Ice begins as a simple thing:
a hardening of water,
a pause in the world’s pulse.
It slicks the roads,
glazes the troughs,
draws white lines
across the morning.
Children test it with their heels.
Farmers curse it.
The river wears it
like a tight, bright mask.
Ice is just weather,
you tell yourself;
a temporary firmness,
a cold that will pass.
But then you notice
how it waits,
how it watches,
how it forms without asking
and stays without permission.
How it can trap a body
in a moment,
hold it still,
make movement dangerous.
How it decides
who gets to cross
and who goes under.
By the time you realise
this ice has nothing to do
with winter,
the frost has already crept
up the spine of the story:
quiet, rigid,
and very much
by design.
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