The Penguin |verified| - Jayme Lawson
She stepped onto the ice. It did not melt. It sang.
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. jayme lawson the penguin
Inside was not a derelict warehouse. It was a cathedral of ice. Frozen waterfalls cascaded from the ceiling. The floor was polished mirror-smooth. And in the center of it all, rising from a throne of crystalline frost, was a man made entirely of frozen starlight. She stepped onto the ice
Jayme Lawson was, by all accounts, a perfectly ordinary woman. She lived in a small, perfectly organized apartment, worked a perfectly quiet job as a library cataloger, and took her perfectly bland lunch at precisely 12:17 PM each day. The trouble began on a Tuesday
Jayme stopped. The penguin stopped. It turned its head, fixed her with a bright, bead-like eye, and then looked pointedly down at her boots. A single, crystalline drop of water slid from her heel onto the pavement.
“Jayme Lawson,” the man whispered, his voice the crackle of a glacier. “The last of the Winter Souls. You have been dormant long enough.”