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๐“˜๐“ถ๐“ธ๐“ฐ๐“ฎ๐“ท๐“ฎ ๐“œ๐“ช๐“ฑ๐“ช๐“ต๐“ฒ๐“ช

๐“ข๐“จ๐“๐“”๐“ข๐“ฃ๐“—๐“”๐“ข๐“˜๐“;
๐“ ๐“Ÿ๐“ž๐“”๐“œ ๐“•๐“ž๐“ก ๐“ฃ๐“—๐“” ๐“›๐“ž๐“ฅ๐“”๐“ก ๐“˜ ๐““๐“ž๐“โ€™๐“ฃ ๐“—๐“๐“ฅ๐“”

    I was playing Red Rover with two fire trucks: I was stomping through thin ice so my feet could get a grip as I ran; I was slipping and falling and getting back up. Just once, to catch my breath, I sat cross legged in the snow, and I knew I wouldn't feel cold if I cooled offโ€”if my body's temperature was the same as the air'sโ€”so I waited, and then I was sorry that it felt so good to freeze. Eventually the trucks barrelled past me and the man hanging off the back of one blew steam in my direction and I was grateful, and then I felt cold again.

    I began the walk home. I suppose the trucks never called my name at all, I just mistook their sirenโ€™s song. Winter craves intimacy: I stuffed my hands into my pockets and pretended they were being held. I imagined how romantic it would be if the wind swept me off my feet; I focused on the sound of something moaning in its grasp. To warm up, I thought of touch: it's like when I think of the moon and I can feel the tides, or when I think of the sun and start to feel hot. My eyelids are sweating, I said, like there was anyone else around, Iโ€™m not crying. My lashes froze together so I could hardly see; I didnโ€™t need to, I guess, I could feel the ground beneath me. I wrenched them open anyway. I bore my pupils into the road and considered whether I had time for a nap in another drift.

    I like tire tracks because they remind me that someone else has been here before: maybe a carpool taking it slow to savor the company. Crunching sounds are silvery and the smell of winter is so blue it shines. Heat is relative: when Iโ€™m inside the warm again Iโ€™ll take a bath that smells like peppermint and listen to a song that tastes like spring, or spring water. Maybe Iโ€™ll masturbate. Definitely Iโ€™ll go to bed alone.



       Imogene Mahalia (she/they) is an accused poet and a triple threat (biracial, non-binary, bisexual) based in Montreal. Formally, she is a voyeur of the illusory; she writes personal essays peppered with lies. Off-paper, most people call her Emmie.
       Her work can be found in Joyland Magazine, Bullshit Lit, and Maybe Mag (forthcoming: JAKE). She was honoured to read at the first Plateau Symposium: you can listen to the recording here.