on thin ice (open)
Nov 27, 2011 22:46:59 GMT -5
Post by Noah Wilde on Nov 27, 2011 22:46:59 GMT -5
Fall was quickly drawing to and end. The once luscious trees had shed their last remaining leaves leaving them looking delicate and frail. The air smelt like coming winter snow warmed up by the distant scent of burning wood. The temperature had finally dropped cold enough for the shallow pond to freeze and the grass to crunch beneath Noah's feet frost bitten by the chill of fast approaching winter.
Noah couldn't believe how quickly the months seemed to be passing, Thanksgiving had already passed and Christmas was only a few short weeks away. Soon she'd be home in Nebraska with her parents and her brother, safe, back where she knew every soul that past and knew what to expect. Back where people lived in simpler ways and where being sheltered didn't just mean you were in a house. She had mixed feelings about going home. Yes, she loved it.... but she knew that there she'd be expected to act even more passive then she did at school.
She'd been working so hard to try and come out of her shell. She had gone out of her way to talk to at least a few other people and even managed to talk in class without her voice shaking out of control. She didn't want to revert even farther back into herself. Into where she felt trapped and blind... but it was so safe there.
Noah gripped the laces of her ice skates tight as she reached the pond hoping that it was still frozen enough from the recent cold front to be able to enjoy. She'd wanted to come down to it earlier but her studies had gotten in the way. Ice skating had always been something she'd loved. She could vividly remember her first time when she was 3 with her father at Tomani Lake, only a miles walk from her house. His big hands holding hers carefully as he lead his little girl over the frozen water never stopping the loving words of encouragement. The memory met her like a warm hug on Christmas morning making coming out of it only that much more jarring when she wasn't with her warm supporting father but rather alone with the bleakness of the dying season.
She plopped down on the grass and slid off her black boots, replacing them with her white ice skates. She carefully surveyed the pond. It looked frozen, she could see ice from the corners to the middle, no pools of water. Once she had her skates on she got up and picked up a rock throwing it hard into the ice and watched it slide down. Seemed safe enough.
Noah carefully stepped onto the pond, putting only half of her weight on and holding her breath listening for the sound of cracking or her foot to go into the freezing water. When no sounds of terror met her ears she dared to put the rest of her weight onto the ice. Letting out a sigh of relief when she found herself standing, above the water, safe.
Noah couldn't believe how quickly the months seemed to be passing, Thanksgiving had already passed and Christmas was only a few short weeks away. Soon she'd be home in Nebraska with her parents and her brother, safe, back where she knew every soul that past and knew what to expect. Back where people lived in simpler ways and where being sheltered didn't just mean you were in a house. She had mixed feelings about going home. Yes, she loved it.... but she knew that there she'd be expected to act even more passive then she did at school.
She'd been working so hard to try and come out of her shell. She had gone out of her way to talk to at least a few other people and even managed to talk in class without her voice shaking out of control. She didn't want to revert even farther back into herself. Into where she felt trapped and blind... but it was so safe there.
Noah gripped the laces of her ice skates tight as she reached the pond hoping that it was still frozen enough from the recent cold front to be able to enjoy. She'd wanted to come down to it earlier but her studies had gotten in the way. Ice skating had always been something she'd loved. She could vividly remember her first time when she was 3 with her father at Tomani Lake, only a miles walk from her house. His big hands holding hers carefully as he lead his little girl over the frozen water never stopping the loving words of encouragement. The memory met her like a warm hug on Christmas morning making coming out of it only that much more jarring when she wasn't with her warm supporting father but rather alone with the bleakness of the dying season.
She plopped down on the grass and slid off her black boots, replacing them with her white ice skates. She carefully surveyed the pond. It looked frozen, she could see ice from the corners to the middle, no pools of water. Once she had her skates on she got up and picked up a rock throwing it hard into the ice and watched it slide down. Seemed safe enough.
Noah carefully stepped onto the pond, putting only half of her weight on and holding her breath listening for the sound of cracking or her foot to go into the freezing water. When no sounds of terror met her ears she dared to put the rest of her weight onto the ice. Letting out a sigh of relief when she found herself standing, above the water, safe.