
hoarse rather than husky, and wavered.
"Avalanche. Wiped out Yewwl's whole family … and, oh, God, the Shrine, the heart of her clan's
history—like wiping out Jerusalem—" A fist beat itself unmercifully against the console. "I should have
guessed. But … no experience … I'm from Dayan, you know, warm, dry, no snow anywhere, and I've
just been a visitor on worlds like Terra—" Her lips drew wide, her eyes squinched nearly shut. "If I'd
thought! That much snowpack, and seven Terrestrial gravities to accelerate it—Yewwl, Yewwl, I'm
sorry."
"Why, that's terrible," Polevoy said. After a pause: "Your subject, she's alive?"
Abrams jerked a nod. "Yes. With nothing to ride, no tent or supplies or tools or anything but what
she's got on her person, and doubtless not a soul for a hundred kilometers around."
"Well, we'd better send a gravsled for her. It can home on her transceiver, can't it?" Polevoy was
fairly new here.
"Sure, sure. Not right away, though. Don't you know what grief usually does to a Ramnuan? It's apt
to drive him or her berserk." Abrams spoke in rough chunks of phrase. "Coping with that is a problem
which every society on this planet has had to solve, one way or another. Maybe that's a main reason why
they've never had wars—plenty of individual fights, but no wars, no armies, therefore no states—A
soldier who lost his buddy would run amok." Laughter rattled from her. "Too bad we humans don't have
the same trait. We wouldn't be cobwebbed into our Terran Empire then, would we?" She stubbed out
the cigarette, viciously, and started the next. "We'll go fetch Yewwl when she's worked off the worst of
what's in her, if she lives through it. Sometime this afternoon." That would be several standard days
hence. "Meanwhile, I can be preparing to take on the wretched Empire."
Shocked, Polevoy could merely say, "I beg your pardon?"
Abrams slumped. She turned from him and stared out a viewscreen. It gave a broad overlook across
the locality. On her right, the Kiiong River flowed seaward, more rapidly than any stream on Terra or
Dayan would have gone through a bed as level as was here. Spray off rocks dashed brilliant above water
made gray-green by glacial flour. Sonic receptors brought in a booming of great slow airs under more
than thirty bars of pressure. Beyond the river was forest: low, thick trunks from which slender branches
swayed, upheld by big leaves shaped like parachutes, surrounded by yellowish shrubs.
To her left, eastward, chanced to be rare clarity. Dun pyrasphale rippled across twelve kilometers to
Ramnu's horizon. Trees and canebrakes broke the sameness of that veldt; a kopje reared distance-blued;
clouds cruised above, curiously flattened. A small herd of grazers wandered about, under guard of a
mounted native. A score of flying creatures were aloft. When Abrams first arrived, this country had
swarmed with life.
Overhead, the sky was milky. Niku, the sun, appearing two-thirds as wide as Sol seen from Terra,
cast amber light; a frost halo circled it. Diris, the innermost moon, glimmered pale toward the west. It
would not set until Ramnu's long day had become darkness.
"Another ice age on its way," Abrams mumbled. "The curse of this world. And we could stop it and
all its kind. Whatever becomes of us and our Empire, we could be remembered as saviors, redeemers,
for the next million years. But the Duke will not listen. And now Yewwl's people are dead."
"Uh," Polevoy ventured, "uh, doesn't she have a couple of children who're adult, married?"
"Yes. And they have children, who may well not survive what's coming down from the north,"
Abrams said. "Meanwhile she's lost her husband, her two youngsters, the last baby she'll ever bear; her
clan has lost its Jerusalem; and none of that needed to happen." Tendons stood forth in her neck. "None
of it! But the Grand Duke of Hermes would never listen to me!"
After more silence, she straightened, turned around, said quite calmly: "Well, I'm done with him. This
has been the last thing necessary to decide me. I'm going to leave pretty soon, Ivan. Leave for Terra