The Longest Day of the Year


Lucky gull chicks on a city roof

take food from their parents and snuggle for warmth;

for them, life has begun as well as it could.

The flightless chick who fell from its nest above

and is abandoned by its parents

on a hostile gull family’s roof

is shut in a large, bright, open room

and soon learns that fear is a nail

that fixes the whole being to a hard board.

The lost chick can hear its family above

and calls to them, looking up to a place

it cannot reach and from which no helps comes;

flight is weeks away. The enemy adults attack

and the refugee huddles in a corner

watching the privileged chicks eat well,

all because the spots on its head

are not in the correct pattern.

Sometimes it cannot resist any longer

and rushes forward to try and share the food,

but is driven back by sharp, flashing beaks.

The fallen one must somehow hang on,

surviving on forgotten scraps

until its feathers are ready

and a new phase of life begins.

The prisoner walks around and around,

the will to live fighting the hunger,

but it cannot escape for now, no matter what.  

Living in terror in this rooftop hell,

every day is the longest day of the year.

Published in Cassandra Voices