Abbywinters240621elisevandannaxfisting Fixed

One dusk, while loosening compacted soil around a stubborn bay sapling, their hands brushed. Neither flinched. Instead, Elise placed her palm over Vanda’s knuckles, grounding them both. “We’re not fixing each other,” she whispered. “We’re letting light in.”

Later, sweeping thyme clippings into a compost bucket, Vanda asked, “Still afraid of touching?” abbywinters240621elisevandannaxfisting fixed

Elise considered. “Not of touching. Just of being dropped.” One dusk, while loosening compacted soil around a

Their first task was to revive a knot garden—an intricate pattern of herbs meant to be both beautiful and medicinal. The shelter’s residents had walked away from it years earlier, leaving thyme to strangle rosemary and lavender gone woody and sour. “We’re not fixing each other,” she whispered

On the autumn equinox they held a small gathering: soup brewed from their own herbs, bread baked with garden rosemary. Someone produced a cheap cassette player; Vanda taught them to two-step on the cracked concrete, arms linked, shoulders relaxed. Elise, laughing, realized she’d spoken more words in three hours than in the past three months.