Mockingbird
By Jonah M., Fitchburg, MA
You squawk like a mock-crow in your cardboard cradle, pacing from corner to corner through shavings, seeds, and excrement. You carry your left leg crooked, wings wet with nervous sweat. You fell into the cold arms of the pavement, scuttling over the sidewalk like a feathered lizard.
When I look at you, you freeze in place, peering at me through raisin eyes. Left alone, you cry out for food through your paper thin beak, squawking too loudly for so small a bird, no bigger than my fist.
I bear you in your box-home back to the tree. You try to fly away, but cannot break free. Something invisible holds you there. All afternoon long, I sit on my porch, watchful for neighborhood cats. If I’m too near, your parents won’t take you back.
Still your mother swoops down to feed you, your parents perch atop the cardboard nest, worms dangling from their beaks like frayed threads. They feed you till evening: they guard you now, silent in the branches like pulsing gray statues.
At night, I tie your cardboard nest to a narrow branch with twine; the cats should not reach you here, your parents will be near. I can only say good night.
In the sunlight of the morning, the box is still there, but no chirping, no parents near. I look inside your empty nest and choose to believe you have flown away.
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