Jayme Lawson The Penguin -
The penguin led her through the sleeping city, past the glowing bakery, past the silent fountain in the park, to the old abandoned icehouse by the river. The door was rusted shut, but as Jayme approached, the metal groaned. Frost spiraled out from her fingertips. With a single push, the door flew open.
“The penguins remember,” he said, gesturing to Popsicle, who now stood tall, a regal guard. “You were born of the Great Freeze. Your cold feet are not a curse. They are a key. Winter is fading from this world, and only you can renew it. Step forward, and claim your crown.” jayme lawson the penguin
And so, Jayme Lawson, the perfectly ordinary librarian, became the Guardian of Winter. She still works at the library, but now her lunch break is spent freezing the local pond for skating lessons. And Popsicle? He sits on her shoulder, the most loyal, pea-stealing familiar a winter soul could ever ask for. The penguin led her through the sleeping city,
“I don’t understand,” she stammered, her breath misting in the air. With a single push, the door flew open
She’d seen doctors. Specialists. A man who claimed to read auras and suggested she was “emotionally allergic to summer.” Nothing worked. So Jayme simply adapted. She wore snow boots in July, slept with a small fan pointed at her feet (the heat they generated was, paradoxically, unbearable to the rest of her), and avoided carpeted areas.
Jayme looked down at her ugly snow boots. She looked at Popsicle, who gave a solemn nod. And for the first time in her life, she smiled—a wide, genuine, slightly frosty smile.
The trouble began on a Tuesday. She was walking home from the bus stop when she saw it: a puddle. Not a rain puddle, but a long, glistening smear of meltwater on the sidewalk. And at the end of the smear, waddling with purpose toward a storm drain, was a small, disgruntled-looking penguin.