Where did she go, the pigeon
With the moon obstructing her view,
Pecked while picking the corn
I put out to bring them near me
To feel
The flap of their wings
And the purple of the frail necks
My gaze meeting theirs,
Ducking and bobbing orange with the black pupil
Staring furtive.
They trust me now,
They come onto the balcony
Congregating they vie for the grains
Coo cooing coo coooo,
And she was pecked, leaving her with the moon over her eye.
Infected, I fear, her moon is now a mortal wound.
Yesterday she stayed behind on the roof,
Seeking a solitary morsel in a ray of winter sun
Unsteady under the weight of her eye
A peril to her flight.
Now I look for her in vain,
Her loneness like a flag
Her absence ignored by all but me.
Did she fall from the roof, did she die alone,
Looking at the sky
Wishing she could fly?