AgeOfFive02TheLastOfTheWilds.txt

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LAST OF THE WILDS 

AGE OF THE FIVE,  

TRUDI CANAVAN  


Prologue 

Reivan detected the change before any of the others. At first it was instinctive, a 
feeling more than a knowing; then she noticed that the air smelled duller and that 
there was a grittiness to it. Looking at the rough walls of the tunnel, she saw 
deposits of a powdery substance. It coated one side of every bump and groove, 
as if it had been blown there from a wind originating in the darkness ahead. 
A shiver ran down her spine at the thought of what that might mean, yet she said 
nothing. She might be wrong, and everyone was still deeply shocked by their 
defeat. All were struggling to accept the deaths of friends, family and comrades, 
their bodies left behind, buried in the fertile soil of the enemy. They didn't need 
something else to worry about. 
Even if they hadn't been all scurrying home in the lowest of spirits, she would 
not have spoken. The men of her team were easily offended. They, like her, 
nursed a secret resentment that they had not been born with enough Skill to 
become a Servant of the Gods. So they clung to the only sources of superiority 
they had. 
They were smarter than average folk. They were Thinkers. Distinguished from 
the merely educated by their ability to calculate, invent, philosophize and reason. 
This made them fiercely competitive. Long ago they had formed an internal 
hierarchy. Older had precedence over younger. Men had credence over women. 
It was ridiculous, of course. Reivan had observed that minds tended to become 

as inflexible and slow with age as the bodies they rested in. Just because there 
were more men than women among the Thinkers didn't mean men were any 
smarter. Reivan relished proving the latter. but now was definitely not the time 
for that. 
And I might be wrong. 
The smell of dust was stronger now. 
Gods, I hope I'm wrong. 
Abruptly she remembered the Voices' ability to read minds. She glanced over 
her shoulder and felt a moment's disorientation. She had expected to see Kuar. 
Instead a tall, elegant woman walked behind the Thinkers. Imenja, Second Voice 
of the Gods. Reivan felt a pang of sadness as she remembered why this woman 
now led the army. 
Kuar was dead, killed by the heathen Circlians. 
Imenja looked at Reivan, then beckoned. Reivan's heart skipped a beat. She 
hadn't spoken to any of the Voices before, despite being part of the team of 
Thinkers that had mapped the route through the mountains. Grauer, the team 
leader, had made the task of reporting to the Voices his own. 
She stopped. A glance at the men before her told her they hadn't noticed the 
summons, or that she was falling behind. Certainly not Grauer, whose attention 
was on the maps. When Imenja reached her, Reivan began walking again, 
remaining one step behind the Voice. 
"How may I serve you, holy one?" 
Imenja was still frowning, though her gaze remained on the Thinkers. "What is it 
you fear?" she asked in a low voice. 
Reivan bit her lip. "It is probably underground madness, the dark upsetting my 
mind," she said hastily. "But. the air was never this dusty on our previous 

journey. Nor was there this much on the walls. The pattern of it suggests rapid 
air movement from somewhere ahead. I can think of a few causes. " 
"You fear there has been a collapse," Imenja stated. 
Reivan nodded. "Yes. And further instability." 
"Natural or unnatural?" 
Imenja's question, and what it suggested, caused Reivan to pause in shock and 
dread. 
"I don't know. Who would do that? And why?" 
Imenja scowled. "I have already received reports that the Sennons are causing 
trouble for our people now that the news of our defeat has reached them. Or it 
might be the local villagers seeking revenge." 
Reivan looked away. A memory rose of vorns, mouths dripping with blood after 
a final "hunting" trip the night before they'd entered the mines. The good will of 
local villages hadn't been a priority to the army-not when victory was so sure. 
We weren't supposed to come back this way, either. We were supposed to drive 
the heathens out of Northern Ithania and claim it for the gods, and return to our 
homes via the pass. 
Imenja sighed. "Return to your team, but say nothing. We will deal with 
obstacles when we come to them." 
Reivan obeyed, returning to her place at the back of the Thinkers. Conscious of 
Imenja's ability to read her mind, she kept alert for further signs of disturbance. 
It did not take long before she found them. 
It was amusing to watch her fellow Thinkers slowly realize the significance of 
the steadily increasing amount of rubble in the passage. The first blockage they 
encountered was a small section of roof that had collapsed. It hadn't filled the 

passage, and it was only a matter of climbing over the mess to continue on. 
Then these obstacles became more frequent and difficult to pass. Imenja used 
magic to carefully move a boulder here and shift a mound of dirt there. No one 
suggested a cause for the disturbances. All stayed prudently silent. 
The passage reached one of the large natural caverns so common in the mines. 
Reivan stared into the void. Where there ought to be only darkness there were 
pale shapes faintly illuminated by the Thinkers' lamps. 
Imenja stepped forward. As she entered the cavern her magical light rose higher 
and brightened, illuminating a wall of rock. The Thinkers stared up at it in 
dismay. Here, too, the roof had collapsed, but this time there was no way over or 
around the blockage. Rubble filled the cavern. 
Reivan gazed at the pile of rocks. Some of the boulders were enormous. To be 
caught under a fall like that. she doubted there'd be time to comprehend what 
had happened. Crack. Squish. 
Better than a stab in the guts and a long, agonizing death, she thought. Though I 
can't help feeling a sudden death cheats you of something. Death is an 
experience of life. You only get one death. I would like to be aware it was 
happening, even if that did mean enduring pain and fear. 
A noise from Grauer caught her attention. 
"This shouldn't have happened," he exclaimed, his voice echoing in the 
shortened cave. "We checked everything. This cave was stable." 
"Keep your voice down," Imenja snapped. 
He jumped, and dropped his eyes. "Forgive me, holy one." 
"Find us another way out of here." 
"Yes, holy one." 

With a few glances at the Thinkers he favored, he gathered a small circle of men 
about him. They murmured for a small time, then parted to allow him to stride 
forward confidently. 
"Allow me to lead you, holy one," he said humbly. 
Imenja nodded to the other Thinkers, indicating that they should join him. The 
passage became crowded as the army doubled back on itself. The air became 
noticeably stale, despite the efforts of Servants to draw fresh air down vents and 
cracks in the mountain above. Servants, soldiers and slaves alike kept a worried 
silence. 
The passing of time was hard to estimate underground. The months Reivan had 
spent here helping her fellow Thinkers map the mines, natural cave systems and 
mountain trails had given her a knack of guessing the time. Nearly an hour had 
passed before Grauer reached the side tunnel he wanted. He all but dove down 
the new route, rushing in his anxiety to prove himself. 
"This way," he said, his gaze moving from the map to his surroundings over and 
over. "Down here." The Thinkers hurried after him as he turned a corner. "And 
then a good long walk along-" 
There was a pause, then an echoing scream faded rapidly into the distance. The 
Thinkers hurried around the corner and stopped, blocking the passage. Reivan 
peered between two shoulders and saw a jagged hole in the floor. 
"What has happened?" 
The Thinkers stepped back to allow Imenja through. 
"Be careful, holy one," one said quietly. Her expression softened slightly and she 
gave him a brief nod of acknowledgment before walking slowly forward. 
She must know already what happened to Grauer, Reivan realized. She would 
have read his thoughts as he fell. 

Imenja crouched and touched the lip of the hole. She broke off a piece of the 
edge, then rose. 
"Clay," she said, holding it out to the Thinkers. "Molded by hands and 
strengthened by straw. We have a saboteur. A trap-layer." 
"The White have broken their agreement!" one of the Thinkers hissed. "They do 
not mean to let us go home." 
"This is a trap!" another exclaimed. "They lied about the traps in the pass so 
we'd take this route! If they kill us here nobody will know they betrayed us!" 
"I doubt this is their doing," Imenja replied, her gaze moving beyond the walls 
of rock surrounding them. She frowned and shook her head. "This clay is dry. 
Whoever did this left days ago. I hear nothing but the thoughts of distant gowtherders. 
Choose another leader. We will continue, but carefully." 
The Thinkers hesitated and exchanged uncertain looks. Imenja looked from one 
to the other, her expression changing to anger. 
"Why didn't you make copies?" 
The maps. Reivan looked away, fighting down a rising frustration. They went 
with Grauer. How typical of him to not trust others with copies. 
What will we do now? She felt a moment's apprehension, but it quickly faded. 
Most of the larger tunnels in the mines led toward the main entrance. It hadn't 
been the original miners' intentions to create a maze, after all. The smaller 
tunnels, which had followed veins of minerals, and the natural cave systems 
were less predictable, but so long as the army kept out of them it would 
eventually find its way out. 
One of the team stepped forward. "We should be able to navigate by memory; 
we all spent considerable time h...
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