Sunlight on the Workbench

The light slants through the window, dust motes dancing in it. My fingers rest on the board, the roughness of the grain familiar as a friend. I remember the day my grandson, Jake, was small. He wanted to build a box for his marbles. We spent hours sanding, him getting frustrated when it didn’t look like my old toolboxes. I showed him the knots, said they’re like the tree’s own marks, not mistakes. He polished one knot with his thumb, said it looked like a moon. That box is still in his closet, I think. The shavings here smell like pine, like that afternoon. The light’s still warm, even now. The work doesn’t stop, not really.


