An Old Friend

Today is Free Food day after all, and Mom insists that there is no better way to fight the cold than to eat an authentic, perfectly flavored Curry from the Spice Market. She leads by example, and engages in a conversation with a vendor she’s somehow on a first name basis with. The vendor teases her about how there will be “no haggling needed today,” and then mom sits down on one of the colorful tables nearby, clearly happy with herself.

Very clearly happy with herself.

It’s my turn to order, while my siblings are too chicken to try the… well, the spicy chicken.

A sad-looking man in his forties drags his feet behind me as I talk with the grey-haired vendor. He looks familiar, but I can’t place him.

Then he sits down in front of Mom. She draws a stunned breath, and I remember who he is, just as he looks up to recognize her.

“Romain!” she smiles, before pulling him in for a hug. She sees an old friend she wants to greet — I see what she misses, in the way he looks at her. I see a ghost who could never get over what never was. Maybe he could never live at all.

“I’m happy to see you,” she says brightly. “What have you been up to, and how are Marie and William?”

“Azalea…” he whispers.

From my spot on the bench where I pretend not to be listening, I get bits and shadows of what he’s telling her. I don’t understand it all. Part of what I’d need is buried under decades of life and things my parents would never share. But I can imagine.

“It worked out for her,” he says. “She got deal after deal, and she decided she didn’t need me after all. She lives in Champ Les Sims now, with William. And I’m alone.”

“Romain, I’m so sorry. I wish I’d known. I wish we’d kept in contact.”

“Yes…,” he says. “I wish we could have.”

The Snowpal Club

What else are you gonna do in the middle of a vast, empty place covered in snow, if not a congregation of snowpals?

Once you’re done fighting with snowballs, of course.

Alone or in groups of two, we gather up snow and shape it up into form with colorful accessories, a good portion of which directly acquired from the fruits and vegetable stall on the market.

One, two, three, four, five snowpals come to life, with varying degrees of success. I’m still not very good at it, but the other ones are not that much better… Except for Mom’s. She has knowledge and talent the rest of us cannot fathom.

Portraits in the Snow

That day, we make some of our best memories as a family, the kind that last forever.

We also take some of my favorite pictures.

The Snow Arena

The Spice Market becomes an arena where the seven of us compete. Snow flies from hand to face; to your arm if you’re lucky or skilled enough.

In a minute you can form an alliance with your aunt and watch as she betrays you. Siblings, twins, parent or child doesn’t mean much anymore, no one is safe, no one is to be trusted.

San Myshusnow

It’s a special day today! All stores and shops offer food and drink, for free, for all customers. It’s also the day Mom and Dad decide it’s about time we knew “our roots”.

Really, they mean their roots. With the excuse of free food day, we’re headed on a family trip to San Myshuno’s Spice District, to visit Aunt Miranda and Nolan at their loft.

And when we arrive, we’re greeted with a beautiful surprise. A San Myshuno snow in the Spice District.

Mom looks like a kid who’s just met Father Winter. I know how much she’s missed this place — I don’t think she could be happier. It her first time seeing snow in the Spice Market, too.

I’m happy to see my cousin again, the snowy landscape can wait a bit for my attention. We all spend some time laughing, chatting happily in front of their house — it’s cold but we’re enjoying the surroundings, the atmosphere. It takes some time before we finally admit to ourselves, we don’t even wanna go in.

Snow Selfies

I don’t take selfies often, but when I do, it’s because the landscape is exceptionally beautiful. And there’s a cute snowpal behind me.

Granted I’m not the best at selfies. I have exactly one smile in my repertoire.

Or maybe it’s just that my cheeks are frozen solid by my time in the pool and my dive in the snow. Time to go warm up inside.

Morning Angel

In winter the sun never goes really high up in the sky. It stays there, looming an inch over the horizon, bright but foggy, magical.

No one else is foolish enough to step foot outside by these temperatures, so it feels like I have the whole neighborhood to myself, with those big, silent monuments that are the houses around. Complete silence except for the cracks of the snow, white as far as the eyes can see. I’m all alone!

A truly beautiful day for snow angels, indeed.

Cold Bath

I end up shutting down the computer, and slamming the office door behind me. Wholly fed up with office politics, I’m looking for a way to cool down… And I find it really easily. I’m going to cool waaaaaay down.

It’s a winter wonderland outside. The decorative trees in our backyard are glowing faintly in the late morning light, and somehow, even though it’s very cold, the sun is shining bright on the coat of snow.

And the pool… The pool is shimmering, the bluest blue I’ve ever seen it. Inviting. I dip a foot in it, to check… Not so much checking the temperature as my ability to withstand it… And then I fully immerse myself.

It takes me a few lengths to decide I swam enough and I want to wrap myself in warm clothes, but these lengths were more than enough to clear my head. I feel cleansed and relaxed, and I breathe better, in more ways than one.