Sing
I found a temporary room at an expensive private suburban hospital. Clean sheets, a cot and three daily hots. It was an intensive care color spectrum zonal theory filled with young lovers in their emotional zombie reality of lies and uncertainty.
Downhill from the hospital a crying man waiting at the Metro station held a cardboard hospital chart and paper package. An orange paper folder discovered papers from a doctor, a lab, a prognosis, a definite definitive defining medical history. It revealed a story about someone dying, a wife, uncle, someone he loved.
He waited in heavy unconditional silence for a green Metro to collect him and his package of fear, loss and regret transporting him down the line. Home. Where he’d spill the contents on a table surrounded by friends and relatives sharing his tale. Loss and hypodermic needles of pain, pleasure, desire, sloth, envy and assorted fabulous conversations laughed.
A bird pressed itself against a thorn to make herself sing.
A stranger passing the hospital smelled wild roses. A bird sang. He whistled. Bird answered.
The bird’s song were short sharp sounds, a trill, long deep vibrational throated mysteries, harmonic scales, warbling.
“Now I know why the caged bird sings,” whispered an orphan child scrambling across mined fields next to her Cambodian bamboo home.
The man and bird carried on this musical conversation until the bird was satisfied the stranger knew the music. It flew, singing.
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