That morning, she found the seed.
She picked it up. It was smooth. Dead, surely.
Nuna stared at the seed. It was so small to hold so much loss.
But deep in the dark, pressed close to her warmth, the seed dreamed of rain. Ice Age
And so did she.
“What is it a memory of?” Nuna asked.
It lay in a crack of blue ice, a tiny, dark fleck no bigger than her smallest fingernail. She almost missed it. But something made her stop—perhaps a sliver of instinct passed down from ancestors who knew forests, not this glittering desert. That morning, she found the seed
The world had forgotten the taste of rain.
Kumiq crouched, her breath a brief cloud. She took the seed and held it between her calloused palms. For a long moment, she said nothing. Then she closed her eyes.
That night, as the aurora painted the sky in silent, cold flames, Nuna tucked the seed into a leather pouch against her heart. Outside their shelter of frozen hide and bone, the wind howled like a hungry wolf. The world was a white grave. Dead, surely
Her name was Nuna. She was twelve winters old, though winters had lost their meaning. Her tribe kept moving, always moving, following the bones of great beasts—woolly giants with tusks like crescent moons—and the ghosts of rivers frozen solid.
“Green,” she whispered. “The world was green. Trees so tall they brushed the belly of the sky. Water fell from above—soft, warm—and things grew without waiting for blood to soak the ground. We didn’t have to chase. We simply… reached out and ate.”
Kumiq smiled—a rare, cracked thing. “Not here. Not now. But you keep it anyway. You keep it because one day, maybe not in your life or your daughter’s life, the ice will sigh and retreat. And when it does, something will need to remember what green was.”
“Can it grow again?” the girl asked.
For two thousand years, the ice had crawled south like a dying god’s final breath. Now, even the wind sounded different—sharp, metallic, a blade scraping over an endless shield of white. The sun, when it appeared, was a pale coin with no warmth.