Eeeeeeeek! My turn! *bites nails* The pages I'm putting up for critique are from a book I'm co-
writing with Dean Lombardo. They're the first ones by me, but not the first ones in the book. The book, currently titled
The Cave Artist, is MG historical fiction... actually, prehistorical fiction, if that's a thing. It takes place 30,000 years ago and tells the story of 14-year-old Cor, the last Neanderthal in Gibraltar (on the coast of Spain), and 12-year-old Maysa, a member of a Homo Sapiens tribe. After her husband, the ruthless hunter Balt, leads the human warriors in an attack that wipes out the rest of Cor's clan, Cor must run for his life while Maysa, who never fit in with her people, wrestles with guilt over her husband's deed.
This story has been a unique challenge for me because it's so, so, SO different from what I'm used to writing. It's my first foray into MG, and there's no spaceships, no magic, no monsters...
Anyway, Dean is writing Cor and Balt's POV chapters while I'm writing Maysa's. The pages below are the first 3 pages of Chapter 3, which is Maysa's first POV chapter. Tell me what you think!
Chapter 3
The
sun had arced past its midday blaze, but the shades of twilight were still
several hours away. Gazing at the rock gilded by the afternoon light, Maysa imagined
the forest beyond and wondered how long her cruel husband would pursue the poor
savage.
Husband. The
word felt so wrong, even in her head, she wanted to spit it out, like she would
a toxic berry. For the other women in her tribe, the word “husband” was a
source of joy, of endearment, of pride. They’d speak it with their chins
uplifted and their lips tilted with fondness—for having found a companion—or
vanity, for having snared a worthy mate. That was because they’d discovered the matches
they desired and imagined everyone else had as well. But Maysa saw things differently.
While they believed she had the most
enviable match of all, she would have given anything to be rid of the wicked
man she’d been forced to marry.
A powerful gale blew her long, dark locks across
her face, but she’d long ago grown accustomed to the feeling and did not bother
with brushing them away. She could not have, in any case, since her basket,
filled with dull gray stones, required both arms to hold. A sudden instinct
urged her to run into the sea and hurl the basket’s contents into the ever
moving surf. Though they were simple rocks at the moment, they would soon be
fashioned bringers of death and pain. Worse, she would have to join the other
women in shaping them into such.
“Maysa!” The shrill voice of her mother, Noma,
rang in her ears. Maysa turned toward the sound. Noma stood in the entrance of
the cave, waving her arm in impatience. Upon meeting Maysa’s gaze, the older
woman, whose once rich brown hair was now dusted with age, pulled her lips into
a deep frown. “What has been keeping you? I did not think stones were so hard
to find!”
“Sorry, Mother.” Maysa walked toward the cave,
the basket heavy in her hands, and joined the others inside. Near the entrance,
where the light was best, a group of five women sat on the ground, each with a
basket like Maysa’s beside her. The light of the fire they surrounded glinted
off their brown and black hair. They had apparently been at their task—knocking
a hard pounding stone into the unshaped rocks to form blades and spear points—for
some time. They glistened with sweat from their labor. Ordinarily, such tasks
would be performed outdoors. Today, the women had preferred to work inside
their new home, as if their prolonged presence would solidify their ownership.
But to Maysa, the cave still felt stolen, which
was why she had volunteered to gather more rocks. The very air seemed to accuse
her of entering a space that wasn’t hers, and she could almost hear the ghosts
of the fallen savages asking how she dared trespass. She tried to ignore the
other women’s disapproving look as she sat down beside her mother and placed
her basket to the side.
“You must stop letting your head wander into the
clouds, Maysa.” Noma sighed. “Losing focus on the present creates space in your
mind, which allows demons to slip in. I hope you were not indulging in more
foolish daydreams about wildcats.”
A flurry of snickers rippled through the small
crowd of women, and Maysa felt her ears go hot. She would always regret the day
she let her words get the better of her and shared her dream of leaving the
tribe to wander alone in the wilderness, like the stealthy lynx. Oh, how she
longed to be free like the bright-eyed predator, and not confined by the laws
of her kind! But, as her companions were quick to point out, she would not
survive for long if she left. And Gotan had reprimanded her sharply for
entertaining such selfish thoughts. The tribe was good to her, he’d said. They
provided her with food and shelter and security. What right had she to wish
them gone from her life?
Raifa, the medicine woman, repeated Gotan’s
question now. From her position across
from Maysa, she seemed to accuse with her sharp eyes, which sat above powerful
cheekbones. She was not crafting blades like the others. A woman in her
position did not conduct these sorts of rough tasks. Instead, she was using a stone
pestle to mix a reddish paste inside a small bowl. It looked like paint, though
Maysa couldn’t tell for sure.
Maysa avoided the older woman’s gaze, choosing
not to answer. Raifa was supposed to be the wisest of all, wiser even the
Gotan, who often sought her counsel. But though she was skilled with herbs and
attuned to the ways of the gods, she knew nothing of Maysa’s heart.
Maysa sifted absently through the basket of rocks
beside her, loathing the idea of turning the innocent little objects into
murderers. That one of her creations might have killed a helpless savage child this
very morning made her sick to the stomach. And she was forever bound to a monster
who had taken pleasure in the attack.
Had she remained as ugly in womanhood as she had
been as a child, she might have been spared the young hunter’s lusty eye. But
though Balt had mocked her mercilessly when she’d been a spindly, flat-faced
girl whose chin jutted too far, his constant staring had taken on a different
meaning once her body had matured to match her long limbs, and her cheekbones
had sharpened to offset her angular features in a regal manner. He’d once made
fish faces in her presence, taunting her for her full lips, but now his dark
eyes sparkled hungrily whenever he laid eyes on them.
Her beauty was her curse, for it had spurred
Balt to demand her as his wife. He’d declared that as the tribe’s greatest
hunter, he deserved its most beautiful woman. Gotan had been happy to grant his
wish, especially after a beaming Noma had wept with joy at having her daughter,
whom she’d feared unmarriageable for so long, at last be called beautiful.