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The Plains of Passage - Jean M. Auel [97]

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and tools in it.”

Ayla nodded. She, too, had been thinking about getting them all across the river with their belongings intact, and she had tried to anticipate some of the potential problems, remembering her few excursions in the Lion Camp’s bowl boats. “We should leave a place for each of us on opposite sides, so it stays balanced. I’ll leave room for Wolf to be with me.”

Jondalar wondered how the wolf would behave in the fragile floating bowl, though he refrained from saying anything. Ayla saw his frown, but kept her peace. “We should each have a paddle, too,” he said, handing one to her.

“With all of this, I hope we’ll be able to fit,” she said, putting the tent in the boat, thinking she might use it for a seat.

Though it was cramped, they managed to get everything into the hide-covered boat, except the poles. “We may have to leave those behind. There’s no room for them,” Jondalar said. They had just replaced the ones they had lost.

Ayla smiled and held up some cord she had kept out. “No we won’t. They’ll float. I’ll just tie them to the boat with this so they won’t drift away,” she said.

Jondalar wasn’t sure that was a good idea, and he was framing an objection as he thought about it, but Ayla’s next question distracted him.

“What are we going to do about the horses?” she said.

“What about the horses? They can swim across, can’t they?”

“Yes, but you know how nervous they can get, especially about something that they haven’t done before. What if they get frightened by something in the water and decide to go back? They won’t try again to cross the river by themselves. They won’t even know we’re on the other side. We would have to come back and lead them across, so why not just lead them to begin with?” Ayla explained.

She was right. The horses probably would get apprehensive, and could just as easily go back as across, Jondalar thought. “But how are we going to lead them when we’re in the boat?” he said. This was becoming complicated. Trying to manage a boat could be difficult enough without trying to manage panicked horses, besides. He was feeling more and more worried about crossing this river.

“We put on their halters with lead ropes, and tie the ropes to the boat,” Ayla said.

“I don’t know … That may not be the best way. Maybe we should think about it some more,” he said.

“What is there to think about?” she said, as she was wrapping cord around the three poles. Then she measured out a length and fastened it to the boat. “You were the one who wanted to get started,” she added, while she put Whinney’s halter on, attached a lead rope to it, then fastened it to the boat on the opposite side of the poles. Holding the slack, she stood beside the boat, then turned to Jondalar. “I’m ready to go.”

He hesitated, then nodded decisively. “All right,” he said, getting Racer’s halter from his pack basket and calling the horse to him. The young stallion lifted his head and neighed when the man first tried to slip the halter over his head, but after Jondalar talked to him and stroked his face and neck, Racer calmed down and allowed it. He tied the rope to the boat, then faced Ayla. “Let’s go,” he said.

Ayla signaled to Wolf to get into the boat. Then, with both of them still holding the lead ropes, to maintain control of the animals, they pushed the boat into the water and scrambled to get in.

From the beginning, there was trouble. The swift current took hold of the small craft and swept it along, but the horses were not quite ready to enter the wide stream. They reared back as the boat was trying to pull away, jerking the boat so violently that it nearly tipped over, making Wolf stumble to regain his footing and eye the situation nervously. But the load was so heavy that the boat righted itself quickly, though it rode very low in the water. The poles had stretched out in front, trying to follow the strong current.

The pull on the horses by the river trying to propel the boat downstream, and the anxious words of encouragement from Ayla and Jondalar, finally convinced the balky animals to enter the water. First Whinney

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