She stood thus, I wrapped fleshy tendrils about scratchy bark and consoled her for all the trees I imagined, rightly or wrongly, were sacrificed to rusty notions of progress neatly packaged in emporium form; the saffron leaves and peppery roots lost to dusty reverberations.
That's when the crow came, glowing eyes above fierce wings, his caw hinting at mockery: "Don't flinch, I'm here to help, and you'll not get far imposing such improper intentions."
"The trick," he went on reassuring me, "is to always stand apart.
"Yesterday's sigh becomes tomorrow's squall unless today's kept at a distance.
"Fly up, but not too fast, or the only thing you'll feel is dizzy."
And that, without another word, is just what he did.
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