Return to Eden
had finished Hanath slapped Morgil so enthusiastically on the shoulder that he knocked him over on his side.
"We will do it," he cried. "We will go, now is the time to leave. We will go north and trade with the furry ones."
"Perhaps I will go with you," Kerrick said. "To show you the way."
Armun's eyes widened with shock. Before she could speak her anger he seized her hands in his. "We will both go, why not, take a mastodon to carry the things we wish to trade."
"That will be too slow," she said. "And we will not go, nor do I even wish to talk of it. The children are here…"
"And the children are safe here. Ysel eats soft-chewed food now, Arnwheet has his friends, while the sammads and many hunters are on all sides."
"I want to go too!" Arnwheet called out and Armun shushed him.
"This is a thing that hunters wish to do. You are not quite the grown hunter yet. Some day, but not now."
She took the boy back to the tent with her, leaving the three hunters with their heads bent close, making plans. She was concerned, but not worried. But what should she do if Kerrick said that he wished to go with them? She must decide before he returned. He wanted very much to go, that was clear. Perhaps life on this island was too easy. Certainly it was too hot. She laughed out loud. She would very much like to do this thing as well. By the time Kerrick had returned her mind was made up.
"I think those two have had a good idea," he said. His fingers twisted at the skymetal knife as he talked.
"Of course there is no real need for furs here, not in the summer at least. But the Paramutan have many other things."
"Like what, whistles?"
"Not only whistles," he said angrily, then saw that she was smiling.
"You want to make this trek, don't you?"
"Yes, of course."
"Well so do I. It is too quiet here now, too hot. Malagen, the Sasku woman, she likes to look after Ysel, she will do it willingly if I go with you. Arnwheet has his friends and will not even know that we have gone. I think that it will be a very good thing to go north for a while. We will find cold rain, perhaps snow, and when we return the worst heat will be over."
A shadow passed across the clearing before the tent, drifted back. Kerrick stepped out and looked into the burning blue bowl of the sky, shielded his eyes with his hand. It was a large bird, an eagle perhaps, soaring in slow circles, a black silhouette against the sky. It was too high to make out any details. It moved away and he went back into the shade. Was it a Yilanè bird sent to look for them? Not that it mattered: Lanefenuu would never forget those dead uruketo. The fighting was over.
Day followed burning day as the uruketo swam slowly west along the coast. When the waves broke on the sandy shore they moved steadily, with at least three Yilanè on the fin at all times watching the coast slip by. Only when there were large inlets and bays did their progress slow as they made a careful search of the indented coastline. It became even slower when they came to one large bay with islands, it appeared to be a river mouth, that had to be carefully searched. Fafnepto was on the fin, blinking in the sunlight as she looked at the cool darkness under the trees close by. When they turned by a rocky headland she pointed it out to Vaintè.
"Oddness of rock shape, memorable/unforgettable. I will go ashore there and hunt fresh meat."
"Appreciated by all. When we have finished the search we will return and meet you here. Good hunting."
"For me, it is always good hunting." She climbed down the fin and slipped into the water.
It took almost the entire day to search the bay. After that they started up the river through large, sweeping bends. For the first time Vaintè began to worry that their search would be in vain. She knew that Gendasi*
was large, but had never truly appreciated the size of this new continent. Always before she had followed on the track of the ustuzou, going where they led. Now, on her own, she was beginning to realize that even something as large as an uruketo would be difficult to find—when she had no idea of where to look.
The river was still wide and deep, moving inland in lazy loops. The other uruketo could have easily come this way. Should they search further? It was a great relief to discover that sandbars soon blocked the channel and they had to return. There was no need to follow the river any more. Those they searched for must still be somewhere along the ocean's shore.
It was
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