The periodicals room is like a goddamned meat locker. This happens every year. Weather outside starts to become not so drab and depressing, and the air conditioning stomps the inside temp to like, 60. I can see outside into the offices across the street, and beams of sunlight are striking this lady wearing only unnatural fibers, and it's got to feel pretty good to be her right now, being baked in her Banlon shell by the May sun.
The only good thing about the temperature in here right now is this: the cooler it is, the less people smell. When it gets nice and toasty in here on a rainy winter day, this room is packed to capacity with an array of people and their many, many different ideas about what personal hygiene means to them. It's the same thing when you enter a slaughterhouse in the summer. You can actually see the smell. That's why you should only buy your sausage from a reputable dealer who does all the nasty stuff in a cool room.
The other day while Chris and I were slowly navigating through a crowded neighborhood in northwest, we drove past a pigeon fluttering all over itself in the gutter, wing at a painful angle, eyes bugged out.
"Oh!" I said and brought a horrified hand to my mouth. "What do we do?" I looked to Chris for an answer. I turned the corner and swung into a parking space.
"We can't really do anything."
"We have to do something."
"Like what? We could take it home and nurse it back to health. Keep Little Portly from killing it."
"No, I mean, we have to do something."
"What, like snap it's neck?"
I looked around in the car for anything I could use as a weapon. I had an empty Dr. Pepper can, a pile of napkins, a few cracked CD cases, and a fingernail clipper shaped like a ladybug.
"Christ, I didn't mean it. Are you going to get out of the car and kill it?"
Here's the thing: if I would have had my snow shovel in my car, we wouldn't even have had that conversation.
"You don't think I could kill an animal that was suffering?"
"No, I don't think you have it in you." He paused, then smacked his forehead. "Oh right. I forgot, you're a farm girl. Saw lots of animals mutilated and weird stuff."
Not really, but whatever. I just know that I would want some help reaching death if I had been that mangled bird in the gutter. I wouldn't have smacked it with a shovel to be cruel, and I wouldn't have enjoyed it. But I would have done it if it would have stopped the pain.
We drove away without doing anything at all. I thought about the pigeon as I tried to sleep that night. I imagined it poked at by kids with sticks, kicked by jerks, frightened at it's inability to leave the ground. Am I as bad as the kid with the stick? The asshole who dumps a beer over it's head?
I need to get a new snow shovel.
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I was cleaning out the barn last year when a pigeon fell from a nest in the rafters. It wasn't a chick, but wasn't big enough to fly either. Add to that - it looked retarded. The fall hurt it and there was no way I could put it back up in the nest. My brother was with me and I said, "I suppose I should do something." With that I snapped it's neck with my gloved hands. Michael winced and went pale. "Jesus," he said, "I didn't expect that." Yeah. Me neither. Not growing up on the farm - it's sort of a transition.
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