Clean: Slate By Mugwump

She set down the cloth. Picked up the chalk.

The first swipe was the hardest. It always is. The drag of the cloth across the slate felt like pulling a splinter from bone—a long, necessary pain. The residue of a job she'd hated but worn like a skin. Gone. Another pass, harder this time. The memory of a friend who'd left, a door closed without a note. The chalk dust fell in pale, silent flakes to the floor. clean slate by mugwump

The chalkboard of the year stood before her, not erased, but smeared—a ghost-trail of Januaries and Septembers, of promises half-drawn and resolutions half-scrubbed. Each gray smudge was a word she'd choked on, a plan she'd abandoned by February, a version of herself she'd tried to dust away but couldn't quite. She set down the cloth

She held the damp cloth, cold in her fist. It always is

Swipe. Swipe. Swipe.

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