A River's Cold Reckoning
By Leaf Richards
The wind, a razor-sharp whisper, carved paths across the exposed skin of my face. Ice, thick and treacherous, gripped the banks of the old River Severn, its surface a mosaic of fractured grey under a sky the colour of tarnished silver. Every breath was a small, white explosion, instantly snatched away by the biting air. My boots crunched on the frozen shale and packed snow, a rhythmic protest against the absolute stillness that otherwise reigned. This desolation, this profound quiet, was a rare and precious commodity in a world saturated by the Stream’s insistent hum, a world I was desperate to escape.