65 ~ Wands in the Aviary
by Bluebird Branch
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After the sparkles faded I looked up and saw my father surrounded by birds. Old birds, silly birds. “Hey there, Father!” I said. “Begone, grandmas!”
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I could see Father much better now that I had glasses on. I had spent my whole childhood in a shifty blur! He told me about his job at Starling Market, and about his elderly father, my grandfather. He and my grandfather liked to go to the park and play ping pong. I told him about my blue room and my blue books and I saw that his eyes were blue, like mine.
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Father had to leave, but he hugged me first, and told me that I could visit him in town anytime, especially if I came without any of the other birds (except Tanager, my mother).
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Then I went up to my blue room and stood there alone for a while. I thought about how flowers and stars looked the same, and about how I was never going to die, but Father was.
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Father was still here, it turned out. The full moon had risen, and in its greeny glow he had pulled out an upright bass and was playing himself to exhaustion. I think my father might be a little bit crazy, like me.
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I was almost a fully grown bird now, which meant that there were things I needed to do. The most important things were to read and to write. I still had a few dozen of my great-grandfather’s books that Betsy the bookshelf was holding for me and that I hadn’t read yet. I tried to read at least one every day - and on a good day, I could get through several, since they were on the short side. I read stories about my ancestors, some I knew and some I didn’t. In particular, there were a lot of stories about a man named Arthur, who apparently took a really long time to die. How curious!
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After I’d acquired some writing skill points, I went to City Hall, where Mother worked, and registered as a self-employed writer so that some mysterious invisible entity would start paying me real money for my books.
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While I was there, Granny Starling, who is approximately 4,000 years older than me, called me to say very excitedly that there was a bird she needed me to find while I was out. “A bird? You mean…a Branch? Is one of our family members out in town?” I asked. “No, a BIRD!” she said. I had no idea what she was talking about, but I got on my broom anyway and followed her directions.
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The bird in question was a real bird, and it was all the way at the top of the mountain, near where I’d found the floating beetles as a child. You’ll never believe what it was, reader. You really won’t.
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It was a bluebird! Just like me! It had a smear of rusty red on its breast, which…I don’t have…but its wings and back and head were all blue and it was chirping quietly and I got so excited that I squatted right down and beckoned it to alight on my wrist and be my friend.
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The bluebird didn’t want to be my friend. I know this because it bit me.
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“HEY!” I said, and stood up so I would look taller and more in-charge. “Excuse me, bluebird, but I am
also Bluebird, and my great-great-great-great-great grandmother said that we are meant to be friends! I’m supposed to capture you and take you home to our aviary where you will live forever and ever! Also, my foot is now stuck in the mountain because of you! You’re a very mean bluebird, and bluebirds aren’t mean, so that doesn’t make any sense! So
THERE!”
As I was talking I started to realize, maybe, why the bluebird didn’t want to be my friend. It flew away and disappeared and then I was all alone again.
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I flew home on my broom and felt a great sadness swelling like a balloon in my chest. When I got home, I decided to visit the aviary. Cala the Cardinal still lived there, a happy little bird, and maybe I could work on preparing a cage for my own pet bird - if I ever found one who wanted to be my friend.
I said hello to Cala and did a little tidying in one of the empty cages. Then I noticed that the staircase kept going up, and I’d never been to the top floor before.
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Up I went, to the very tip top. And what a new, weird world it was!
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There was an attic in the aviary, rimmed with pretty, odd things! There were books and little statues and a dress form and dusty boxes…I just gaped at all the strange objects and wondered why they were there. They must have been accumulated over the years since the start of the dynasty, but some of them didn’t make sense. Nobody in our family was a stylist, for example, so why was there a dress form?
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I wandered around gazing at all the things. I felt breathless and excited and so, so curious. I wanted to know what the old things were, and where they came from, and what they meant. Maybe they didn’t mean anything, but maybe some of them did! And as I spun around and around I felt something, like a delicate invisible thread, pulling me to a trunk on one side against the windows. On top of it was a little wooden stand with a gathering of little wooden sticks.
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Aha! Wands! Magic wands! At least I knew what these were.
I chose a particularly blue one that was hiding behind the others and tucked it into my pocket. Then I crept down from the aviary, into the main house, and up to the top floor where my room was.
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And I started practicing. I had forgotten that I was finally big enough to do real magic. Now, with a blue wand in my hand, the delicate thread I’d felt in the aviary turned into delicate threads of light that I could see with my actual eyes. It felt familiar, but also new, like a story I’d never read but had somehow known all along.
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The next day was Sunday. Mother spent the day down at City Hall, holding the first protest she’d held in quite a long time. She said the protest was kind of small. I said, well, City Hall is kind of big.
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Then she told me my father was there! He comes to all her protests. This time he was wearing a kilt, for some reason, and was really excited about it, for some reason.
It was a new day and I was feeling brave, so I decided to show Great-Great-Grandma Meadowlark that I could do some magic.
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“Nooo, Bluebird, please! Don’t use me as your first ever target! I don’t--”
“Relax, Great-Great-Grandma! I’m just going to give you a Good Luck Charm.”
“I can’t possibly relax, child, I’m Neurotic! I don’t do well with--”
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“It’s going to work, I promise! The threads feel all bubbly, which means it’s going to work. Ready?
Bonn valim von doo--”
*sob* “I can’t even look!”
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The Good Luck Charm worked, obviously, because I could
tell that it was going to.
“Oh, Bluebird! What a miracle!”
“It’s not a miracle, Great-Great-Grandma. I told you, I could feel the bubbles in the magic.”
“It seems the Good Luck has fallen on both of us!”
“I guess so, but also
I could feel the bubbles in the magic so I knew it was going to work. Even Fig, who is just outside of this screenshot, knows that I'm a capable witch.”
“Yes, yes, your skill will grow with time, darling. Oh, I’m so relieved--”
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Whatever.
I know I’m a capable witch. And I also know my feet are pretty cute. That’s what I was looking at while resting in the hot tub. Everyone knows bird feet are adorable.