A frosty Monday morning, and time now to think back on the palmy days, the gleaming days, the days when all the world was a juicy oyster for your Indianapolis Colts.
Remember that? Remember how the sun shone, with eight minutes and 40-something seconds to play Sunday afternoon? Remember the 20-9 lead, the unease settling over Arrowhead, Patrick Mahomes and the rest of that lot firmly and efficiently subdued?
Good times, Horsie Nation. Goood times.
Not at all like these times, when your Indianapolis Colts are FALLING APART, and there is panic in the streets and along the trackless wastes of the interwhatsis.
That golden moment, see, did not last yesterday, because the Chiefs did Chiefs things and the Colts ... well, did not. Let the 20-9 lead slip away, Indy did. Lost in overtime, 23-20. Forgot who they were, and how they got there, and played not to lose instead of to win.
Here's what they did, across the fourth quarter and overtime: Possess the football for a grand total of five minutes and 21 seconds.
Go three-and-out four times in four possessions.
Hand the football to the best running back in the game this season -- Jonathan Taylor -- all of three times in a situation that virtually cried out for burning clock by handing the ball to the best running back in the league.
Instead, three-and-out, three-and-out, three-and-out and three-and-what-the-hell-Shane-Steichen.
However.
However, this does not mean utter ruin awaits Steichen's crew now, despite what you might be reading in the great social media hellscape this morning.
Over-the-top hysteria is the meat and drink in that country of the damned, and it surely seemed to be in the wake of Chiefs 23, Colts 20. Words like "reeling" stuck their heads up. Words like "crumbling." And so on.
And, OK, so maybe that is a bit of over-the-top hysteria, because for all the doom-and-gloom, not even in the Hellscape was anyone saying the Colts should just pack it up and go home. They are, after all, still 8-3 and a game clear of the field in the AFC South, after barging out to an 8-1 start.
But it is true they've lost two of their last three games, and struggled to beat the sorry Falcons in the other game. Also true is the rest of the schedule is littered with potential Ls: Two games against the Houston Texans and their league-leading defense; two against surging Jacksonville; the Seahawks (8-3) and 49ers (7-4) back-to-back.
So the panic, if not actually in the streets, was at least pacing restlessly on the doorstep.
The Blob is not prepared to do that just yet.
The Blob prefers to see the power outage in the fourth quarter and overtime yesterday as just that, a power outage, and eventually the power comes back on. If Steichen unaccountably decided to crawl in a hole and pull it in after him across those last eight minutes and 40-something seconds, it doesn't change what his team did in the almost 52 minutes prior to that.
Daniel Jones, who finished the game 3-of-9 for 17 yards, completed 16-of-22, threw two touchdown passes, no picks, and did not take a sack.
Taylor lugged it 13 times for 57 yards.
The defense picked Mahomes once, sacked him four times and recovered a fumble.
That was the Colts team that started 8-1. Which means it's still there, power outage or no power outage.
"So you're saying they DON'T totally suck, Mr. Blob?" you're saying now.
Now you're gettin' it.