Bob was somewhere in a dream,
moving, no — driving, in a car, somehow having just come down from some
great height with a jolt yet surprisingly still intact, sort of, and
into a landscape — no a road, no not a road — sand and dunes, others all
racing around him, and
*FLASH!*
Little Head-Bob awoke. Something felt, no —
something WAS wrong. He couldn’t focus his eyes. There was something,
sand perhaps, in the wind—in a wind that was blowing into his eyes and —
there was no wind. Maybe not even his eyes, but still, something was
not right. Something was wrong. The young owl could not get his eyes to
focus, his. . . smell wasn’t working, the leaves of the tree, his tree,
an ancient black oak, a black jack, they wouldn’t come right. They just
weren’t right.
Something seemed to strike him in the head —
on the inside of his head. He tilted his head, and tilted it some more
and one of his feet, he couldn’t tell which one, let go of the branch.
It lifted of its own accord. He couldn’t make it come back down,
couldn’t make his strong talons grip again the branch. He listed farther
to one side, the leg kept lifting. In a panic he shook and fell, down
and down and, so fast the ground came up, he knew he was dying and
*FLASH!*
Reality was. . . not right. Time was moving wrong. It wasn’t moving backwards, but wasn’t flowing right, either. It was like sitting in a meadow, when the warm spring breeze that was drifting from behind was suddenly a stiff wind in your face, full of sand. And screwing your eyes shut tight, you suddenly couldn’t tell where you were and
*FLASH!*
He was walking, outside. He had just passed one of Claire’s vineyards, was coming up on Maeve’s orchard, he could smell the peaches, ripe and almost overripe. The thing was there again, just over his shoulder, his. . . left shoulder, he could feel it there, keeping pace with him, not pouncing, but just, almost, ready to. He was alone. No, I — I was alone. I am alone. Where am I? What day is this?
“Friday,” the thing, keeping pace with me, just over my left shoulder, says.
*FLASH!*
“It’s all right,” she said, there, just over his left shoulder.
He was walking past Maeve’s Orchard, coming up on one of Claire’s vineyards. There, sitting on a branch in one of the peach trees, no – in a black jack tree, a young owl blinked, was looking at him and… just fell off its branch.
*flash*
This piece originally appeared on Amwriting.org
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