A bird fallen from his tree, wings broken, chest rising in uneven panicked gasps half in a mud puddle
disgusted them. No song left in his throat, no color in his feathers. Probably diseased. No longer hopeful, no longer a thing to be admired.
They looked up from the ragged pile of feathers drawn only to the sky- to the soaring. They had no use for the broken one at their feet.
He lay there, not dead, but forgotten. His pain too heavy, too honest, too close to the end.
And they looked away. Pretended he had never flown, never sang, never mattered.
And in that silence, he writhed. The mask of beauty long shed, his frailty exposed to boots and blindness alike.
He had fallen. His panicked fluttering body of tiny hollow bones in the gutter of the world, breathing his last breaths about to die. He fell out of the sky.
And they stepped over him— And on him— with the same indifference.