canât get it open. I donât know how he did it.â
âOh.â Kallik nosed the box. Sheâd seen ones like this behind other big no-claw dens, but sheâd never tried to open one. âHow would it work?â
âThis top part lifts up,â Taqqiq said, shoving the box with his paw.
âMaybe if we try to lift it together?â she suggested. She pressed her paws to the bit of the top that protruded from the metal box. Taqqiq leaned into it with his shoulders and heaved up. To Kallikâs surprise, the box opened and the top slammed back into the wall behind it. Kallik flinched, but there were no sounds of no-claws coming out to see what had made the noise. She couldnât believe this much noise wouldnât bring no-claws running, but then again, the noise coming from inside the big den was loud enough to drown out anything.
âThereâs nothing here!â Taqqiq snarled, digging through piles of shiny, soft, flabby stuff and broken no-claw things. He dropped to all paws and scraped his claws along the ground in a frustrated gesture.
âItâs all right,â Kallik said. âWeâll find something.â
âHrrmph,â Taqqiq grumbled. He looked around at the den and the firebeasts, then back at her. âIâm not just a useless lump of fur, you know.â
Kallik blinked at him, surprised. âI know that.â
âYou think those other bears are so great, like theyâre the only ones who can find food and figure out which way to go.â He swiped the metal box with his paw. âI survived on my own for a while, just like you did, remember? But you treat me like you think I canât do anything.â
âThatâs not true!â Kallik said with a pang of guilt. âI mean . . . this isnât the right world for us â of course itâs harder for us to hunt when weâre off the ice.â
âAnd all you do is complain about my friends,â Taqqiq persisted, âand then drag me off on some other bearsâ journey, and then get all mad when I complain about
your
friends. Theyâre not even white bears! What do they care about the Endless Ice?Sometimes I think youâve forgotten that
youâre
a white bear.â
Kallik glanced at the reeds near the edge of the denning place. The light from the den was blindingly bright, making it hard to see into the darkness, but she thought she saw the gleam of the other bearsâ eyes watching them. She hoped they couldnât hear this conversation from where they were.
âSee!â Taqqiq snarled. âYouâre not even listening to me! Youâre thinking about
them
!â
âIâm sorry!â Kallik protested. âI am listening, really.â
âYou say you came all this way to look for me, but now that youâve found me you ignore me and act like Iâm some stupid nuisance.â
âTaqqiq,â Kallik said. She stepped forward to press her nose into his fur, but he jumped away from her, glaring. âIâm sorry you feel that way. I donât mean to treat you badly. I really do want you on this journey with me â and Iâm sure our mother does too.â
Taqqiq snorted. âNisa is dead,â he growled. âWe donât know what she would think.â
âI think she would like them,â Kallik said, jerking her head at the shadows where her friends wereall waiting. âTheyâre brave, like she was.â
This was the wrong thing to say. Taqqiqâs fur fluffed up all across his shoulders and he bared his teeth. âYou keep saying how brave they are! How great and perfect and wonderful they are! Well, Iâm just as good as them! Iâm brave too! Here, Iâll prove it!â
âNo, donât!â Kallik cried, trying to hold him back, but he marched out of the shadows and headed for the nearest firebeast. Kallik peeked out to watch him go. âTaqqiq, come back!
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