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# Winter Snow Haiku
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The first flake of the season didn't drift—it struck the kitchen window like a warning.
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Kaito didn’t look up from the cutting board. His world was exactly twelve inches wide and eighteen inches long, a bamboo stage where a single head of Napa cabbage awaited its fate. He gripped the heavy cleaver, his knuckles a landscape of pale ridges. Behind him, the radiator hissed a rhythmic, metallic sigh that sounded like someone trying to remember a name they’d forgotten years ago.
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*One.* The blade sliced through the crisp white ribs.
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*Two.* The green leaves yielded with a sound like tearing silk.
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*Three.* He stacked the sections, his movements mechanical, drained of the joy that used to hum in his fingers when he cooked for more than a ghost.
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A year ago, the kitchen had smelled of roasted garlic and toasted sesame, a warm fog that blurred the edges of the tiny Tokyo apartment. Now, it smelled of nothing but pine-scented floor cleaner and the sharp, ozone metallic tang of the coming storm.
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He moved to the window. Outside, the neon lights of Shinjuku were beginning to drown in a swirling grey haze. The sky wasn't white; it was the color of a bruised plum, heavy and sagging over the city. He thought of Hana. She would have been at the sliding glass door already, her forehead pressed against the pane, casting a breathy fog over the glass so she could draw lopsided hearts with her index finger.
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"Kaito, look," she would have whispered, her voice like wind chimes. "The sky is falling in pieces."
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He reached out, his own finger trembling. He didn’t draw a heart. He drew a single horizontal line, then watched it weep.
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He returned to the stove. The dashi was bubbling—a deceptively simple broth of kombu and bonito flakes. To the uninitiated, it looked like tea. To Kaito, it was the foundation of everything. If the dashi was weak, the soul of the meal was hollow. He lifted a small wooden spoon, tasting.
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Flat.
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It lacked the briny depth of the ocean. It lacked the sting of life. He reached for the salt cellar but paused. His hand hovered over a small, ceramic jar tucked into the back of the cupboard, its lid coated in a fine layer of dust. Hana’s secret. A blend of dried shiitake powder and sea salt she’d ground herself during that final, shimmering autumn in Kyoto.
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He stared at the jar. To open it was to use it up. To use it up was to erase another physical trace of her from the room.
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The snow was falling faster now, thick, wet clumps that clung to the fire escape like white moss. The silence in the apartment grew heavy, the kind of silence that had mass, pressing against his eardrums until they throbbed. He looked at the cabbage, the dashi, the empty stool across the counter where she used to sit and kick her heels against the wood.
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"Write it down," he muttered to the empty air.
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Hana had been a poet of the mundane. She didn’t write about epic battles or tragic heroes; she wrote about the way a pear felt in your hand, or the specific shade of gold a streetlamp cast on a puddle. She’d left notebooks everywhere—tucked under sofa cushions, wedged into the spice rack, hidden in the pockets of his winter coats.
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He put down the spoon and walked to the hallway closet. He pulled out her heavy wool coat, the one the color of dried rose petals. His throat tightened as he reached into the right pocket.
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His fingers brushed paper.
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He pulled out a crumpled scrap, a receipt from a convenience store dated fourteen months ago. On the back, in her loopy, hurried script, was a haiku.
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*Silver breath on glass,*
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*The mountain hides in the clouds,*
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*Soup warms up the heart.*
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Kaito leaned his forehead against the cool wood of the closet door. The simplicity of it hurt more than a symphony. She hadn’t been writing for an audience; she’d been writing for the moment. And the moment was always about the warmth they shared against the cold of the world.
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He straightened his shoulders. He went back to the kitchen, grabbed the ceramic jar, and twisted the lid. It gave way with a dry, gritty snap. The scent hit him instantly—earthy, deep, and smelling of the forest floor after a rain.
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He took a pinch—just one—and dropped it into the simmering broth.
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The steam rose, catching the light from the overhead lamp. He watched the powder dissolve, vanishing into the liquid, becoming part of the whole. He added the cabbage, the silken tofu, and a handful of scallions he’d sliced so thin they curled like wood shavings.
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He didn't set two places. He set one. He sat on his stool and rested his hands on the warm ceramic bowl, lacing his fingers around it as if holding a small bird.
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Outside, the storm had turned the city into a white void. The skyscrapers were gone. The streets were gone. There was only the kitchen, the steam, and the ghost of a poem.
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He took a sip. The broth was rich, humming with the mushroom salt, a perfect balance of sea and soil. It tasted like autumn meeting winter. It tasted like a memory made tangible.
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Kaito picked up a pen from the counter, the one he used for grocery lists, and turned over the receipt he’d found in her pocket. Beneath her three lines, he wrote his own, his handwriting shaky but certain.
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*One bowl, shared in thought,*
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*Salt of earth and salt of tears,*
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*Winter holds its breath.*
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He laid the paper on the empty stool beside him. He picked up his chopsticks and began to eat, the heat of the soup spreading through his chest until the ice in his veins finally began to crack.
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The snow continued to strike the glass, but inside, the broth stayed warm.
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