The pigeon

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A pigeon sits in a person’s hand. Pigeon’s eyes are closed, shedding tears.
Iryna Presley / The Cascade
Reading time: < 1 min

He was alone. That was the first thing that seemed odd. Birds of a feather flock together — and this little pigeon was solo. He also wasn’t flying. Instead, he huddled in the narrow alley beside my building, unconcerned about the man who had rounded the corner only a few feet away. The little bird let me come within arms reach before it beat its wings just enough to regain a few feet of separation. Something was wrong.

I went back upstairs, Googling possible causes. It could have been injured by flying into a window; it could have eaten something toxic; it could be suffering from the summer heat; it could have simply been old. I rooted through the kitchen for seeds, nuts, and berries, washed a yogurt container, filled it with fresh water, and brought the lot down to the ailing fowl, who promptly ignored it. I gave it some time and space. 

That night, he was still there. Food and water untouched, his tiny beak nestled in his plumage. The SPCA and bird sanctuaries apparently don’t come for pigeons. There he remained — fixed like a living statue, awaiting a fate I feared we both anticipated. On the fourth day, he was gone, with only my litter remaining. 

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