Winter Starts — When

Finn looked confused. “Loves? Winter doesn’t love anything.”

And so, as the clock ticked toward the longest night, Finn stepped outside into the silent, hovering snow. He had no idea what story to tell. But he opened his mouth, and the words came anyway—not about science or forecasts, but about a little boy who once lost his mitten in a snowdrift and found it the next spring, wrapped around a crocus bulb. About a frozen pond that held the weight of a thousand children’s skates before finally cracking with a sound like laughter. About a single candle left in a window on the coldest night, not to keep the cold out, but to remind it that warmth was patient. when winter starts

Elara smiled, wrinkles deepening like riverbeds. “You do, Mayor. You’re young. Winter hasn’t heard your voice yet. Every old god loves a new voice.” Finn looked confused

She handed him a cup of tea she had brewed an hour before—as if she had known he was coming. “Every hundred years or so, winter remembers it used to be a god. Not the gentle snowman you see on greeting cards. The old kind. The kind that buried armies and turned rivers to stone. It’s been sleeping under our mild Decembers and lukewarm Januaries. But something has broken the lock.” He had no idea what story to tell