Mudlark No. 44 (2011)

The Waterbird

A Domestic Tragedy

“Sadie,” said the Mother of Seven Daughters,

“Did you remember to feed the waterbird this morning?”
“No, Mother,” Sadie replied.  “I believe it was Aurelia’s turn.”
“Aurelia,” said the Mother of Seven Daughters, 
“Did you remember to feed the waterbird this morning?”
“No, Mother, I believe it was Amaryllis’s turn.”
And so it went, all the way from Amaryllis to Chloe to Bernadine to Valoria to Sue.
So they all ran in their billowy white cotton nightgowns to the back porch 
where the waterbird’s mesh cage hung suspended from a beam,
but it was too late.
The wingspan, the peckishness, the trembling sentience, the song
were gone forever,
not even a bubbly smear left behind.
 
Now the Mother of Seven Daughters
has been dead for years,
and the girls have grown up to be old
in their larger but less billowy white cotton nightgowns.
Every day and every night they rock in wicker chairs on that same porch
where the episode of the waterbird is discussed frequently 
and with considerable vigor,
though they have yet to determine
which among them
is to blame. 

Claire Bateman | Mudlark No. 44 (2011)
Contents | To the Pacific