did not grow tall, as out on the veldt, but formed a thick turf, hoarfrost-white, that muffled the hoofbeats
of the onsars. Small crepuscular creatures were abroad, darters, scuttlers, light-flashers, and the chill was
softened by a fragrance of nightwort, but life had grown scant since Yewwl and Robreng were young.
They felt how silence starkened the desolation, and welcomed a wind that sprang up near morning,
though it bit them to the bone and made stands of spearcane rattle like skeletons.
The sun rose at last. For a while it was a red step pyramid, far and far on the blurry horizon. The sky was
opalescent. Below, land rolled steeply upward, cresting in a thousand-meter peak where snow and ice
flushed in the early light. That burden spilled down the slopes and across the hills, broken here and there
by a crag, a boulder, a tawny patch of uncovered nullfire, a tree—brightcrown or saw-frond—which the
cold had slain. A flyer hovered aloft, wings dark against a squat mass of clouds. Yewwl didn't recognize
its kind. Strange things from beyond the Guardian Range were moving in with the freeze.
Ungn, her infant, stirred and mewed in her pouch. Her belly muscles seemed to glow with it. She might
have stopped and dismounted to feed him, but a ruddy canyon and a tarn gone steel-hard told her through
memory how near she was to her goal. She jabbed foot-claws at her onsar's extensors and the beast
stepped up its pace from a walk to a shamble, as if realizing, weary though it was and rapidly though the
air was thinning, that it could soon rest. Yewwl reached into a saddlebag, took forth a strip of dried meat,
swallowed a part for herself and chewed the remainder into pulp. Meanwhile she had lifted Ungn into her
arms and cuddled him. Her vanes she folded around her front to give the beloved mite shelter from the
whining, seeking wind.
Ych rode ahead. The sun entered heaven fully, became round and dazzling, gilded his pelt and sent light
aflow over the vanes that he spread in sheer eagerness. He was nearly grown, lithe, handsome; no ruinous
weather could dim the pride of his youth. His sister Ngao, his junior by three years, rode behind, leading
several pack animals which bore camp gear and the smoked spoils of the hunt. She was slightly built and
quiet, but Yewwl knew she was going to become a real beauty. Let fate be kind to her!
Having well masticated the food, the mother brought her lips around her baby's and, with the help of her
tongue, fed him. He gurgled and went back to sleep. She imagined him doing it happily, but knew that
was mere imagination. Just six days old—or fourteen, if you counted from his begetting—he was as yet
tiny and unshapen. His eyes wouldn't open for another four or five days, and he wouldn't be crawling
around on his own till almost half a year after that.
Robreng drew alongside. "Here," Yewwl said. "You take him a while." She handed Ungn over for her
husband to tuck in his pouch. With a close look: "What's wrong?"
The tautness of his vane-ribs, the quivering along their surfaces, the backward slant of his ears, everything
about him cried unease. He need but say: "I sense grief before us."
Yewwl lifted her right thigh to bring within reach the knife sheathed there. (Strapped to the left was a
purse for flint, steel, tinderbox, and other such objects.) "Beasts?" Veldt lopers seldom attacked folk, but a
pack of them—or some different kind of carnivore—might have been driven desperate by hunger.
"Invaders?" The nightmare which never ended was of being overrun by foreigners whom starvation had
forced out of their proper territory.
His muzzle wrinkled, baring fangs, in a negative. "Not those, as far as I can tell. But things feel wrong
here."
In twenty years of marriage, she had learned to trust his judgment nearly as much as her own. While a
bachelor, he had fared widely around, even spending two seasons north of the Guardians to hunt in the
untenanted barrens there. He it was who had argued, when last the clan leaders met before the Lord of the
Volcano, that this country need not be abandoned. Orchards and grazing would wither, ranching come to
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