That plane tree caught my eye when I first walked here. A maple, the sellers said, wife streaming with allergies each spring. But it was, no, a plane tree, a memory of where I’d come from filling the sky of this small garden. Its fruit like furred cherries peppered the grass each fall, bark peeling in scabby strips, leaves as plentiful as daylight impaled on the rake tines, blowing their lookalike handprints all over this Canadian lawn. Three years I plotted murder while it stretched always higher, mindful of its reach, the boggling scale of its brothers spanning London’s parks, fanning the top windows of buildings.
This winter I gave the order and the arborist, holstered and spurred with chain saws and tree spikes, scaled it, feeding its oval silhouette to the chipper, branch by branch until it was limbless, then a half torso, then a stump, ready for grinding, all that green shade reduced to a week’s worth of firewood.
And now there is too much sky in its place, and one less home for the wind to mourn in on summer nights.