Mild
What the Cold Kept
522 words · 3 min read
Outside, the cold is absolute. The wind moves through the spruce trees in long, low surges, and the cabin walls answer with a faint creak, and then silence resumes — the specific silence of deep winter in the Rockies, the kind that has weight. She has been awake for twenty minutes, watching her own breath rise and dissolve above the quilt, not thinking about anything in particular. Just existing inside the warmth she has made.
Her name is Mara, and she has not touched herself in four months. She knows the exact count because the last time was the night before she moved out, sitting on a bare mattress in an apartment that had already stopped being hers. She is not sure when she stopped wanting to. Somewhere in the gutting work of becoming a person again, desire had simply gone quiet, the way an instrument goes quiet when no one is left to play it.
She slides her hand beneath the quilt slowly. The thermal undershirt she slept in — waffle-knit, woodsmoke-soft, bunched now at her hip — does not move with her. She has to work her wrist past the hem, and the ribbed edge drags lightly against her skin, a small resistance, almost a question. She pauses there. Her jaw is loose. She is looking at the ceiling, where nothing is visible yet, only the particular pre-dawn dark that is slightly less dark than it was an hour ago.
Her fingers settle between her thighs with a kind of tentativeness she doesn't recognize in herself. Like approaching something she has been told is fragile. The warmth she finds there is startling — not because it surprises her intellectually, but because her body registers it before her mind does, a soft bloom of heat against her fingertips that arrives ahead of any thought about it.
She exhales through her nose. Long and careful.
She has forgotten, a little, how to do this. Not the mechanics — those don't leave — but the permission. The willingness to stay inside the sensation instead of cataloguing it from a distance. She catches herself observing and has to let go of the observer, which takes a moment, which costs something.
Her hand moves. Barely. The barest tracing pressure, the heel of her palm resting against the inside of her thigh, her fingers asking only the simplest question. Outside, the wind rises again, and the walls creak, and the cold presses against every window in the cabin, and she is warm. She is so warm. Her breath shortens — not faster, just smaller, drawn in with more attention, held a half-second longer than usual before release.
She does not close her eyes. She watches the dark ceiling begin, imperceptibly, to grey.
After a long moment her hand stills. She lifts her fingers slowly and holds them near her lips in the dark — not quite touching, just close enough to feel her own warmth against her mouth. The question hangs there, unanswered, intimate as the cold pressing against the glass. Outside, the spruce trees creak and settle. She breathes in. She does not decide yet.