She pulled her coat tighter and walked to the edge of the village. Frost had already stitched delicate patterns across the fence posts. Her breath unfurled in small clouds, each one a tiny ghost of summer’s last warmth.
It wasn’t a lament. Nora had never feared the cold. She knew that winter arrived not to bury the world, but to press pause . To let seeds sleep in the dark soil. To give the river time to rest. To teach patience through silence.
As she stood, the first snowflake landed on her eyelash. Then another. Within minutes, the air was full of soft, drifting white. winter season begins
She reached the old oak at the crossroads. Last autumn’s leaves lay curled at its roots like closed hands. She knelt and placed a small bundle of dried herbs—rosemary for remembrance, sage for strength—into a hollow at the base. An old village custom. An offering to the season ahead.
“Winter begins,” she murmured, more to herself than to anyone. She pulled her coat tighter and walked to
The old calendar on Nora’s wall said December first, but she didn’t need it. She knew winter had begun the moment she stepped outside and the air didn’t just feel cold—it tasted different. Sharp. Clean. Like the sky had been scrubbed with ice.
Winter had officially begun. Not with a roar, but with a quiet promise: Rest now. I’ll keep your secrets safe until spring. It wasn’t a lament
Here’s a short story draft based on the prompt “winter season begins.”