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The Tundra Shall Burn!

Page 37

by Ken Altabef


  Iggy stood up, staring at the sky. Someone else noticed it too and in a few moments the entire camp was waking up, men and women coming out of their tents to see what was the matter. Nobody could explain such a thing.

  Maguan called for his sister the shaman and Alaana and Ben finally emerged from their tent, sleepy and annoyed, accompanied by their grandmother, Old Higilak. The tupilaq waddled after them.

  Alaana noticed the change in the night sky immediately. The spirit world felt this loss as a huge, gaping wound in the sky, oozing sadness.

  “It’s the Moon,” said Iggy. “It just disappeared.”

  “It will come back,” said Kigiuna. “It always comes again.”

  “The Moon is gone!” said Maguan.

  “It’s not gone,” insisted Kigiuna, squinting up at the sky. “You can still see the outline, black against the stars.”

  “It’s dead,” said Alaana. “The Moon is dead. It won’t be coming back.”

  A grim silence fell over the people. They knew the shaman did not ever lie. And the weight of her words, the complete and total dread in her tone, frightened even the hardiest among them.

  “Dead?” said Kigiuna. “How can that happen?”

  “What could have caused this?” asked Tiki secretly.

  Alaana didn’t say anything. They both knew the answer.

  “How will we see at night?” asked Maguan. “How will we see in winter? Hunt seal? We’ll all be blind men in the darkness.”

  “Alaana?” asked Iggy.

  Old Higilak let out a low moan. At sight of the sky she was thrown into a panic. Wild-eyed, a crazed look on her face, the old woman shook with a palsy of fright. “I’ve lived too long!” she screamed. “I’ve lived too long.” She fell to her knees, shaking and sobbing.

  Alaana had never seen her so terrified.

  “My fault,” she said. “It’s like a wave, surging, sweeping over us, going to wipe us away.”

  “Alaana!” cautioned the tupilaq.

  “Alaana, what does this mean?” asked Maguan. “Alaana?”

  “I don’t know,” said the shaman.

  But she did know. “We’ve lost,” she said to Tiki, using the secret language. She was swept up by a feeling of panic equally as great as that which had brought Old Higilak to her knees. She felt a strident need to protect her family. But she knew she couldn’t protect them; she couldn’t save them.

  “Alaana?” asked Maguan again.

  “Don’t say anything else,” suggested Tikiqaq. “You must not give voice to such terrible thoughts.”

  “Why not?” muttered Alaana. “We’re all going to die, if I say it or not.”

  “Enough!” said the tupilaq.

  Alaana scowled down at Tiki. She couldn’t stand to be spoken to this way, and by her own creation no less. “Fine!” she said. “You be the shaman for a while.”

  “I might as well,” said the tupilaq. “You’re useless to us like this.”

  “Alaana, what should we do?” asked Maguan.

  Alaana could face neither her brother nor her father. Ben at least had the good sense not to ask her a bunch of foolish questions.

  “Leave her alone,” said Kigiuna. “And since when does the headman need to beg his sister for advice? You know what we should do. What we always do. Hunt, fish and put aside what we can for winter. Now let’s go back to bed. The Moon will take care of itself, or it won’t.”

  Ben gently lifted Higilak from the ground and carried her back to their tent.

  The rest of the people returned to their houses or stood milling about, gazing up at the sky.

  Tikiqaq remained standing by its master, careful to say nothing else.

  Alaana took no comfort from the tupilaq’s presence. It seemed she stood alone in the night, powerless as her world was coming to an end. She had never wanted to be the shaman, let alone the one who presided over the destruction of the spirit world.

  “Where can we run?” she asked the tupilaq. “Where can we possibly hide from something like this?”

  Then the sky erupted into flame. All eyes were drawn upward. The lights in the sky were falling, carving blazing paths down the curtain of night.

  Alaana gaped in disbelief. It was a rain of stars.

  “What new horror is this?” she asked.

  “It’s the shamans,” said Tikiqaq. “All the dead shamans coming down from the sky.”

  As the stars continued to fall, Alaana felt a buzzing in her ear.

  “You will not fight alone,” said the familiar voice of Old Manatook. “Not anymore.”

  Alaana’s heart leapt at the sound.

  Not alone.

  THE ADVENTURE CONCLUDES IN:

  CLICK HERE FOR AMAZON KINDLE

  ALSO AVAILABLE from Cat’s Cradle Press:

  CLICK FOR AMAZON KINDLE

  Praise for “Il Teatro Oscuro”:

  “A heartbreaking work of fantasy that addresses the call of the lost, golden past in the human heart.”

  -- Lois Tilton for LOCUS online

  Praise for “The Woman Who Married the Snow”:

  “This is a rich, atmospheric tale of the interaction of spirits amongst both living and dead. I appreciated the writer’s impeccable voice.”

  -- Colleen Chen for TANGENT online

  “A well-told tale with great details about Inuit culture.”

  -- Sam Tomaino for SFRevu

  Praise for “The Lost Elephants of Kenyisha”:

  “This well executed story deserves a 'thumbs up,' for its well-crafted writing.”

  --KJ Hannah Greenberg, TANGENT online

  “The herd of ghost elephants is a neat idea and a great premise for a story.”

  --Lois Tilton, LOCUS online

  “This was another well-told story that I enjoyed immensely.”

  --Sam Tomaino, SF REVU

  COMING 9/25/16:

  The Kingdom or the Girl?

  Bloodthirsty demons attack him.

  Strange spirits protect him.

  A seer foretells his shocking destiny.

  In a primitive land filled with magic, witches and giants, a young musician named David is summoned by the king to chase away the nightmares that torment him, but the palace isn’t as safe as it seems. Demons haunt the king and two powerful foes—the Witch of Endor and a giant named Goliath—lead an army that threatens to enslave the country.

  Princess Michal is drawn to David, but a romance with the poor musician is strictly forbidden. Only by defying her father’s wishes and risking her freedom, can they be together.

  To save the kingdom, David will need more than music; he’ll need to defeat Goliath in a battle of champions. Only a fool would face the giant, but when David falls in love with the rebellious princess, his heart tugs him toward the impossible. As he steps into battle, he faces an unthinkable choice—either save the kingdom or be with the girl of his dreams.

  He can’t do both.

  GLOSSARY OF ANATATOOK TERMS

  agiuqtuq a corrupted name causing sickness

  aklaq brown or Grizzly bear

  allaruk the vision trance

  amaut pouch for holding a baby

  amautik long woman’s coat

  angatkok shaman

  angakua shaman’s spirit light

  Annigan Moon-Man

  anorak woman’s coat

  autdlarpoq! open!

  Aviktugalik The Great Rift

  Erlaveersinioq the Disemboweler, - a spirit who loves murder and death above all other things.

  ieufuluuraq squirrel men of Lowerworld

  iglu snow house

  ikiruq fire

  ilimarpoq the soul flight

  inua spirit or soul

  inuseq astral projection of the body

  ipiitaq aularuq child’s string game, cat’s cradle

  kabloona white-skinned man, stranger

  kamiks light boots

  karigi ceremonial house

  ke’le disease demon

  Kiptaitc
huq, the snowy owl

  Kuttukuraq the Raven

  lumentin corrupted soul of sinful hunter

  mamut mammoth

  masak, soft wet snow

  maguruq prehistoric giant wolves

  Nunatsiaq Our Beautiful Land

  Sedna guardian spirit of sea life

  Sila fickle wind spirit

  Strixulula the owl-king

  tammoagac dried tomcod and caribou tallow

  tarraka dark, angry spirits

  Tatqeq the Moon-Maid

  Tekkeitsertok guardian spirit of the caribou

  Tifmiaqpak, The Great Gray Eagle

  Tingook reigns over the Dark side of the Moon

  Tornarssuk guardian spirit of the polar bears

  tornaq spirit guide

  tukaq harpoon-headed spear

  tukturjuit caribou

  Tulukkaruq great raven spirit

  Tumo trance state that generates warmth

  tunraq helper spirit

  Tunrit race of primordial supermen

  tupilaq vengeful homunculus

  turgat powerful guardian spirits

  umiak whaling boat

  ungarpaluk little harpoon

  Usinuagaaluk Whale-Man

  yaranga light summer tent

 

 

 


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