Little Head-Bob woke up. He could hear the wind through the oaks and the cedar trees. He could feel a draft coming in the hole to the nest. Spring here, his first, was still a little chill in the mornings. He was warm though, huddled up with all his brothers and sisters so close. His mother’s silent appearance with a still warm squirrel was met with enthusiastic hoots and rasps from four different adolescent beaks.
Just out the hole in the oak, where where 
they all sat digesting, was the remains of another oak, worn by weather 
and eaten by termites.  There was little left but a ring of bare trunk 
about as tall as an owl, and one almost flat side rising to about the 
height of a buck’s shoulder. The outer surface of this side, bark long 
gone, showed something else that fascinated Head-Bob, something he had 
never seen anywhere else. 
It was the face of a man, prominent nose, eyes set deep under heavy brow and staring up, directly at the entrance to the nest. Little Head-Bob had never seen a man. All he knew was that this face, so different to him, was of something strong and fierce. Perhaps it was a spirit, some guardian of the woods , perhaps one of those he heard sighing and whispering in the night.
It was the face of a man, prominent nose, eyes set deep under heavy brow and staring up, directly at the entrance to the nest. Little Head-Bob had never seen a man. All he knew was that this face, so different to him, was of something strong and fierce. Perhaps it was a spirit, some guardian of the woods , perhaps one of those he heard sighing and whispering in the night.
On the far side of the small woods, other 
beaks were raising more raucous  voices, grating and challenging. They 
changed the feeling of the woods and indeed the air itself.  The Murder 
of Crows was awake and casting about for whom, as they say, it might 
devour.
Though it was normally his family’s habit 
to stay in the nest most of the day, they did  sometimes go out into the
 limbs of  their tree to watch and to listen to their woods. 
With his keen ears he could hear the distant sound of the crows. He had never seen a crow either, but he had heard them calling through the woods. He somehow knew their strident voices, heard first from this way and then that, meant nothing good. Still, he wondered just what all that noise was really about.
With his keen ears he could hear the distant sound of the crows. He had never seen a crow either, but he had heard them calling through the woods. He somehow knew their strident voices, heard first from this way and then that, meant nothing good. Still, he wondered just what all that noise was really about.
Perhaps today was a good day to go for a  
little flight. As he hopped to the edge of the limb and pushed off into the air he heard his brother and sisters rasping and calling in dismay at
 his abrupt departure. he stopped in a nearby persimmon tree to watch 
the remarkable progress of a tortoise crashing loudly through the 
remnants of last year’s dead leaves. He wondered how something so like a
 rock moving at such a slow pace could make so much noise.
He continued on across the wood, thinking 
about the tortoise, he had forgotten about the crows.  As he flew on, 
suddenly there was a crow, another entirely new thing to him, flapping 
from limb to limb, all the time cawing more and more loudly and 
alarmingly.  Another crow, then another, and another until  Little 
Head-Bob was surrounded by many crows, diving at him, hopping along the 
nearest branches as though in mock attack. 
He hissed. He flapped and spread his wings in warning display. The crows were not impressed or frightened. He dove out of the tree, right at two crows nearest, but they were too fast, to agile for him to touch. And still as he tried to get away from them, away from their noise, the crows pursued.
He hissed. He flapped and spread his wings in warning display. The crows were not impressed or frightened. He dove out of the tree, right at two crows nearest, but they were too fast, to agile for him to touch. And still as he tried to get away from them, away from their noise, the crows pursued.
Little did he know, but would soon 
discover, he had just met his second greatest enemy and possible 
nemesis.  It was not uncommon for an owl to be continually and 
relentlessly harassed and pursued, both day and night, until unable to 
sleep or to hunt the owl would weaken, succumb and die. The crows had a 
system. They had numbers. They could, by working is shifts, keep up 
their siege well beyond the strength of any one bird to match. As the 
day wore on Head-Bob learned, bit by bit, of the nature of crows.
As he perched, his back up against the 
trunk of the tree, hissing and snapping at the crows, he began to pick 
up another sound. Some other unknown creature, was making its way into 
the woods. Though most of his attention was on the jeering crows, he 
could still track the sounds of the new thing enough to realize it was 
coming directly towards him. Was this, he wondered some new foe, taking 
advantage of his vulnerability to end his short life?
But when the creature emerged from a copse 
of cedars The young Great Horned Owl saw something he never would have 
expected, even more remarkable the murder of crows. It was a large 
thing, walking on two legs, covered in something not fur, not feather, 
nor even scales. It carried in its upper limbs something even more 
remarkable, a long shiny thing that smelled of fire,  some mineral, and 
somehow, some new definition of death.
As Little Head-Bob perched, his back 
against the trunk of the tree, transfixed by the shear strangeness of 
the thing below, it did a new thing.  It turned its head and, staring 
him straight in the eye,  showed him its face, showed him the face in 
the woods. It was the face he had seen all his life, carved in the stump
 by his nest.
The thing looked at Head-Bob. It looked at 
the crows. It looked at Head-Bob, and again at the crows, and then at 
the thing it carried.  Its face, as it watched the crows, took on a 
harder even more intimidating cast. It  raised the thing and pointed it 
at the crow nearest to Head-Bob. He saw it  hopping towards him on the 
limb above his. The world exploded. It ended with the sound and the fury
 of a thousand thunder claps. 
The young owl sat up in the grass below, the crow lay dead a small way in front of him. The rest of the crows had taken off, but hadn’t gone far. They were mumbling now in the next tree, to themselves, or the owl, perhaps to the man.
The man spoke, another new thing. He spoke to the crows. He spoke to the owl.
The young owl sat up in the grass below, the crow lay dead a small way in front of him. The rest of the crows had taken off, but hadn’t gone far. They were mumbling now in the next tree, to themselves, or the owl, perhaps to the man.
The man spoke, another new thing. He spoke to the crows. He spoke to the owl.
“You no-good sons a bitches are gonna learn
 to leave my owls alone!  And you, young feller, better get back to 
Mommy and Daddy while I instruct these miscreants and your gettin’ is 
good.”
Little Head-Bob stayed crouched where he was, unable to move.
The man, the Spirit of the Woods, waited 
one – two – three breaths. 
“I mean leave! Now! And do try to pay attention to who’s around next time, would you?”
“I mean leave! Now! And do try to pay attention to who’s around next time, would you?”
Little Head-Bob  jumped into the air and 
flew faster than he had ever flown. Behind him the sound of a thousand 
thunders came again, and again, and once more.  He went straight back to 
his own tree, back to his nest. He buried his face under his wing, 
overcome by too much fear and too much amazement, over the crows, over 
the man, the face in the woods.
Bob woke up. He looked around him at the 
cold dead remnants of last night’s camp fire. He looked at the sandstone
 before him there on top of the hill at the edge of the woods. 
Everything seemed different, more serious, and more miraculous than he 
had ever seemed to feel before. He had no idea why. There was something,
 some feeling … he just couldn’t remember.
He got up, rolled his sleeping bag and started off towards the house. He wanted coffee, that first, best cup of the day. He thought he might get his tools, go back up into woods today, work on that carving of his father’s face. The one he hadn’t seen in too long.
He got up, rolled his sleeping bag and started off towards the house. He wanted coffee, that first, best cup of the day. He thought he might get his tools, go back up into woods today, work on that carving of his father’s face. The one he hadn’t seen in too long.
 
 

 
 
 
 
 
 
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and what happens next?
ReplyDeleteI agree with Ginny. We want more of this story!
ReplyDeleteThanks! I'm not sure what happens next but as soon as I remember, I'll get it down.
Delete