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To Make Color

โœ’๏ธ Ryler Dustin
Every morning, my grandmother cleaned the Fischer stove in the back of the trailer, lifted ash in a shovel, careful not to spill the white-gray dust. Precious, she said, her breath smoking in the cold. Precious in winter's first lavender not-quite-lightโ€”and you could smell it, the faintest acrid hint of ash, a crispness calling you from bed. You could watch her cap it in a chicory coffee can to stack among others, back bent from a long-gone fever. For the garden in spring, she said.
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