My father put his hands in the white light of the lantern, and his palms became a horse that flicked its ears and bucked; an alligator feigning sleep along the canvas wall leapt up and snapped its jaws in silhouette, or else a swan would turn its perfect neck and drop a fingered beak toward that shadowed head to lightly preen my father's feathered hair. Outside our tent, skunks shuffled in the woods beneath a star that died a little every day, and from a nebula of light diffused inside Orion's sword, new stars were born. My father's hands became two birds, linked by a thumb, they flew one following the other.