The cold blows north and the city falls into the cycles of a leafless world. It feeds off the brick, licks the shoes, tastes the cotton of jackets, gnaws hands clutching the last warmth of summer close to their heart, cuddling its last embers, huddling to the next soul with faint fires when it goes out.
Dogs on the leash paw the air delighting in distinguishing the smells of life and death all around. Autumn is their rooting season, their time to sniff for the rat hidden in the pre-collection trash, to proudly drop the last migrating Warbler wounded by the reflection of sun on glass, at their masters feet in the remaining scent of the Great Wolf Hunt.
With each gust their master’s minds go south to thoughts of changeless sunshine, snowbirds migrating in caravans to The Villages filled with plantation magnolias scarred with the memories of rope swings and before that, feet swaying in the dirt, never mindful that it was the African eye who first caught the non-reflective sun and bleached skin, the first shudder of cold.
The taste of cold on fingers and faces etches their tundra souls and in the rubbing of hands, the warm breath of air in palms, they almost feel the sun again. They sense something invigorating, thrilling in feeling the right amount of cold, the wind howling in the cave of their hearts.