Jayme Lawson The Penguin ^new^ | LATEST |

They were cold. Not a little chilly, not the kind of cold you fix with a thick pair of socks. It was a deep, ancient, polar cold that radiated from her bones. Her toes were perpetually the color of a winter sky, and the floor around her favorite armchair was permanently damp from the slow melt of an invisible frost.

She’d seen doctors. Specialists. A man who claimed to read auras and suggested she was “emotionally allergic to summer.” Nothing worked. So Jayme simply adapted. She wore snow boots in July, slept with a small fan pointed at her feet (the heat they generated was, paradoxically, unbearable to the rest of her), and avoided carpeted areas. jayme lawson the penguin

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. They were cold