The stove that remembers her
Ikal wakes up before six every morning. By five past, she's lighting the gas stove, heating water in an old pot, and looking — not quite on purpose — at the framed photo of Tlanextli propped on the shelf above the burners. In the photo, her grandmother leans against the ahuejote tree in the yard, hands dark with chinampa soil. The frame is cheap wood. The glass is scratched. The photo is still sharp.
The morning ritual has three parts: light the stove, pour the first cup, look up at the photo for as long as the first sip lasts. Ikal doesn't pray or talk to herself. She just looks. Then she sets the mug on the table, grabs her boots, and heads out to the canal while the day is still dark over San Gregorio Atlapulco.







