people from Stipock's Bay do, anyway? They had all come - there was no one left on the other side to bring a boat and take them across in the night. No one could swim the river - the current was too swift, and it was three kilometers wide at the narrowest point. They had none of their carpentry tools, and the older people were brandishing their axes and torches as if they'd gladly break a head or two, if one were offered.
She left the fire and walked slowly to where Hoom and Wix were still arguing furiously with Aven and Noyock.
"We don't want any trouble," said Noyock, "but I won't let you break up the City!"
"Break it up!" You call this holding it together?" Hoom shouted back.
Behind each group of leaders was a gathering crowd of supporters. Both crowds looked equally angry; but the crucial difference was the sharp tools the older men held in their hands. Dilna walked into the space between the two groups.
She said nothing, and after a few moments they realized that she wasn't joining into the argument on either side. "What is it?" Noyock asked.
"All this talk," Dilna said, "won't build the ships for us. And all the shouting doesn't find us a place to stay warm tonight. I want my husband to build me a shelter. We'll need tools to do it."
And Dilna turned around to find herself looking directly into Wix's eyes. She averted her gaze, found Hoom's concerned face. Behind her, she could hear Aven saying, "We can't give them tools - they'd build boats in a week. Not to mention busting our heads in."
Dilna whirled on him. "You should have thought of that before you stole our homes from us. I'm pregnant, Aven. Do you want me to spend the night in the open air?"
Noyock turned to Aven and said, mildly, "They're right. Maybe a few tools - enough to rig some kind of shelter before nightfall."
"Why?" Aven asked. "Not one of them but has parents that'd be only too glad to invite 'em back into their homes."
Wix's father, the usually gentle Ross, raised his hand and said, "That's right, there's no hard feelings. We'd be glad to give them food and shelter!"
Wix's face was twisted with fury. "Give us food and shelter! There's not one of us but has plenty of food and shelter across the river! You stole it from us! You don't give us one damn thing! It's ours by right!"
"Rights, rights!" shouted Aven. "You little lying bastards don't have any rights!"
Dilna turned back to Wix and Hoom. "Enough, enough," she said quietly. "In a brawl we'd lose. Whatever we do, we can't do it here."
"She's right," Hoom said. "Let's go."
"Where?" Wix asked.
Hoom looked up the hill toward Noyock's Town. "The forest just north of the Pasture. We can take fence rails and rig a shelter."
Dilna turned back to Noyock. "Do you hear that, Noyock? We're going to take fence rails from you and build shelter. That way we won't have to touch your tools."
Noyock, eager to end the quarrel without violence, agreed, and Hoom, Wix, and the rest of the crowd straggled away from the beach, heading back up the hill. It was already afternoon, and there was much to do before night.
Noyock caught Dilna's arm before she could leave the beach. "Dilna - please listen. I want you to know, this wasn't my idea. When I got here, the boats were already burning."
"There's a law," Dilna said, "about destroying another man's property. You're the man who loves the law - imprison these men until Jason comes."
"I can't," Noyock said miserably. "There are too many of them."
"There are more than a few of us, too," Dilna retorted. "This is Linkeree and the ax all over again. Only you're not Kapock."
As she walked away, Noyock called after her: "It wasn't me that worked so bloody hard to strip all the power away from the Warden, it was you! If I still had that power, I could protect you!" But she didn't turn to answer. When she got to the brow of the hill, she stopped and looked back at the beach. Noyock was still there alone, watching the last flames die. On impulse she ran back down the hill, all the way to where he stood. "Warden," she said, "we'll need a fire tonight. Will Jason approve, do you think, of our taking some of