The Peril of Prairie Delays
By Jamie F. Bell
The Winnipeg train station, usually a bustling hub of departures and hurried greetings, was now a purgatory of delayed Christmas hopes. Fluorescent lights hummed with a weary indifference above a scattered congregation of stranded travellers. Outside, the world was a blur of snow-whipped grey, a true prairie white-out, pressing against the vast windows like a ghostly hand. Inside, the air was thick with the faint, metallic tang of an old building, overlaid with the less pleasant smell of too many bodies in too small a space, the persistent whine of a toddler, and the faint, sweet decay of forgotten festive cheer.