A Stray Dog Jumped Into an Icy River, Then Refused to Let Go-Ginny

The coldest mornings do not announce themselves with drama.

They arrive quietly, with frost on the inside of old windows, with porch steps that complain under your boots, with air so sharp it makes every breath feel borrowed.

That Sunday in January began that way in a small river town in upstate New York.

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The houses were still dark.

The storefronts on Main Street had not yet turned on their signs.

The river ran behind town with its winter face on, half-frozen along the edges and black through the middle, where the current never slept long enough to ice over.

I was walking because sleep had become unreliable.

Two winters earlier, my mother had died after a short illness that made every room in my house feel both too full and too empty at the same time.

People tell you grief comes in waves, but they do not tell you how often it comes before sunrise.

They do not tell you how many ordinary mornings you will wake with your chest tight and no clear reason except absence.

So I walked.

I walked before work.

I walked on weekends.

I walked when the town still belonged to snowplows, delivery trucks, and the occasional person too lonely or too restless to stay inside.

The towpath beside the river became part of my routine.

It was not pretty in a postcard way during winter.

It was severe.

Bare trees leaned over the water.

Old reeds rattled dryly along the bank.

The river carried broken plates of ice down the middle and made a grinding sound when they knocked together, low and stubborn, like stone dragged over stone.

That morning, my phone later showed 6:17 a.m.

The weather app said fifteen degrees.

The wind off the water made that feel almost generous.

I remember the smell most clearly.

Snow has a smell when it is packed hard and old.

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