His mother always taught him that food caught by ones own hands always tasted the best. As usual, Yurta turned out to be right. Razkar had dined on roasted monkey since he had teeth, and yet gnawing strips of sizzling flesh from the bones of the little beast he'd taken down... it certainly added a certain flavor to it.
The rest of the family seemed to think the same way. A dozen Myrians sat around the bonfire and jabbered away with mouthfuls of succulent meat, socializing as all cultures did with food and good company. Now and then thanks or praise would be tossed his way, or to Zek. Even Querix, his ever-disapproving older sister - gave him a grudging complimnt.
"Nice to see there's something you can't petch up."
"Shut up!"
"Razkar?!"
"Sorry, motOW!"
Zek stifled a smile and jerked off another limb from his own monkey. Between the two of them, a score of the little meat-bags had fell under their poisoned arrows, dragged back to the village just as Syna had fell to her rest the night before. But that wasn't the night for feasting, of course.
"Give it a day for the poison to die in their veins," he'd told his son as the two had skinned the pile of dead primates, "Eat them too soon and you'll end up as stiff as them..."
But the meat wasn't all he focused on that afternoon. While the rest of the clan was tossing bones festooned with fat and charred gristle onto a basket for disposal, he noted Razkar was carefully hoarding his own... and only from the animal he'd killed.
The male's flickering, flinty glare caught Yurta's, and words were not needed to convey the same thought.
Yes, I see it, too. Yes, I know what he's planning. No, I won't let him traipse off without a guardian.
The War Mistress of the Shorn Skulls read all this in her husband's eyes and nodded shortly, going back to savaging a tasty thighbone. The male didn't bother with the stifling that time: she was allowing her son to grow, even if it was in a way neither of them particularly approved of.
The Power of Bones was not an exact art. Much could go wrong, as they'd seen from Mayla's experiences. The Witch of the Wilds was a powerful mage, true, and a master of the Power of Bones... but even she was a novice once, long ago, back when they were no older than little Jakuo, nibbling determinedly at a roasted shoulder.
"So..." the older male said casually, voice low at Razkar's side, "... when will you be doing it?"
"Doing what, father?"
A single stern gaze that screamed "don't fuck me around, son" was all it took.
"... when night falls, I think. All I need is the ink and something to carve with."
"I shall go with you."
Razkar's gaze jerked to his father like it had a line attached to it, but he knew better than to question that statement, simply because it was that. Young who questioned their Elders were not tolerated among the clan: when someone of Zek's age and status said a thing, especially to a younger male, that thing would happen. Instead he regarded his peaceably chewing father for a few ticks, then went back to his own half-eaten bone.
"You fear for me?"
"I fear for the unknown, when it concerns my son. You have but one prior experience with the Power of Bones. That does not make you a master of it. Should the worst occur, I will be there to end it."
In any other culture, it would have been a heartwarming statement worthy of a fond smile or even an embrace. But Razkar knew differently. His father loved him, love all his brood, but loyalty to the clan as a whole surpassed that tender emotion. Tenderness killed out in the Wilds: it bred hesitation and doubt and thus error and failure.
He knew his father would be there for him... and if the worst did occur, and he could not control that which he conjured forth, Zek would end him before the mad wyrd could spread.
Razkar ate in silence as his family laughed and joked around their bounty. Syna would be falling soon, and the night was ahead.