Among the wreckage of the dirz fighter, Shan found a shard of metal that tapered to a nice point. She attached the wide end to the eaves of their roof and let the shadow cast down over the wall. Each day she scratched a mark when the sun reached its peak.
Time passed.
One day she noticed the mark was higher than the day before. The sun had reached its solstice. From here on the days would get shorter. She had no idea how long it would be until autumn, but it was still summer and it was already cool enough at nights. She was afraid to think how cold it would get.
Also during this time she ventured out onto the plain and scouted for the herd of yaks. She didn't see them, but she saw signs of their passing. There was spoor that she collected for fuel, there were hoofprints in the dry soil and there were swaths of cropped grass.
Once she found a carcass by the river. She inspected it and found it was mostly rotten, but not completely. She removed a section of intestines. Back at camp, she scraped it clean and tied each end of it to a scrap of iron and stretched it and let it cure a long time. Each day she moved the section of the fighter, stretching her strand of intestines tighter and tighter, each time rubbing it with a piece of metal, running it into a fine rope. Finally, when it seemed as tough and leathery as she could make it, she measured a length and tied off the ends to loop around the tips of the carbon fiber rod to replace the bow string.
More time passed.
Towards the end of summer, she found the herd again. This time they were in the hills far to the south, in a gully, along the bank of a small feeder river.
She had her bow and a couple of arrows with her. She wasn't going to get a better chance.
She crouched low so as not to alarm them, and she advanced as close as she dared. There was a row of hedges. She stood behind them and strung the bow and inspected the arrow and when she was confident that all was in order, she knocked the arrow on her new string and readied her grip.
She scanned the herd. There were less than two dozen. Half by the river drinking or eating and half with their heads up, ears twitching for signs of danger. As she watched, some moved away from the river and others moved in to take their place.
One of the animals was somewhat separated from the rest. It walked along the bank, head down as if searching for something specific to eat. Its horns were longer than the rest, and its fur was lighter and shaggier.
Shan moved along a row of hedges to get closer to her target. Then she drew, took aim, and fired. The arrow cut right. Hit the animal in the shoulder. It brayed, dropped to its knees and cried out some more.
The other animals stampeded, running away quickly. Leaving only dust and one injured member behind.
Shan drew the knife and approached. The animal was terrified. Her own nerves hummed. She had never killed anything this way before. She was used to shooting dirz fighters, not facing a screaming animal and looking it in the face when she killed it. But that's what she had to do.
She cautiously closed the distance and when she was near, the animal quieted. It knew its time had come. Animals could sense that sometimes. Close as she was she saw details: its horns were segmented as if grown in stages, its fur was nearly white and surprisingly clean, and its eyes were black and she saw herself reflected in them. And then she touched its neck. She felt the animal tremble. And she drew her blade across the flesh, opening a vein.
Soon it was over and she draped the carcass over her shoulders and carried it the long distance back to camp.
*
Between the two of them they were able to figure how out to gut and skin the animal and slice the meat.
That night they ate yak steaks, dry and tough and gamey, but it was real meat and Shan was in a delightful mood.
After they ate their fill, they cooked the rest of the meat so it would last longer. Then they set to work stretching and drying the hide.
Exhausted they sat side by side and watched the few firefly crickets that were still hoping about this late in the season.
"I don't know about you, but that steak hit the spot."
Jadhar grunted his agreement.
"My vegetarian friend once told me that being a vegetarian gives people more energy. But I think that's a load of crap. I have more energy with some meat in me."
Jadhar looked at her, his expression was one of patience.
"What? Why are you looking at me like that?"
"You want to say something."
"Is it that obvious?"
He nodded.
Shan scowled. This was not how she wanted to do this. She said nothing for a time, just watched the night. Then, abruptly she said, "I want to go to the mountains." She didn't wait for his objection, she simply went ahead with her thoughts. "I think there might be caves there, something we can keep heated better than this aluminum shed. Plus there will be better sources of water. Maybe better plants. Different plants, at any rate, maybe a better food source."
He said nothing.
"What do you think?"
"It's a good plan."
"But..."
"But nothing. Let's do it."
Shan looked at him, decided how to broch her next thought. "I want to scout it first by myself. You stay here, pack our supplies, maybe make a sled to carry our stuff if we decide to make the move. I think that will be better."
"Why?"
How could she answer that? She wasn't really sure herself. "We might not move there. It's just a possibility. I just want to check it out first." What she didn't say was that she needed some space. His passion and their close proximity were suffocating. She needed air.
There was silence between them, a stillness that threatened to become a distance if not bridged. Then Jadhar did the best thing he could, he touched her thigh and said, "I support your decision."
She let out a breath she didn't know she had been holding.
That night there was no sex, there was too much to worry about, but there was some kissing. And for Shan that was enough.
*
On the plain under the dark sky and the small red sun, Shan marched. Days passed. Eventually there were clouds that blew in from the west and she thought it was going to rain, but there was nothing she could do about that now. There was no place to shelter.
As she marched her thoughts kept turning to her girlfriend back on Earth. She couldn't help but think about what Li Cong would say if she were here now.
"They abandoned you, you know that, don't you?" That's probably how it would start.
"They had no reason to think I survived."
"I know you, Shan, you tell yourself that so you won't be pissed at them for leaving you here."
Shan wasn't about to argue with a figment of her imagination.
But that figment wasn't finished yet, not by a long shot. "They abandoned you, like you abandoned me."