Propped against a maple trunk,
each end a snake’s head,
the wandering boy toyed
with its possibilities:
a sword for slaying dandelions,
a wand for conjuring magic
from the air
He slept with the black stick
beneath his bed,
twirled it like a cane
Though narrow, its wood
was so hard
he could lean on it,
lay in the grass and slide it
through his fingers to alter
how he saw clouds
He trusted it to be his guide
until the day he propped it
against the trunk of a maple,
climbed through the tangle
of complex limbs
to rest in a nook shaped
like a chair where he dozed
When he woke and shimmied down,
he found it gone, its magic vanished
The spell broken and fairy tales false,
he could see it was only a stick,
crooked like the street he lived on