The Unusual Case of Ephemera

The Unusual Case of Ephemera  

Ephermera likes her toast charcoal black, so does her budgie.

She wakes by sound. The little bell tinkling in the cage as the budgie humps the metal thing: tinkle, tinkle it goes.

“You dirty little birdie,” she says.

“Tweet, chirp to you to,” says the bird.

 “Don’t be cheeky.”

The budgie turns, flips up his tail feathers, and a little round, white drop of poop comes out.

“Oh, there’ll be no toast for you, Dirty Bird.”

She cracks the kitchen curtain and peeks outside.

“Boy’s coming today, Dirty Bird.”

“Chirp.”

She cranks up the setting on the toaster.   

The kitchen smokes. The toaster protests. 

The ceiling clouds and swirls, she inhales and Dirty Bird flaps in his cage.

A knock at the door!     

She shuffles across the linoleum, and opens the door with a grand swirl of black smoke. It’s Frankie.

“You wanted your windows done today,” he says.

“Oh, yes, expecting you, step ladders in the shed, start here, in the kitchen.”

Frankie on the ladder cleans the window, and waits.

Ephemera’s there, glasses on the end of her nose, tap, tap, taps with her index finger.

Tap, tap, there, tap, tap, here, and he sprays and washes till she’s happy. 

“Fifty cents an hour, three hours that’s a buck fifty.”

“Cheap, rich old bag,” he thinks, smiling.   

“Thanks, see you next week.”

She walks to town, gets the post, a letter! She goes to her bench and opens it right there, an invitation, my name? What? Come to Hinton, it says. A convention,  people with my name? A contest, a poem? How exciting. She thinks, waits on the bench, then thinks of a doughnut but decides not, too excited, so continues home.

“Dirty Bird, Dirty Bird,” she exclaims shaking the invitation, “a contest, I need to write a poem about you,” she says.

Dirty Bird flaps in the cage.

“We need to think, out you come.”

Dirty Bird flies around the house and settles on Ephermera’s shoulder. She is sitting at the kitchen table, pen and paper in hand.

“Now what do you think?”

“The poem silly, what should I write, after all it’s about you.”

Dirty Bird flutters on her shoulder.

“Don’t you dare poop,” she says.

Dirty Bird squats and scoots his neck in acquiescence, and peers at the paper.

“Good, now let’s see: Into my morning head I hear a tinkling bell it sounds quite near.”

Dirty Bird chirps, and is soft as he tits her neck.

“I know, I do have a knack for it,” she says.

I get up, my house coat on to see the ruckus cage within

“Chirp, too-witt, too-woo.”

“Yes, yes.”

A little bird chirps his song, I feed burnt toast to aid along.”

“Chirp, chirp, tweeter-too.”

“Yes, I see, how’s  this, I hum with yellow bird with glee, for it is my best company.”

She twists and looks at Dirty Bird from the corner of her eye.

“You are my best.”

“Coo-Kooo.”

Sometimes he likes to fly quite free, yet always comes home to abide with me.”

“Chirp, tweet,” says Dirty Bird flapping his wings.

“I like it too.”

“Tomorrow I’ll post it off, and if I win, I’m off to Hinton! You too!”

Dirty Bird flaps excitedly.

The long days are longer because Dirty Bird and Ephemera are waiting patiently for the post, and one day, it arrives.

She sits on her bench. Her hands shake as she opens the letter, it says:

THE EPHEMERA  CONVENTION

Dear Ephemera,

Please be advised that your poem, ‘Yellow Bird Swagger’ is one of the finalists in the contest. Kindly return this letter with your endorsement and we will complete your registration as finalist. We look forward to seeing you there!

Yours in Service,

Ephemera B. Higgins,

Head of Selection Committee,

Hinton, B.C.

I’ve won! Then halts herself aware that she’s only a finalist. She rushes home to tell Dirty Bird.

It’s quiet in the house, Dirty Bird must be napping, so she is soft with her footsteps, going in the side door, placing her purse on the bed, clasping her wonderful letter.

“Yoohoo, Dirty Bird, look what I have,” gaily and musical.

But there is no chirping or tweeting or too-witt-too-wooing, instead, at the bottom of the cage lies Dirty Bird, there, on the cage floor surrounded by little white poops, like a little angel.

She sighs.

“Time for a strong cup of tea,” she says to the kettle.

A dainty cuppa, then lays on the couch, and sleeps, warm and comfy.

She wakes to a knock, knock, knocking on the door. It’s Frankie.

“Hi Mrs. Hamilton, you told me to keep knocking if no answer, today’s the day for the edges.”

“Yes, right, not today, but come tomorrow, I have something special for you to do.”

Ephemera puts dead Dirty Bird in a shoe box, but it’s too big, so finds one smaller. She places the bird soft in the bottom on crepe paper, and thinks she hears a small chirp as she puts the lid on.

Published by Fresh Words Magazine, May 5, 2022

Frank Wayne Mottl