and wiped off the birthing fluid with a bit of skin. Then the older women, including Sheb, clustered around the baby, examining it closely, picking over its limbs and face.
Juna experienced a sudden, unexpected surge of joy. 'He’s a boy,' she said to Pepule. 'He looks perfect…'
Her mother gazed back at her, her face empty. Then she turned away. Juna became aware that there was muttering from the women working on the baby; some of them glared up at Juna disapprovingly.
Now Juna saw what they were doing. They had put the baby on the ground, where he grasped at the air feebly. He had wisps of blond hair, Juna saw, stuck to his scalp by the fluids from the birth. Pepule’s sister took a stick. She pushed the baby into the hole the women had dug, as if she was shoving away a bit of sour meat. Then the women started to fill in the hole. The first dirt fell on the baby’s uncomprehending face.
'No!' Juna lunged forward.
Sheb, with surprising strength, took her shoulders and pushed her back. 'It must be done.'
Juna struggled. 'But he is healthy.'
'It,' said Sheb. 'Not
'But Pepule—'
'Look at her.
On and on.
Pepule was coughing. She sounded exhausted — ill. Juna thought of Cahl lying with her mother just hours ago, and she wondered what filth he had brought with him.
Still Sheb was talking to her.
At last Juna dropped her head. 'But the baby is healthy,' she whispered. 'He is healthy.'
Sheb sighed. 'Oh, child, don’t you see?
'And me?' Juna raised her head and whispered. 'What will become of me? What of
Sheb’s eyes clouded.
Juna twisted away and ran out of the hut, with its stink of shit and blood and useless milk.
The two sisters sat whispering in a corner of the small shelter they had constructed for themselves as children.
Juna had told Sion everything.
'I have to go,' she said. 'That’s all. I knew it the moment they pushed the baby into that hole. Pepule is strong and experienced, where I am a child. And Acta, for all his drunken flaws, is beside her still. Tori doesn’t even know my baby is his. If
In the dusty dark, Sion shook her head. 'You shouldn’t speak like that. Sheb was right. It was not a person, not until it was named.'
'They killed him.'
'No. They could not let
It was ancient wisdom, drummed into them since birth, an echo of tens of millennia of human subsistence. Jo’on and Leda had had to face this. So had Rood’s people. It was the price you paid. But for some in each generation, it was too high a price.
'I don’t care,' said Juna.
Sion reached for her sister’s hand. 'You can’t leave. You must give birth here. Let the women come to you. And if they decide the time is not right—'
'But I’m not like Pepule,' Juna said miserably.
'Don’t talk like that,' said Sion.
'I will go in the morning,' Juna said, trying to sound stronger. 'I will take a spear. That is all I need.'
'Where will you go? You can’t live alone — and definitely not with a baby at your breast. And wherever you go the people will drive you off with stones. You know that. We would do the same.'
But there is one place, Juna thought, where the people are at least
'Come with me, Sion. Please.'
Sion, her eyes drying, pulled back. 'No. If you want to kill yourself, I — I respect your choice. But I will not die with you.'
'Then there is nothing more to be said.'
Carrying nothing but a spear and a spear-thrower, wearing a simple shift of tanned goat hide, she jogged easily. She covered the ground quickly, despite the unaccustomed burden in her belly.
The land was so dry that Cahl’s footsteps were crisp. Here and there she found his spoor — splashes of half-dried piss on rocks, a neatly coiled turd — hunting beer men, it seemed, was not hard. Even far from the village, farther than the hunters would usually roam, the land was empty.
After Jahna’s time, once more the ice had retreated, brooding, to its Arctic fastnesses. The pine forests had marched north, greening the old tundra. And across the Old World people spread out from the refuges where they had survived the great winter, islands of relative warmth in the Balkans, the Ukraine, Spain. Quickly their children began to fill up the immense depopulated plains of Europe and Asia.
But things were not as they had been the last time the ice retreated.
In Australia, since Ejan’s first footsteps, it had taken a mere five thousand years to achieve the grand erasing of the megafauna, the great kangaroos, reptiles, and birds. Now, everywhere people went, similar patterns unfolded.
In North America there had been ground sloths the size of rhinos, giant camels, bison with sharp-tipped horns that measured more than a man’s arm span from tip to tip. These massive creatures were the prey of muscular jaguars, saber-toothed tigers, dire wolves with teeth able to crunch bone, and the terrible short-faced bears. The American prairies might have looked like Africa’s Serengeti Plain in later times.
When the first humans marched from Asia into Alaska, this fantastic assemblage imploded. Seven in ten of the large animal species were lost within centuries. Even the native horses were destroyed. Many of the creatures that did survive — like the musk oxen, bison, moose, and elk — were, like the humans, immigrants from Asia, with a long history of learning how to survive in a world owned by people.
Similarly, in South America, once humans walked across the Panama land bridge, eight in ten of the large animal species would be destroyed. It happened across the great plains of Eurasia too. Even the mammoths were lost. All the large animals vanished like mist.
The damage was not always proportionate to the size of the territory occupied. In New Zealand, where there had been no mammals but bats, evolution had playfully filled the roles of mammals with other creatures, especially birds. There were flightless geese instead of rabbits, little songbirds instead of mice, gigantic eagles instead of leopards, and seventeen different species of moa, giant flightless birds, eerie avian parallels to deer. This unique fauna, like that of an alien planet, was wiped out within a few hundred years of human settlement — not always by humans themselves, but by the creatures they brought with them, especially the rats, which devastated the nests of the ground-dwelling birds.
All these animals had been under pressure from the fast-changing climate at the end of the glaciation. But most of these ancient lines had survived many similar changes before. The difference this time was the presence of humans. It was no great blitzkrieg. People were often pretty inept as hunters, and big game contributed only a fraction of their diet. Many communities, like Jahna’s folk, actually believed they were touching the animals lightly. But by pressuring the animals at a time when they were most vulnerable, by selectively killing off the young, by disrupting habitats, by taking out key components of the food webs that sustained communities of creatures, they did immense damage. It was only in Africa, where the animals had evolved alongside humans and had had time to adapt to their ways, that something like the old Pleistocene diversity was maintained.
Rood’s chill Eden had long gone. There had been a hideous shriveling, leaving an empty, echoing world, through which people walked as if bewildered, quickly forgetting that the great exotic beasts and different kinds of people had even existed.
People still lived by hunting and gathering, of course. But it turned out to be much harder to hunt deer and boar in the forests than it had been to ambush reindeer crossing rivers on the open steppe. After the extinctions, life was impoverished compared to what it had been in the past, with poorer quality food and less leisure time. Worldwide, people’s culture actually devolved, becoming simpler.
Always, deep down, they would know that there was something wrong. And now they faced a new pressure.
Juna had been traveling only half a day when she caught up with Cahl. He had sprawled in the shade of a worn sandstone bluff, and he was eating a root. The meat and artifacts of shell and bone he had taken from the people had been dumped in the dirt at his side.
He watched her as she approached, his eyes bright in the shade. 'Well,' he said silkily. 'Little
She didn’t understand that word, 'gold.' She slowed as she approached, dismayed by his hard stare.
He got to his feet clumsily. His belly strained at his skin shirt. 'What a frightened rabbit!' he said. 'Look,
She stood frozen, staring at him. Her mind seemed flattened, as if a great rock had fallen on her, pinning her to the dirt. Although she had rehearsed this encounter — imagining herself taking control, making demands — this wasn’t going remotely as she had planned.
He said, 'No reply? Here’s why.
She forced herself to speak. 'As Acta wants beer.'
He grinned. 'You follow. Good. So, just like Acta, you want something from me. But you’re not going to get it, little girl, until you figure out what I might want from you.' He walked around her, and let his fingertips slide over her buttocks. 'You’re skinny for my taste. Lean. All that chasing after wild goats, I suppose.' He yawned, stretching, and looked off into the distance. 'Frankly, child, I wore out my cock humping that fat mother of yours.'
Impulsively she pulled up her shirt, exposing her belly.
Startled, he ran his hand over her skin, feeling the bump there. The flesh of his palm was oddly soft, without calluses. 'Well,' he said, breathing harder. 'I knew there was something different about you. I must have good instincts. And as for you, you’re getting the idea. My strange lust for pregnant sows; my one weakness—' He stroked his chin. 'But I still don’t know what