Even so, somehow, in her heart of hearts, Madeleine never thought it would happen
here.
Night-Dawn fed almost all the time. So did everybody else, to prepare for the winter, which was never far from anyone’s thoughts.
The adults co-operated dully, bickering.
Sometimes one or other of the men fought with the Bull. The contender was supposed to put up a fight for a while – collect scars, maybe even inflict a few himself – before backing off and letting the Bull win.
The children, Night-Dawn among them, fed and played and staged mock fights in imitation of the Bull. Night-Dawn spent most of his time in the water, feeding on the thin beds of algae, the krill and fish. He became friendly with a girl called Frazil. In the water she was sleek and graceful.
Night-Dawn learned to dive.
As the water thickened around him he could feel his chest collapse against his spine, the thump of his heart slow, his muscles grow more sluggish as his body conserved its air. He learned to enjoy the pulse of the long muscles in his legs and back, the warm satisfaction of cramming his jaw with tasty krill. It was dark under the ice, even at the height of summer, and the calls of the humans echoed from the dim white roof.
He dived deep, reaching as far as the bottom of the water, a hard invisible floor. Vegetation clung here, and there were a few fat, reluctant fishes.
And the bones of children.
Some of the children did not grow well. When they died, their parents delivered their misshapen little bodies to the water, crying and cursing the sunlight.
His mother told him about the Collision.
Something had come barrelling out of the sky, and the Moon – one or other of them – had leapt out of the belly of the Earth. The water, the air itself was ripped from the world. Giant waves reared in the very rock, throwing the people high, crushing them or burning them or drowning them.
But they – the people of the ice – survived all this in a deep hole in the ground, No-sun said. They had been given a privileged shelter, and a mission: to help others, less fortunate, after the calamity.
They had spilled out of their hole in the ground, ready to help.
Most had frozen to death, immediately.
They had food, from their hole, but it did not last long; they had tools to help them survive, but they broke and wore out and shattered. People were forced to dig with their teeth in the ice, as Night-Dawn did now.
Their problems did not end with hunger and cold. The thinness of the air made the sun into a new enemy.
Many babies were born changed. Most died. But some survived, better suited to the cold. Hearts accelerated, life shortened. People changed, moulded like slush in the warm palm of the sun.
Night-Dawn was intrigued by the story. But that was all it was: a story, irrelevant to Night-Dawn’s world, which was a plain of rock, a frozen pond of ice, people scraping for sparse mouthfuls of food.
How, why, when:
the time for such questions, on the blasted face of Earth, had passed.
And yet they troubled Night-Dark, as he huddled with the others, half-asleep.
One day – in the water, with the soft back fur of Frazil pressed against his chest – he felt something stir beneath his belly. He wriggled experimentally, rubbing the bump against the girl.
She moved away, muttering. But she looked back at him, and he thought she smiled. Her fur was indeed sleek and perfect.
He showed his erection to his mother. She inspected it gravely; it stuck out of his fur like a splinter of ice.
‘Soon you will have a choice to make.’
‘What choice?’
But she would not reply. She waddled away and dropped into the water.
The erection faded after a while, but it came back. More and more frequently, in fact.
He showed it to Frazil.
Her fur ruffled up into a ball. ‘It’s small,’ she said dubiously. ‘Do you know what to do?’
‘I think so. I’ve watched the Bull.’
‘All right.’
She turned her back, looking over her shoulder at him, and reached for her genital slit.
But now a fat arm slammed into his back. He crashed to the ice, falling painfully on his penis, which shrank back immediately.
It was the Bull, his father. The huge man was a mountain of flesh and muscle, silhouetted against a violet sky. He hauled out his own penis from under his greying fur. It was a fat, battered lump of flesh. He waggled it at Night-Dawn. ‘I’m the Bull. Not you. Frazil is mine.’
Now Night-Dawn understood the choice his mother had set out before him.
He felt something gather within him. Not anger: a sense of wrongness.
‘I won’t fight you,’ he said to the Bull. ‘Humans shouldn’t behave like this.’
The Bull roared, opened his mouth to display his canines, and turned away from him.
Frazil slipped into the water, to evade the Bull.
Night-Dawn was left alone, frustrated, baffled.
As winter approached, a sense of oppression, of wrongness, gathered over Night-Dawn, and his mood darkened like the days.
People did
nothing
but feed and breed and die.
He watched the Bull. Behind the old man’s back, even as he bullied and assaulted the smaller males, some of the other men approached the women and girls and coupled furtively. It happened all the time. Probably the group would have died out long ago if only the children of the Bull were permitted to be conceived.
The Bull was an absurdity, then, even as he dominated the little group. Night-Dawn wondered if the Bull was truly his father.
… Sometimes at night he watched the flags of night dawn ripple over the mountains. He wondered why the night dawns should come there, and nowhere else.
Perhaps the air was thicker there. Perhaps it was warmer beyond the mountains; perhaps there were people there.
But there was little time for reflection.
It got colder, fiercely so.
As the ice holes began to freeze over, the people emerged reluctantly from the water, standing on the hardening ice.
In a freezing hole, a slush of ice crystal clumps would gather. His mother called that frazil. Then, when the slush had condensed to form a solid surface, it took on a dull matte appearance – grease ice. The waves beneath the larger holes made the grease ice gather in wide, flat pancakes, with here and there stray, protruding crystals, called congelation. At last, the new ice grew harder and compressed with groans and cracks, into pack ice.
There were lots of words for ice.
And after the holes were frozen over the water – and their only food supply – was cut off, for six months.
When the blizzards came, the huddle began.
The adults and children – some of them little fat balls of fur barely able to walk – came together, bodies pressed close, enveloping Night-Dawn in a welcome warmth, the shallow swell of their breathing pressing against him.
The snow, flecked with ice splinters, came at them horizontally. Night-Dawn tucked his head as deep as he could into the press of bodies, keeping his eyes squeezed closed.
Night fell. Day returned. He slept, in patches, standing up.
Sometimes he could hear people talking. But then the wind rose to a scream, drowning human voices.
The days wore away, still shortening, as dark as the nights.
The group shifted, subtly. People were moving around him. He got colder. Suddenly somebody moved away, a fat man, and Night-Dawn found himself exposed to the wind. The cold cut into him, shocking him awake.
He tried to push back into the mass of bodies, to regain the warmth.
The disturbance spread like a ripple through the group. He saw heads raised, eyes crusted with sleep and snow. With the group’s tightness broken, a mass of hot air rose from the compressed bodies, steaming, frosting, bright in the double-shadowed Moonlight.
Here was No-sun, blocking his way. ‘Stay out there. You have to take your turn.’
‘But it’s
cold.
’
She turned away.
He tucked his head under his arm and turned his back to the wind. He stood the cold as long as he could.
Then, following the lead of others, he worked his way around the rim of the group, to its leeward side. At least here he was sheltered. And after a time more came around, shivering and iced up from their time to windward, and gradually he was encased once more in warmth.
Isolated on their scrap of ice, with no shelter save each other’s bodies from the wind and snow, the little group of humans huddled in silence. As they took their turns at the windward side, the group shifted slowly across the ice, a creeping mat of fur.
Sometimes children were born onto the ice. The people pushed around closely, to protect the new-born, and its mother would tuck it away into the warmth of her body. Occasionally one of them fell away, and remained where she or he lay, as the group moved on.
This was the huddle: a black disc of fur and flesh and human bones, swept by the storms of Earth’s unending winter.
A hundred thousand years after the Collision, all humans had left was each other.
Mars was a deserted ice ball, as it had always been.
Venus was choked by acid clouds, its surface glowing red hot.
Mercury was, simply, gone. She smiled at that. Mercury had been the last refuge of mankind. Perhaps humanity persisted, somewhere out there, beyond.
The Moon appeared restored: the craters, the great lava seas, the gleaming, ancient highlands. As if life had never touched its ancient face. But in the telescopic viewers she could see the traces of mankind, persisting even now. Abandoned dwellings, clinging to crater walls. Canals cut from crater to crater. Even water marks in some of the smaller craters, like drained bath tubs. Air, frozen out in the permanent shadows of the poles.
And to Earth, at last, she turned.
Spring came slowly.
Dwarfed by the desolate, rocky landscape, bereft of shelter, the humans scratched at their isolated puddle of ice, beginning the year’s feeding.
Night-Dawn scraped ice from his eyes. He felt as if he were waking from a year-long sleep. This was his second spring, and it would be the summer of his manhood. He would father children, teach them and protect them through the coming winter. Despite the depletion of his winter fat, he felt strong, vigorous.
He found Frazil. They stood together, wordless, on the thick early-spring ice.
Somebody roared in his ear, hot foul breath on his neck.
It was, of course, the Bull. The old man would not see another winter; his ragged fur lay loose on his huge, empty frame, riven by the scars of forgotten, meaningless battles. But he was still immense and strong, still the Bull.
Without preamble, the Bull sank his teeth into Night-Dawn’s neck, and pulled away a lump of flesh, which he chewed noisily.
Night-Dawn backed away, appalled, breathing hard, blood running down his fur.
Frazil and No-sun were here with him.
‘Challenge him,’ No-sun said.
‘I don’t want to fight.’
‘Then let him die,’ Frazil said. ‘He is old and stupid. We can couple despite him.’ There was a bellow. The Bull was facing him, pawing at the ice with a great scaly foot.
‘I don’t wish to fight you,’ Night-Dawn said.
The Bull laughed, and lumbered forward, wheezing.
Night-Dawn stood his ground, braced his feet against the ice, and put his head down.
The Bull’s roar turned to alarm, and he tried to stop; but his feet could gain no purchase.
His mouth slammed over Night-Dawn’s skull. Night-Dawn screamed as the Bull’s teeth grated through his fur and flesh to his very bone.
They bounced off each other. Night-Dawn felt himself tumbling back, and finished up on his backside on the ice. His chest felt crushed; he laboured to breathe. He could barely see through the blood streaming into his eyes.
The Bull was lying on his back, his loose belly hoisted towards the violet sky. He was feeling his mouth with his fingers.