fourth was charcoal and black, wavering from ash to midnight depending
on where the light caught him.
“They’re beautiful,” I told her, and her ears swiveled toward
me, large and thoughtful. She regarded me again in silence, just long enough
for me to wonder whether she was an ordinary animal, and if I had stumbled
out of the woodmistress haze only to be eaten by wolves—and then she came
into my mind.
She did not use words, though I remembered her speaking clearly
in the delirious vision. Instead she filled my mind with action, with
knowledge. She showed me how to hunt, in her way—it was mostly theory, being
as I lacked fast paws, a powerful jaw, sharp eyes. But she also showed me
how to look for plants that could be dug up for yellow roots that were as
good as meat, which berries and leaves to avoid, and which trees, when young
and tender, could be eaten if their bark was stripped away.
Then she asked of me what any young mother, standing at her own
life’s southern wall, would ask: please take care of my children.
And then she lay down her head and died.
♦ ♦ ♦
I gave the mother wolf a better burial than I had given the
rabbit, in a meadow near where I’d found her, though it was considerably
harder, not just because of her size. I thought of how she had led me
through the woodmistress haze, how her pups gamboled around her, pulling at
her tail, trying to wake her, and tears streamed down my face, turning to
mud when I scrubbed a dirt-dusted forearm over my eyes. I stopped to rest
often, having not much strength, and the burying took most of the day. Then
I went into the forest to hunt down the roots and plants she had taught me,
and the puppies followed like ducklings.
In my life I had birthed and raised five children, and one by
one watched them leave Astralar for fairer cities to the north as any wise
youths would do. Puppies are significantly easier to mind than babies,
especially out in the wild. If they have grass to pull up and a reasonably
fresh carcass to destroy, they will quite occupy themselves for hours on end
and not stray far from where you sleep. When we came back to the clearing I
rebuilt the fire and fed them roasted venison and vegetables, which, rather
to my surprise, they seemed to enjoy equally.
When I slept, I dreamt of human children, one for each pup, and
it stung how they reminded me of my own. Without thinking, because it is
what you do with children, I taught them things over the following weeks:
the basics of figuring, how to tend simple wounds, how to write in the
Alorean common tongue. And so my nights were thoroughly occupied with this
gentle fantasy, which sheltered me from thinking overmuch about my poorly
spent life or strange and dubious future.
♦ ♦ ♦
The weeks stretched past counting, and I measured time by the
growth of the pups. They had given me purpose, and their mother had given me
the ability to survive in the forest. I suspected that they had been behind
the destruction of my camp, but I did not know what had caused the mother’s
mortal injury. This was my only remaining anxiety—not for my own sake, but
the pups’, who could not yet survive unguarded.
I woke that morning as I had every morning for the past several
weeks, surrounded by three balls of fur. The fourth perched between my
shoulder blades. He was rapidly growing too big for this to be a good idea,
but I hadn’t the heart to convince him so.
We’d eaten well last night. My new traps had caught two rabbits,
and one of the pups had brought down a third, more by chance than skill, but
a kill nonetheless. And so the pups were stuffed to their necks and I woke
before they did. I dared not stir—their late mornings were painfully
rare—and at length slipped back into sleep.
The pups were not there when I woke again into dreams. Since
that first day with the mother wolf, my dream life had taken on new
sharpness, not just with fancies of children, but in all other respects as
well. The children’s absence did not trouble me; they often went adventuring
into dreams of their own.
I was exploring the Other Forest, the place I always went to in
the strange steady dream world, when the father wolf found me.
The silver pool I had found, as things often were in the Other,
was still as glass, and impossibly clear. I saw his reflection first.
Unlike the mother wolf, and the puppies, he was a wolf here as
well as in the waking world. His coat was coal-black and silver-tipped, as
the dark fourth pup would surely be when he was grown.
You are not supposed to be here, he said. You are
not.
“What kind of greeting is that for one who raises your
children?” I folded my arms, hands clenching.
The fur lifted on his neck and his mouth parted with surprise as
he forayed into my mind and saw that I spoke the truth.
“Where were you?” I accused him. “Where were you when your cubs
were born? Where were you when their mother died in the dirt?” A hot anger
lit the air around me, a living red glow.
He took a step backward. They say the gate has been opened,
he said. They say the dawnsingers have returned.
“You’re not talking sense.” His strange words took some of the
heat out of my anger, replaced it with uneasiness.
I went to watch the Pack, he said, and the cloud of ideas
around his last word told me several things about them. There were many,
beyond counting, and they were frightening. And—
“They cast you out,” I said, now with the soft celadon light of
sadness and unpleasant satisfaction.
I left, he said. We left. My wife and I. We have no
Pack. The Pack is mad. Humans—
“But you have pups,” I interrupted. “And you have me
now.” As if summoned, the children came, emerging from the forest. They
gathered around me, and this time they flickered between wolf and human
children, as if not quite sure what they should be.
You are not supposed to be here, he said again.
“Your name,” I said. I ruffled the fur of the dark grey pup,
whose tail waved gently in answer. “What others call you.”
There are no others.
“What she called you. What your children call you.”
Without warning, he flooded my mind with images. Birthsight,
he said, halfway through the storm. There was high sunlight, a great stone,
black-trunked trees, climbing shelf fungus. And near the end, a feathery,
yellow-flowered herb that I knew.
“Rue,” I said. He stood awkwardly near the pup-children, the tip
of his tail twitching, as though he didn’t quite know what to do with them
and wasn’t especially interested in finding out. The name seemed
appropriate.
♦ ♦ ♦
When I woke from that dream, the wolf was there and the pups
were awake, warily sniffing him. As it had been with the lady-wolf, his mind
was further from mine now, pushing me to wonder if the dreams had only been
dreams. But the suspicion with which he regarded me was more intelligent
than any mere animal could be, and when I said his name, his left ear
twitched with recognition, and annoyance.
I reached out to him with my mind, not knowing quite how I was
doing it, mimicking what the pups’ mother had done to me—and he danced away,
his lip curling to bare a long yellow fang, but not before I had touched his
thoughts.
His mind, like the minds of his children, was a sea of
sensation, a titanic wave of scent and sound. Much diminished but present
was sight—and I understood suddenly the disconnect between the waking and
dreaming wolf-selves. He and the puppies were far too aware of the physical
world while they were awake; in sleep, they could speak, figure,
strategize—in sleep, deadened from sense, they were like me.
Front-mind, now-mind. That is the wolf. And it explained,
perhaps, part of why I remembered so little from my days now. In my close
contact with all of them I was becoming just a little less human, a little
more like these wolves, who sensed by day and thought by night.
I went out to begin the day’s hunting, and the puppies followed
me, as they did every morning. The father lingered, his tail twitching, but
at length he followed also, realizing—whether he liked it or not, I
thought—that his destiny now lie with his children, and with me.
♦ ♦ ♦
That night we ate well again, better than we ever had, with a
young doe the father wolf brought down. It was partly my kill; I startled
it, and its own ill luck made it bound practically into the jaws of the
waiting wolf. And so it was that we all went to our dreams that night
well-sated.
The Other Forest was dark. It had its own day and night, its own
seasons, that came and went in no pattern I could identify, with no
connection to the waking world.
Defying the dark, the children filled the wood with the sounds
of their play. They were still intimidated by the presence of their father,
but one at a time—eldest to youngest—they flickered into their human child
selves and played, jostling with a loop and stick game I had taught them.
Here in the Other one’s focused thoughts could summon simple objects, and
the little female, the youngest, was particularly adept at this.
The father wolf watched them in silence for nearly an hour. When
he spoke at last, I jumped. Thank you for taking care of my family.
He never seemed to question that I might have been lying. For all I knew,
lying might be impossible here, or for the wolves altogether.
“They are a joy. But there is a danger to them in these woods,”
I said. “Whatever killed their mother.”
To his credit, when I showed him my memory of the mother wolf’s
injury, he drew back with a keen of sorrow. It was good to know that he had
loved her. That he could.
The keen had been sorrow, sharp and pure like winter rain, but
beneath it there was fear, and recognition.
“You have seen this kind of injury before.”
He is the king of this forest, he said, uneasy at
acknowledging his own inferiority, but matter-of-fact. She should not
have stood against him.
“Maybe he threatened your children.” The truth was neither of us
knew, but I preferred to call her injury heroic, especially as it made Rue
uncomfortable.
In spring, his antlers will have blood. He will be weak.
“Tomorrow, then,” I said.
♦ ♦ ♦
The notion of hunting the deer-king was not one I relished, but
I liked much less the thought of sharing the forest with him, ever-fearful
of his attack. We discussed the hunt throughout that night, and if anxiety
pulled my eyelids open long before dawn, purpose filled my veins with warmth
and energy.
I spent the morning lashing my hunting knife to an old ash
branch I’d harvested for firewood and then saved, noting its unusual
straightness. A rude thing, to be sure, but it stood me a greater chance of
usefulness than trying to stab a creature twice my height with a blade the
size of my palm.
We set out with morning still pale in the sky, heaping the
puppies with distractions to keep them from following us. I emptied my
recreated larder and taught them a new game—but very likely, the
father-wolf’s stern threat of doom should they follow was what kept them in
the camp.
Rue threaded through the forest on soft, silent paws, and I
followed as quietly as I could. We came first to the rose meadow, then bore
northwest through the broadest side of the wood, places where I had never
gone. Perhaps I had instinctively avoided the deeper territory of the
deer-king, or perhaps I unconsciously attempted to remain close to Astralar,
which the deer had learned to avoid.
He would attack with his hooves, Rue said, which was only very
slightly less dangerous than if he should come after us with full bone
antlers. And he would attack us alone, which was a small blessing, but a
blessing nonetheless.
But we could not go after him alone. If we pursued only the
buck, he would flee, compelled by instinct. We would have to threaten one of
the does. And not just any doe—his queen.
At first the evidence of their domain was subtle: nibbled
leaves, short-cropped grass, saplings stripped of their bark. Then less
subtle—trails through the underbrush, piles of dung like small black
berries, delicate half-moon tracks in the mud.
The first doe I saw was two wolf-lengths away from us,
surprisingly close, her head bent to the soft spring grass. She was so
silent I knew we must have passed one or two others without realizing. My
heart picked up speed, and when my foot came down on a rock it turned my
ankle. I managed to stop the yelp that wanted to fly from my throat, but the
thud of my misstep reached the doe’s twitching ears. Her glistening black
nose flared, and then she turned, leaping through the brush.
The closer we drew, the more there were, their black eyes
shining softly through the leaves, beautiful faces flat and haunting. They
watched, only, despite the predator in their midst, as if they knew their
numbers gave them the upper hand. If they all turned on us, we would surely
die—a thought that pulsed panic through my veins as I imagined the puppies
left alone to starve.
I hadn’t known how we would recognize the queen doe, but in the
end it was obvious. She held court in a glade with the finest grass,
selecting daintily which she should eat. She was also the single most
beautiful creature I had ever seen in the waking world, tall and slim, each
turn of bone and pelt a carefully considered perfection.
Rue felt no such admiration. He growled once, well back in his
throat—ears turned from all directions toward us—and he leapt for her
elegant throat.
The deer-queen screamed high and clear, like the rabbit had done
but ten times as loud. She did not move, and Rue hurtled toward her—I cried
out, sure he would find his target, suddenly heartbroken at the idea of
destroying so beautiful a creature.
A shadow passed immediately over my head, massive, and struck
Rue, knocking him away from the doe.
The deer-king screamed, a strange high-pitched cry, but for all
its reedy thinness there was nothing of weakness in it. He stomped, tossing
his head—brandishing antlers that, as Rue had predicted, were small still
and covered with velvet.
The breath stopped in my throat as I marveled at his size, his
majestic build. As we stood there, taken aback, the more awe-inspiring he
seemed to grow. Surely this was a creature built by the goddesses
themselves. Who were we to think we could bring him down?
He stomped again, with both front hooves this time, daring us to
charge. Rue snarled, a sound of nightmares and bloodlust, and advanced,
snapping his jaws.
The doe fled, a flash of dove grey against the green, and the
deer-king loomed large before us. Incredibly, as he reared, the wave of
emotion that radiated from him matched Rue’s—a terrible hunger, a thirst to
destroy. I took in the contour of his muscles, the size of his hooves, and
my grip on the spear slackened in fear.
Rue’s ears dropped, only for a second, but I knew he felt it
too. Then he rallied, snarling again, and his thoughts were so clear that
they reached me without either of us intending it. Without words, he was
imagining his mate being brought down by this buck, by his slashing hooves.
The memory of it—my memory, reflected through the wolf-mind—filled him with
rage.
The deer-king lowed again, deeper this time, and spun, lashing
out with his hind hooves. And with his attack came a wave of fury that not
only equaled but exceeded our own.
Rue gave a cry, and, without so much as being touched by the
buck’s flying hooves, fell to the ground. He moaned and then whined, high,
sharp, like one of the puppies when injured. The buck did not lunge, as I
expected him to, but reared again and stomped, posturing. As he did, Rue’s
pain—his own rage, amplified, made crippling—doubled back over us.
The spear fell from my hand and I clutched at myself, broken
down by despair. The buck’s tempest-rage was like a storm around us. My
despair doubled, amplified by the beast’s contempt.
I fell upon the spear, and as I hit the ground, the impact
struck twice—first my body, and then a second shock, echoing from the buck.
And I realized his strange animal magic.
“He’s mirroring us!” I shouted, and even as I did so the wave of
my anger bounced back at me, pounding in my throat, obliterating thought.
And Rue continued to writhe, uncomprehending. His wolf-mind,
consumed with the sensations around him—his own, and those that emanated
from the king-buck—could not make sense of my words.
Now the buck was bearing down on him, razor hooves flashing
high, preparing a stomp that would end Rue’s life. Fear sizzled through
me—first my own, then again—and I fought to force my unwilling hands around
the haft of the spear.
I rolled, and as I pushed myself to a kneel I wrapped all the
will I yet possessed around my quivering, faltering mind. I seized myself,
dug deep for the core that had carried me through, pitiful though my life
had been. I had been born unwanted, had grown an orphan, had married, had
been abandoned. I had survived. My children had survived. And I seized now
on that survivor’s gut, and I willed strength at the monster. I willed
vengeance. I willed protection.
Rue rolled and leapt to his feet, jaws wide. His anger flared
back, roaring up like a flame that has found new fuel, and I fought again to
keep my will dominant over his in the buck’s mind. I drowned Rue’s ferocity
with my surety.
Wolf jaws snapped around the buck’s tender neck, dragged him
down—and as his hooves touched the ground I lunged, driving the spear
between his ribs, aiming for his heart. He bellowed, a choking sound as
Rue’s jaws clenched harder, and then he fell, yanking the spear-shaft from
my hands.
I scrambled out of the way, and Rue’s jaws closed completely,
tearing flesh with a sickening sound. The deer-king’s blood flowed around
us, still hot, and I fought to keep down the gorge that bubbled up my
throat.
As I lay on the ground, gasping, wracked with the aftermath of
near-death, Rue paced around the clearing, snarling, snapping, barking at
the remainder of the herd. They’d gathered around us, and cried out as the
deer-king fell—but now they dispersed, turning, white tails high as they
fled.
When they were all gone, and long minutes had passed while I lay
there thanking the goddesses for my survival against all seeming reason,
Rue’s growls subsided, and he panted, sitting back on his haunches. Later,
we would drag the buck’s carcass to the puppies, and feed—but for now there
was only life, only gratitude.
Rue’s dark eyes turned toward me, the hunt faded from them.
Change, he said, and I started, not realizing he could speak at all in
the waking world. Change coming. You. The Pack. There was
exhilaration in his bearing, a kind of welcome he had not given me before
this moment.
Some part of me that remained human mourned that it came at the
cost of such an animal as the deer-king, even as I knew he’d been a danger,
even an inevitable destroyer, of our small family. There would be another
deer-king—the herd was hardly thinned—but that day was far away.
I thought of the puppies, and I sent my thoughts to Rue, who
chuffed with agreement. Perhaps I would see his Pack one day. But for now,
there were children to raise and teach. There was a life to live.
Copyright © 2011 by Erin Hoffman