From April 7, 2010, for #tbt.
They waited
for the bird to fall out of the tree. It
was the only way to go, they said.
They'd consulted parrots experts, some as far away as New Mexico and
Phoenix -- the ones that really knew about the habits of scarlet macaws -- and
the consensus was that the bird wouldn't come down from the tree until it was
good and ready. That's what Mike said
that morning as he was pouring himself a cup of coffee from his red tartan
thermos, "When Fergie's good and ready, he'll come down from that
tree."
Mike had laid
out three small blue bowls; one with seed, one with fruit and another with
water. An animal carrier, the plastic
type you see at airports with Cavalier King Charles Spaniels inside them, was
on the garden table, and another scarlet macaw was peeking out.
"That's
Raquel," he said. "She's his mate.
They mate for life, you know."
Raquel's beak
was poking out of the plastic rungs and she was attempting to twist her neck
upward, toward the sky, where Fergie was hollering for her from his perch in
the eucalyptus tree. His call was loud,
urgent and a little pathetic.
"Oh that
bird, I can't teach him a thing. Twenty-five years I've had him and all he does
is bite my fingers. He thinks I'm a threat, that I've got my eyes on his
lady." He looks over toward Raquel,
craning her neck. "Good girl,
Raquel," he says lovingly.
There's a copy
of the newspaper on the table, and an old book, bound in red, about medieval
falconry. The cover is etched in
gold. A knight and a bird in a leather
hat stare back at me. Mike has dressed
in layers. Maybe he was born back east
where those things come naturally.
Apparently he's going to be here for a bit.
"You can
stay as long as you like," I say. "You know, until the bird comes
down."
We both stare
upward, with a concerned looks on our faces during the momentary lapse in the
conversation.
"I might
be here for a while," he says.
"I'm prepared though."
He smiles at me with his dark brown eyes. I fancy him a Cherokee with
shamanistic powers. I wonder if the bird up the tree is trying to tell us
something.
"Do you
think it's possible he's trying to tell us something"? I ask.
"Sure,
he's saying 'I'm sick of being in my cage, and spreading my wings and flying
across the canyon felt great.'"
I laugh
politely.
"But you
know" Mike continues, staring up at the bird, who is pulling at the
eucalyptus leaves with his beak,
"When I first got him I thought he was a girl, and with that red
hair and all, I called him Fergie, after the princess. I wouldn't be surprised
if he's still pissed at me."
The bird
sounded pissed off as hell, squawking like a pteradactyl, so loud you could
hear him from the top of the street. So loud, in fact, that the neighborhood
coyotes would howl as if an ambulance were passing.
Mike and John
camped out in the garden for four days. It was Easter week and the geraniums
had just started to blossom their impossibly neon pink. The men came at dawn, left at dusk, took it
in turns to call up to the bird, alternately coaxing and berating it. Every morning I brought out cups of tea. I
didn't ask if they wanted milk and sugar. If you're on a vigil, you need hot,
sweet, milky tea.
Nights were
cold in the canyon that week. The owls
knew they had a visitor, tried to engage him in conversation, but to no
avail. The dogs waited too, blinking in
the sunlight at the base of the tree.
The hawks circled once or twice a day, retreated.
"In the
old days, you could call the fire department. They'd come out with one of those
cherry pickers. But they don't do that any more. Some bullshit about
insurance." Mike had his hands
inside his big blue down parka even though it was a mild day.
"I'm not
sleeping," he said. "Neither's John. We can't. These birds are like babies to us."
Every day they
fed Raquel at the the table so that Fergie could see, but he usually turned his
back.
"Come on
down here you old fool" called Mike.
"Fergie. I'm serious. Get your ass down here." And finally, exasperated, he turned his back
on the bird and walked towards the gate.
"I'm
leaving, Fergie" he said. "Bye bye.
I'm leaving now. Bye." A rouse that so often works like magic with
small children evidently does not work with parrots.
When I went
outside on Saturday morning with two mugs of hot, sweet tea, neither Mike nor
John were there. There was no sign of
Fergie either. No rustling in the eucalyptus. No thermos. No newspaper. No
trail of birdseed. The sky was a perfect
optimistic blue. This is a good sign, I
thought. It's Easter Saturday.
They didn't
pick up the phone immediately when I called but finally Mike's voice said
"Hello." It sounded the
opposite of what I'd expected. Small and
muffled.
"He's
dead" he said, perfunctorily.
"We found him on the ground.
No animals had touched him. He
was in tact. We brought him home and
Raquel tried to groom him. She was
nuzzling him, pushing at him with her beak..." His voice trailed off and
there was silence on the line.
"I'm
s..." I began.
"They
mate for life, you know" he said.
1 comment:
Wonderful story, Bumble. Is it true?
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