It Was Magic Whoever Touched It
It was only a pencil, but to hold it was to hold a wand, a sliver of wood wrapped around a secret vein of starlight. Its yellow paint was chipped from years of being carried pocket to pocket, desk to desk, but still it glowed faintly, as if it remembered the warmth of every hand that had ever touched it.
The pencil had been many things in its quiet life: a sword in the hand of a boy sketching rockets that would never fly, a conductor’s baton for a girl who tapped symphonies into the margins of her schoolbook, a key unlocking whole worlds when a man scrawled the name of a woman he loved and feared losing. Each mark it left was a trail of sparks, fading quickly on the paper, but burning forever in memory. The pencil remembered all of this in silence, for its life was not in speaking but in giving others a voice.
Now, dulled and small, it rested on a table in the half-light of evening. Outside, the world whispered with cicadas and the hum of street lamps. The pencil waited, as if listening, as if ready for one last story. Somewhere, someone might yet take it up, and in the curve of a word or the shape of a dream, the pencil would breathe again—wood and lead becoming starlight once more.

Comments
Post a Comment