Years later, when I found a place with its own bramble tangled against the fence, Aleise’s lines came back to me without my asking. I moved like someone remembering choreography—sleeves rolled, bowl at my hip, a habit that fit my hands. The berries stained me the same way: purple at the nails, a smear across the palm that refused to wash out for a day. The song followed in my head, soft and precise, and in the way I picked there was the understanding that some harvests are about more than fruit: they teach how to be patient, how to care, and how to accept small wounds in exchange for sweetness.
Years later, when I found a place with its own bramble tangled against the fence, Aleise’s lines came back to me without my asking. I moved like someone remembering choreography—sleeves rolled, bowl at my hip, a habit that fit my hands. The berries stained me the same way: purple at the nails, a smear across the palm that refused to wash out for a day. The song followed in my head, soft and precise, and in the way I picked there was the understanding that some harvests are about more than fruit: they teach how to be patient, how to care, and how to accept small wounds in exchange for sweetness.
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