Dive bombers, black wings spread, satanic angels: Two crows attacked another broken on the long grass, consumed by grappling weeds, unable to fly and imprisoned within the soft melding soil as if caught nesting; I watched from afar; a spectator at an accident unwilling to intervene. Darting beak, defending itself with desperate protests: they swooped again and again- stukas in the old war, squarking demonically wings flapping like black pistons geared up for death- again and again they drilled into the world of men boring down until in the fading light, head bowed, the damaged crow surrendered and vomitted out its last stored-up breath, shining ebony slashed, in a flurry of dangling flesh, its life hacked away-blood dripping from its bill- hacked away in the cold air, its brothers, like brothers everywhere, gorging on its flesh.
By then, I had had enough, I refused to watch anymore. The bird a meal for its own kind, soon just scattered feathers repositioning the light. Its darkness, once a threat, with its suggestion of forboding now merely signalling innocence, the victim of misrepresentation. I left a scene that did not truly embrace reflection, an unusual carnival of life and death in a city that rejected both.