Snow slammed the door before Awan could close it; the cold pushed past his scarf and carried the scent of smoked meat and burnt tinder. The wind pressed a hard appetite against his face and drew out smaller sounds until the village seemed to be breathing in a single, tight chest. Inside the longhouse, the fire threw quick shadows; outside, drifts covered thresholds and stacked the light into long, flat planes.
He tasted worry more than fear. The worry had a shape: a child's mitten caught on a porch beam, a ladder vanished under a drift, a neighbor who had not come to fetch water. The elders moved with hands that did not fumble, but the angles of their faces were sharp. Kahotay's voice stayed low, quick with the work of naming danger; they measured what to send and who would go. Awan listened, every small noise a question.
Standing at the door felt like choosing between two failures: stay and watch the roof give way, or go and risk getting lost under muscle and storm. He wrapped his scarf, felt the wool cut into his jaw, and thought of his mother's hands folding blankets, of the smell of stew that would keep its memory warm even when pots went cold. When a house is buried, he knew, small things become big: a nail that will hold a hinge, a rope that will save a crossing.
He left. Not from bravado but because waiting felt like permission to let the village shrink away into snow. The trees swallowed his footprints quickly; each step echoed in the hollow spaces between trunks. The forest floor seemed a different country now — drowsy, close, the wind making the branches rattle like a jar of small bones. Night showed no stars; it showed white and shape and the black cut of trunks.
He found tracks that did not match any animal he knew. They were set wide, step after step, and the gaps between them carried a rhythm that did not belong to a human stride. As he followed, he added meaning to the marks: this could be the answer the elder named, a thing that moved when the land called. Or it could be nothing but a trick of weather and a long, lonely mind. The possibility of wrongness scraped at him, but the other possibility — that help waited — kept him moving.
Under a hollow rim the snow settled into a small hush. The wind dropped away as if the land were drawing a breath, and in that quiet, the figure rose from its place like a cliff made of frost. It was larger than men, taller than the pines in some ways, and it held an order to the cold that made the air steady around it. Light, not bright but firm, sat where its chest might have been, the kind of light that did not blind but described edges.
The thing did not move to greet him; it watched. "You have found me," it said, voice like distant stones rubbing, and the sound sat into the ribs in a way that made Awan breathe differently. The Snow Man did not ask for names. The question was simpler and heavier: why had he come?
Awan thought of his home until the memory sharpened: a child who liked to hide under a table, a roof that had begun to sag, a sack of seed half buried. He thought of the work his people did to keep their houses whole. "Our doors are sealed," he said. "We need help to open them and to get the children out."
There was a long pause as if the Snow Man measured him against a winter that had years behind it. "To walk with me is to accept trials," it said. "You will be tested. Do you accept?"
Awan's jaw set. The decision was not about bravery; it was about whether he would carry the consequence of asking a thing for help. He took the offered hand because there was no other way to bring back what was buried.
Tawahka crouched beneath bowed pines. The elders moved quick in a way that said tonight was not like other nights. Kahotay spoke by the hearth: the Snow Man appears when the land asks and when a true plea is made.
Awan followed tracks that cut deeper into the forest than the familiar paths. Snow muffled sound; branches scraped like slow knives. He kept moving because standing still would mean waiting for the village to shrink.
In a hollow the figure rose: vast, not entirely ice, with light in the eyes that did not sting but held the weight of winter. "You have found me," it said. It did not ask where he had come from, only why.
"The village is trapped," Awan said. "We need help."
The Snow Man studied him. "To cross with me is to be tried. Will you accept?"
He took the offered hand. They left the trees together.
The lake was a glass plane rimmed with cracking sound. The Snow Man walked steady; Awan watched the fracture lines and matched his breath to the rhythm of his steps. When the ice complained and split, he tightened his focus, thought of his family, and stepped.
On the far bank wind rose up like judgment. The Spirit of the Wind took form in cold slashes and questions. It pushed to unbalance him, to find the moment he would yield.


















