Mild
The Fog on the Ridge
556 words · 3 min read
The fog had settled on the ridgeline the way it did in October — not moving, not lifting, just sitting there above the treeline like it had always been there and always would be. She had been watching it for twenty minutes. Or she had been watching it since the last set of boot-prints disappeared behind the switchback. She wasn't sure anymore which had come first, the fog or the wanting.
Three miles in. The trail book said three-point-two to the lake, but she had stopped counting. She had started counting other things instead: the minutes since she'd heard another hiker, the specific cold of the air against the back of her neck where her braid had pulled loose, the pressure of her trail pants across both thighs when she stood still like this, not moving, just listening to the forest do nothing.
She stepped off the trail without deciding to.
The Douglas firs closed around her in four steps. The ground was soft — duff and moss, no crunch — and she was aware of how quietly she had done it, how the forest had simply absorbed her. A cedar trunk, massive and dark with moisture, and she put her left hand against it. The bark was cold. Colder than the air. The specific cold of something that had been in shadow since September, and her palm registered it all the way up her forearm.
She stood there with her hand on the bark and her back to the trail.
The fog on the ridgeline hadn't moved.
Her right hand went to the zipper of her shell. Just rested there. The metal pull was a small, precise cold against two fingers, and she held it without pulling, aware of the sound it would make — that specific nylon-and-tooth rasp that would carry in this silence the way a voice would. She held the zipper and breathed in through her nose and the air tasted like wet cedar and something darker underneath, something that was just the forest being very old and very still.
She exhaled. The sound that came out was longer than she'd meant it to be — not a sigh, something quieter, more private, the kind of sound that happens below the threshold of intention.
Her thighs were pressed together inside her trail pants. She was aware of it the way you become aware of something that has been true for a while. The fabric was warm where her legs touched, and above that warmth the shell hung open at the hem, and above that her fingers were still on the zipper pull, still not moving, and the gap between not moving and moving had become the only thing she was thinking about.
The trail behind her was silent.
She pulled the zipper down.
The sound was exactly as loud as she had known it would be. It moved through the trees and then the trees took it, and then there was silence again, and she stood in the open shell with the cold air finding the strip of skin above her waistband, and her left hand was still flat against the cedar bark, and her right hand was at the top of her trail pants, and the fog on the ridgeline sat where it had always been, watching nothing, indifferent and absolute.