By Tess Kelly
That June, trees crisped and browned. Grass yellowed like old newspapers. Each morning I filled my blue plastic watering can at the outdoor spigot and carried it across the garden to the birdbath, a basin of concrete nestled beneath an Ironwood. The bath had toppled and broken years earlier. I hauled its heavy base to the county dump but the important part remained on the ground, the part I stocked for birds, rodents, for any creature that wanted to slake its thirst.
I once read about a Seattle girl who left water and seeds for crows in her family’s small backyard. Over time the corvids brought her a mound of treasures: scores of glistening beads, baubles and sea glass, and even a tube of lip balm, in the way a cat leaves gifts of mice and sparrows on its owner’s doorstep.
During most of that week, heat blistered the region, taking lives. It frightened us Portlanders with its white-hot intensity. I kept the birdbath full. The crows returned again and again, returned alone, or in pairs or trios, dipping onyx beaks and wings into the shaded cool water. Shortly after the fever broke, as bodies were counted and withered plants died, I discovered a cookie on the birdbath’s edge. A perfectly round cookie, shaped like a donut with a hole in the middle and decorated with a stripe of bright red, the color of a valentine heart.
Tess Kelly‘s essays have appeared in HerStry, Ruminate, Cleaver, and Dorothy Parker’s Ashes, among other publications. She lives and writes in Portland, Oregon.
Image by Paul_Cooper courtesy of iStock
Truly beautiful. Thank you for sharing.
Crows and ravens are the best! Thanks for this tribute to corvids.
Lovely. And yes, they return the gift. Gratitude is another thing human beings share with other species.
Beautiful, lovely, moving prose. Thank you for sharing this blessing with us.
Lovely. Peaceful and hopeful way to start my day.
A beautiful story!
I love how you make space for grief and gratitude in the same short piece. Gorgeous. Thank you for sharing.
Beautiful, indeed. These gifts that we sometimes overlook–thank you for this Monday morning gift.
I have wondered what the crows are saying to me (to each other) as they accompany me from my apartment down the walkway to where my car is parked.
I like the contrasts here: dry and wet, white and black, heat and coolness, life and death, sea glass and a decorated cookie. Cold, damp places turned hot and scorched. I like that as the stakes increase, the gift becomes edible, possibly life sustaining. Exquisite piece! Thank you.
Gorgeous writing. Worthy of reading more than once (which I did). A “simple” story told eloquently and elegantly. So glad this was posted. This piece plus the comments have given me writerly things to think about: What makes a story good? Strong verbs, Details that matter. I enjoyed Susan N’s comments about the contrasts. Well-done!
Such a lovely glimpse into our world and the grace and gratitude of beings. Beautiful writing!
Gorgeous writing. More, Tess, more!