Salt in the Glass
After the Collapse, when rain became memory and rivers were just lines in the dirt, even our breath seemed rationed. Water was everything—currency, hope, and weapon—and those who controlled its flow controlled us all. In what was once Hartley, a blink of a town tucked between dead fields and brittle trees, the council sat perched atop the reservoir gates like crows. The rest of us lived in their shadow, scratching for every drop.
My father used to say we had two luxuries left: stories and ice. He meant it as a joke—his kind of dry humor—but after he died, I realized he was half right. People had stopped telling stories. But we still had the old nugget ice maker he’d salvaged from a yard sale years before everything dried up—a black cube with a handle like a suitcase and a removable top cover that made it easy to clean even with precious little water.

It could turn half-murky well water into soft, chewable nuggets in six minutes flat. It hummed like something alive while it worked. Some nights I’d fill my glass with icy pearls just to listen to them crackle; it almost made me forget how much I missed rain.
I guarded that machine like treasure. Not because of what it was—most folks couldn’t afford to waste power or water on ice anymore—but because of what it meant. Ice was comfort; it was proof we could still choose something other than survival. My little brother Eli would press his cheek to the basket after school patrols left him shaken, letting the cold numb his bruises.
The council’s men came knocking on a Tuesday evening when the wind carried dust thick as wool through Main Street. They wore their badges high and their eyes higher. One of them—Joss Harper, whose mother used to teach me arithmetic—leaned against our porch rail as if he owned it.
“We’re conducting an inventory,” he said. “Power draw’s up in your sector.”
I stood in the doorway, arms crossed tight around my ribs. “Maybe your numbers are off.”
Eli hovered behind me, clutching the scoop from the ice maker like it might turn into a weapon.
Joss’s partner poked around our living room, brushing aside curtains to peer at the black box on our counter. “This yours?” she asked.
“Was my father’s.”
She lifted the lid and ran her finger along the rim. “Still works?”
“Sometimes,” I lied.
They didn’t take it—not then—but they made notes on their pads and left us with warnings about non-essential appliances. When they were gone, I cleaned the machine carefully with what little water we had left—a luxury only possible because of its easy-open top—and set another batch running for Eli.
That night I hosted neighbors in whispers. Mrs. Lacey from across the way brought wilted mint leaves; old Mr. Reznor contributed half a lemon wrapped in cloth. We passed around chipped glasses filled with nugget ice that melted slow enough for us to pretend we weren’t parched all the time.
We spoke softly about ration cards and lost friends—about Joss Harper’s father turning away sick kids at the clinic because their parents couldn’t pay enough for clean water now held behind council gates.
“It’s not right,” Eli murmured over his glass, watching shards of ice dissolve around his tongue.
I thought about protesting out loud but bit it back; there were always ears listening these days.
Still, word spread about our little gatherings: pockets of relief where you could remember coolness slipping down your throat, where nobody cared who you’d been before or how many drops you had left on your card. A bit of soft ice became more than refreshment—it became defiance in miniature.
Three weeks later came the crackdown. The council sent their men through every home, unplugging whatever wasn’t strictly necessary—radios, coffee pots, bread makers—and hauling away any appliance they deemed wasteful or subversive.
Joss stood in my kitchen again while Eli cowered behind me; this time he didn’t meet my eye as he reached for the nugget ice maker by its sturdy handle.
“I’m sorry,” he said quietly. “Orders.”
I watched them carry out what was left of my father’s comfort—the last piece of him that still worked—and I felt something sharp break loose inside me.
For days afterward our house sat heavy with heat and silence; Eli stopped eating altogether. But then Mrs. Lacey knocked one night with her own battered pitcher filled with slowly melting nuggets.
“We can share,” she whispered over tears neither of us wanted to name.
So we did: gathered in shadows sharing slivers of cold against our tongues and memories against our griefs, passing hope from hand to hand like contraband.
It wasn’t much—the council still had our water under lock—but sometimes one small mercy is enough to remind you that power isn’t always where people think it is.
In Hartley now they say resistance started with salt in a glass and a handful of good neighbors who remembered how to keep things clean even when all else turned to dust.
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