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Breakaway: Clan of the Ice Mountains
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Table of Contents
Breakaway (Book 1: Clan of the Ice Mountains)
Copyright
Dedication
Prologue
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
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Breakaway
Book One: Clan of the Ice Mountains
by C. S. Bills
Highest Hope Publishing LLC
Copyright
This is a work of fiction. The events and characters described herein are imaginary and are not intended to refer to specific places or living persons. The opinions expressed in this manuscript are solely the opinions of the author and do not represent the opinions or thoughts of the publisher. The author has represented and warranted full ownership and/or legal right to publish all the materials in this book. Breakaway, Book One: Clan of the Ice Mountains. All Rights Reserved.
Copyright © 2012 C.S Bills.
Edited by Bethany Eicher.
Cover and formatting by Jeff Bennington.
Published by Highest Hope Publishing LLC.
This book may not be reproduced, transmitted, or stored in whole or in part by any means, including graphic, electronic, or mechanical without the express written consent of the publisher except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.
Dedication
To my students at Hahn Intermediate School.
You are amazing!
Prologue
Cloudless sky laced with stars met the endless expanse of ice on the horizon, then stretched itself up into an infinite black. The sparkling pinpricks of light beckoned to the twelve men and women who sat below, each on a large rock flattened and polished by countless generations of those who had sat as they sat now, mountains to their backs, rotting ice over an endless ocean stretching out before them.
Motionless since the sun disappeared below the horizon, they stared out over the ocean’s Expanse, each seeming to see something that was not there, something important, something dangerous.
Now the wind, warm and carrying the scent of open water, whipped around them, blowing hair out of hoods and jangling the ornaments on the sticks positioned across their laps, long implements of gnarled wood decorated with shells, feathers, and curiously carved dangling charms. Theirs was the only movement, the only sound.
Until one of the watchers spoke.
“I have finally found the one from the Ice Mountain Clan who will heed the call,” the man said, and he turned, grunting as his old bones complained about sitting still for so long. The female watcher beside him turned as well, her fiercely red hair gleaming dark in the starlight, flashing occasionally like fire in the light of the rising moon.
The two faced each other; the rest, seemingly oblivious, continued to stare out over the ice. This would be the last clan called, if their plans worked out as all hoped. The other clans were already well on their way to safety.
“So, most Ancient One, who will it be?” the red-haired woman asked, pulling her hood up over her flaming hair and tucking her bare hands more firmly into the long sleeves of the woven outer garment she wore. “Their leader? Or his brother?”
“Neither,” said the first, and pulled a strand of long white hair back into his cloak. He fixed his eyes on the woman, and she caught a twinkle of amusement in their blue depths. “It is the young hunter, the son of the one who can no longer lead, who has heard the Call. He is restless. He will listen. He will come.”
“But how can he do this thing?” The red-headed woman protested. “Why will the clan follow such a young hunter?”
“Because he has the Gift,” replied the first. “And their healer is believed to be the embodiment of Shuantuan. She also has the Gift. She will encourage him. Others will listen to her.”
The female watcher turned back toward the Expanse, her eyes unfocused, her head tilted, as if she were listening to something. Then she nodded, slightly at first then more earnestly.
“Yes, it will be so,” she agreed. “But the dangers... they are so many, and his chance to succeed, so small.”
“I have tried all others who could lead more easily. None will listen. It must be him. We must cause him to find help, when he needs it,” the blue-eyed watcher said. “And I know just who to send to our young hunter. Together, they will bring two clans to us, if the Great Spirit wills it, before it is too late.”
“Who?”
“The young woman of the Great Expanse clan. She has dreamed, and although she does not yet believe, she will when the time is right.”
“Perhaps. But you see what they will face, do you not, oh Ancient One? Disaster on the ice, attacks from both animal and man, and worst of all, betrayal by one of their own. Their clans seem bent on destroying themselves. Certainly their chances of success are slim?”
“You are right, Young One,” the blue-eyed Ancient agreed. “Do you sense another choice?”
The woman’s shoulders sagged. “No,” she answered, her voice edged with both reluctance and resignation.
“Then let us do this now. We must travel soon, back to the Rock and its safety. We have many days of journeying ahead of us to reach the final place of Guidance.”
The blue-eyed man stood and threw his hood back. White hair blew behind him as he faced the now gale-force wind coming off the ice, warm on his face.
“The time has come!” The man shouted above the wind, and shaking the long stick in front of him, he began to chant. The others on the rock stirred at his words. They stood as well and each chanted. They called the clans, called to the people scattered across the great Expanse of melting ice to race for the safety of land and be saved.
Chapter 1
Attu and Suka strode across the vast expanse of hardened snow over ice, a bitter wind cutting through their fur-lined miks and hoods. They were cold and tired, but the hunt had been good and two large snow otters hung across Attu’s pack and one across Suka’s.
“I’m not taking one of your otters, so quit trying to give it to me.” Suka scowled and walked faster. “It won’t make a difference, anyway.”
Suka tightened his hood against the cold and the glaring sunlight reflecting off the flat endless white around them.
“I’m just saying-”
“My father isn’t like yours, even though they’re brothers,” Suka said, thrusting his spear butt out before him, testing the ice as he walked. “Haven’t you figured that out by now? I could come home with ten snow otters and still whatever game Kinak gets will be better, just because he’s the oldest son. It’s always been that way. ‘Kinak the broad shouldered, Kinak the wise. Suka the weak, Suka the stupid one.’ Nothing I do changes how my father feels about me.”
Attu shook his head, sorry for his cousin. Ubantu, Attu’s father, was so different from his younger brother, Moolnik, Suka’s father. It’s hard to believe we’re part of the same family...
Suka picked up his pace. He was long-legged for a Nuvik, narrow in the body and tall for his age. Like Attu, he wore bone goggles, slitted to keep out the constant glare of the ice around them, carved to fit snugly against his dusky skin around deep set brown eyes. The long trim on Suka’s parka hood hid his round face with its high cheek bones and flat wide nose, but Attu didn’t have to see Suka’s face to tell his cousin was angry as he strode toward the distant dark rocks that jutted up behind a thin strip of grey and tumbled ice.
“Careful,” Attu said. “We’re nearing the shore.”
Suka and Attu struck the ice in front of them with every step, using the butt of their spears. No Nuvik walked on the Expanse anymore without testing ahead. Full of death traps set by Attuanin, the Spirit of the Deep, the thin ice waited for them to take one wrong step and plunge into the frigid water beneath. In their heavy fur clothing, they would sink like stones.
“Do you think the stories about Attuanin are true?” Suka asked, as the young hunters approached the rocky outcropping of land.
“My father says more hunters have been lost since you and I were born than ever before. Attuanin must need men for his water kingdom,” Attu replied.
Lomkut and Shrantik, two hunters from their clan, had fallen through the ice and drowned within the last twenty moons. They’d left women and children behind. Some of those were near starving now. The clan women shared the meat from their own hunters, but there was never enough.
“It wouldn’t be such a loss for my family if I fell through the ice,” Suka grumbled. “But since your father’s accident six moons ago, with his injured
leg-”
“That’s why I’m careful,” Attu interrupted. He paused, listening to the sounds of the ice. Satisfied, he moved on.
Attu had been named after Attuanin, but he didn’t think that would keep him safer on the ice than anyone else. In his two hundredth moon, at his final naming ceremony, Attu’s name had been changed from Neetook, which meant “quiet one,” because he was almost as good as his father at sneaking up on game without a sound, to the name of the water spirit, Attuanin, the greatest of all hunters.
His father, Ubantu, had braided Attu’s black hair down his back in the single braid worn by men, chopping the bottom off below the rawhide tie, and setting that hair aside to be burned at the ceremony. His mother, Yural, rubbed grease into his upper body until his bronze skin shone, careful not to touch his upper arms with their still healing clan tattoos, the ice mountain for his clan on his right arm, and the down facing line under the flat ice of the Expanse, the symbol for Attuanin, on the other. It rippled over his left bicep whenever he flexed his arm.
Mother smeared blood from Attu’s latest kill on her weathered palm and pressed it over Attu’s heart. Meavu, his little sister, did the same, although Father had to lift her up to make her tall enough to reach. She placed her small blood-stained hand over the imprint of her mother’s on Attu’s chest. Thus Yural and Meavu were bound to Attu and he to them, sworn to hunt for his mother and sister until the day he took a woman of his own.
Attu stood amongst the clan, stripped to the waist, the bloody handprints on his chest, his body gleaming in the light of the nuknuk lamps, while all around him the clan danced. Elder Nuanu, the clan’s healer and spiritual leader, spoke the words and shook the bone rattle. And then he was a man, a hunter, Attuanin.
“You must call him Attu. It is profane to call someone their full spirit name,” Attu’s mother had scolded Meavu when she danced around the shelter later that night, smiling and singing, “Attuanin, mighty hunter, my brother, Attuanin.”
Attu heard a soft groaning sound, and both hunters froze. But no crack raced across the ice.
Attu looked to Suka.
“I think it’s safe,” Suka said, and as if to prove it, he forced his spear butt roughly into the ice in front of him, testing his next step. Suka’s spear plunged through the ice, and his weight threw him forward after it.
“No!” yelled Attu, and he grabbed for Suka, latched onto the snow otter tied to Suka’s pack, and pulled.
Attu yanked Suka backward several steps, dragging him by the snow otter. Then both turned and ran away from the rotted ice, opening up a space between them for added safety. Once on solid ice, the two hunters stopped running and looked back.
A hole just big enough to drop a man through, Attu thought as he gazed toward the place where Suka had almost fallen through the ice.
“It’s an old nuknuk breathing hole,” Attu said as he walked back to where Suka now stood, far away from the hole. The huge seal-like animals were the main meat of the Nuvik, and their fat was burned in long soft stone bowls, the nuknuk lamps that lit and heated every Nuvik snow house or hide shelter.
“That hole in the ice was almost my grave,” Suka whispered after a moment. “Thank you.” He clasped Attu in a fierce embrace.
“Just trying to save a good snow otter,” Attu teased. He pulled away from his cousin and punched his arm.
“You just about strangled me with it.” Suka grinned back. His eyes were mere slits in his face as he tried to join in the joking, but Attu could still see his fear.
They stood still, breathing slowly, until Attu stopped hearing his blood pounding in his ears.
“Guess we go the long way,” Attu said.
He turned and walked east of the broken ice, carefully avoiding the cracks around the hole.
Suka followed, walking slowly as he checked the ice.
“We shouldn’t have been talking about Attuanin and his traps,” Suka said after they’d walked another spear throw’s distance. “Talking, or even thinking about something bad that could happen, sometimes makes it happen. That’s what Elder Nuanu says.”
“She should know.”
Attu adjusted his pack across his back again. The snow otters were heavy. Their dark bodies dangled the length of his torso, and their tails almost touched the ice behind him as he walked.
“Let’s think about how delicious these snow otters will taste instead,” Attu said. “I’m thinking of my favorite part, the livers, sliced thin, warmed over the nuknuk lamp, but still bloody.”
Suka’s stomach growled loudly in response. “You sound like the women talking about how to prepare the meat.”
“Your stomach seems to like it,” Attu teased. When his own stomach growled too, he patted it gently. “Soon, soon,” he crooned.
Suka chuckled.
A few more steps and they reached the large rock that marked the boundary between the Expanse and the safety of solid land.
Just beyond the rock, Attu and Suka paused for a moment, enjoying the ground under their feet. They shifted their spears to carry them loosely, spear point forward, and set off down the rocky shoreline path toward home.
“Don’t say anything about what happened,” Suka demanded as they walked.
“I won’t. My mother worries too, every time I go hunting-”
“It’s not that,” Suka interrupted. “I don’t want my father to know. If he finds out I almost fell through an old nuknuk hole, he’ll yell at me for the next moon.”
“Oh.” Twenty-eight days of being yelled at by Moolnik? Attu shuddered at the thought. I’d tell my father everything, and he’d grab me up in a strong hug and thank the spirits for saving me...
Attu decided to change the subject. “Do you think Elder Tovut is still angry with me?”
“You did argue with him in front of everyone,” Suka said. “Why’d you do that?”
“Because he keeps telling those stories about the Great Frozen melting, and I just got tired of it. It scares Meavu, and it’s nonsense. I wanted him to stop.”
Suka stood in the middle of the path. Clearing his throat and leaning in toward Attu, he deepened his voice and spoke as if he were addressing a clan meeting. “It has always been cold on the Expanse, where we hunt. The sea has always been frozen. That is why it is called the Great Frozen. Water is always frozen on the surface; everyone knows that. Why tell such stories, Elder Tovut? Do you enjoy scaring the children?”
“Was it that bad?” Attu asked. Suka had repeated what Attu had said three nights ago when he’d confronted Elder Tovut, the clan’s oldest and most revered member, in front of the whole clan gathered in the great snow house.
“Yes,” Suka replied. “Worse, actually. Didn’t you hear your mother hissing at you? You’re going to go hungry if you keep talking that way to an elder in front of her.”
Attu shot a glance at Suka as they started walking again. Suka was shaking his head mournfully. Once the game was given to the women, it became theirs to do with as they saw fit, but Attu couldn’t believe his mother would let him go hungry when he was the one who brought the meat home. Yural was a kind woman, generous to all and a devoted mother.
Had Suka’s mother ever refused to feed him because she was mad at him? Mother had seemed angry the night I challenged Elder Tovut, but I still ate the next day. Besides, Elder Tovut’s stories are not new. I’ve been hearing them since I was small. It’s just that Elder Tovut has begun telling them as if they are true, not stories at all. That’s what made me angry enough to confront the frail old man, elder or not.
“The Nuvikuan-na, the land of our people, has seemed to us to always be a land of cold, with the Great Frozen and its frigid waters below the ice, and the Great Expanse, the top of that ice and the sky above, where we live,” Elder Tovut said. “We hunt the snow otter and the nuknuk, make our homes on the small rock outcroppings, gather the mussels, and light the lamps at night. Here we are born and live and die, each his eight hundred moons or so, if the spirits allow. Most go the way of the Between much sooner. More generations than we can count have lived this way, without seeing the Great Frozen melt and become water on the surface once again. But the Warming comes.”
Elder Tovut had paused, looking at each of them sitting in the large gathering snow house, his dark eyes like two polished beads beneath his deep lid folds. “It is part of the cycle of the Nuvikuan-na,” he continued, “and we must heed this cycle or die. We must remember, or all the clans will perish. I’m the oldest of this clan, and it was told to me by my father’s father, whose father told him, and his father before him. It is a sacred trust to be told. It is my duty to make you see the truth of what I say.”