DP FICTION #135B: “Afterimage” by Anna Zumbro

edited by David Steffen

The bay air felt strange on Domenico’s skin. He’d been here every evening for weeks, but this was the first time in a while — years, really — that he’d taken his body with him. He’d forgotten the kiss of breeze on flesh. The rental canoe’s heave and sway troubled his bad hip. His arms, at least, retained much of their strength from his youth, and paddling was not as difficult as he’d expected. In his early career he’d flipped sedated hyenas and wolves to implant trackers. He’d had Johan with him then, of course.

Ahead of him waves tumbled over the island’s rocky shore, water copper-flecked in the late-day sun. From the docks behind him came the low coos of a flock of eiders. Bioluminescent symbols flashed on the backs of his hands: blood pressure, heart rate, temperature, true north. He fished a pair of musty gloves from the pockets of Johan’s old bomber jacket and slid them on to block the blue glow. Being human here was enough trespass.

His daughter’s ringtone chirped on his wristwatch, and after a moment’s pause he accepted the call, regretting that he hadn’t set the watch to Do Not Disturb. But knowing Addie, she’d keep calling if she couldn’t reach him, or send the Coast Guard to bring him back.

“Addie.” His voice was clipped, a little breathless. “What’s up?”

“Before you lie to me, I can see you,” she said. “You’re in Dad’s green jacket and the knit cap I made you. You’re alone in the canoe like an absolute fool. If you’ve got any bait, toss it overboard.”

He’d given her tracking permissions after his fall last December. For emergencies. She’d always been the anxious sort, and she had far too broad a definition of emergency. The eiders were nearby, not fifty yards away. Of course she would have gone to the local ridealong listings and picked one of them. He retrieved a small bag of granola from his pocket and cast a few pieces in the water. Three of the birds approached, splashing after the food with eager ah-ooos. A large male plunged for a drifting morsel, revealing the telltale bands ringing his legs.

He chuckled. “So here’s my little albatross.”

“And the ancient mariner. Papa, you’ve got to be fucking kidding me.”

Addie swore more than she used to. Since Johan’s death, she spoke more authoritatively to Domenico. She seemed to assume that, as a widower, he lacked not only partnership but a necessary measure of pushback. She seemed to have forgotten that Johan had always been the risk-taker, even if she did remember the Coleridge poem he loved.

“I can handle it. I’m sorry about the show.” His grandchildren’s music day camp was putting on a concert. He’d excused himself with the excuse that the folding-chair seating wouldn’t agree with his hip, which was true anyway, and promised them he’d hear all their songs at home. The terns would be leaving in less than a month, and he might not get another chance. At least he’d made it far enough that she couldn’t stop him. “Where are you? I hope you didn’t leave early.”

“I’m in the parking lot.” There was a pause of several seconds before she responded. She was shifting her consciousness back and forth between the neurochipped eider and her own body. “There were 17 hosts available tonight just in the bay alone when I hopped on. You want to tell me why you couldn’t just enjoy this from home — enjoy your own life’s work?”

It was his work, and that of many others. Like Johan. Their names graced a few patents of early models that helped humanity crack the mysteries of the animal kingdom, though the technology had progressed remarkably since they retired. Just as important as the patents were the research papers they’d co-authored, cracking the code of animal cognition and behavior. It was their research that demystified magnetoreception in deer and dogs and described how starlings choreographed their murmurations. But their scientific work was symbiotic with their relationship: from their meeting in freshman-year biochemistry to their early married days as they toted Addie on missions around the world to test prototypes on different species, Johan had been a part of every professional achievement he’d had. They were driven by the same narcotic thrill of experiencing an animal’s instinct, its world, firsthand. Not just through its eyes with a camera, but thanks to the technology they’d helped develop, through its senses. We’re much more similar to other creatures than we appreciate, and their education of humanity has only begun, Johan liked to say at the conclusion of his lectures. Far from strangers, they are our fellow passengers on this spaceship called Earth. A onetime English lit major and occasional poet, he’d always delighted in rhetorical flourishes, even to the end. He probably would have quoted poetry as his last words if he’d been able to, if Domenico had been there to hear him.

Addie was too old for “just trust me” or “none of your business,” and so, perhaps, was Domenico. “I’m here for me. And for your dad.”

The eider flapped its wings. He placed another piece of the granola bar on the bench opposite him to see if it would join him in the boat. It did, and so did one of its unchipped companions. Instinct, nothing more. Addie was not the captain of her eider.

He’d heard the military was working on the ability to control its trained dolphins through neurochip ridealongs, a prospect that would have horrified his younger self. The use of chipped songbirds for surveillance, an early way the technology had been co-opted, had always bothered Johan the most. Fire, the wheel, the blade, the internet: no tool resisted use as a weapon.

“For Dad? You can’t — you can’t mean what I think you mean, Papa. Don’t do this,” Addie said. “The kids and I love you, you know that. We need you.”

“Oh, no, no.” Laughter nearly escaped him before he stopped himself. It wasn’t funny. Why did he want to laugh? Because it was life that had brought him out here, or the possibility of it. Life and lightness and hope that had lately filled him so that he scarcely recognized himself from the shell he’d been for months prior. “You thought I was coming out here to die somehow? I’m sorry to worry you. Nothing like that. I’m coming back, I promise.”

Her sigh crackled over the wristwatch speaker. “Then what’s going on? You don’t need to come out here to remember him. Stop scaring me. What if you capsize? Come back now.”

“Addie…” She’d taken Johan’s death hard, too, but their grief had led down different paths. Addie, at least, seemed to have emerged from the darkest stretch of hers. He did not want to pull her back in.

They’d moved to this Maine college town when Addie was nine and bought a house only a minute’s walk from campus. She was fascinated by the squirrels. (So were the undergrads; in Domenico’s experience, every college had legends about its squirrels.) On one of her first ridealongs in Maine, her squirrel host was struck by a car and killed. She said, later, that she didn’t feel any pain, just the shock of finding her mind thrust back into her own body without warning. He’d hoped, in a way, that the experience might calm her fears of death.

But she was traumatized, and he and Johan were not prepared for the way it manifested. She hid food under her bed and in her closet. She climbed trees with a wild and foreign boldness. Traffic unnerved her, understandably, but so did hawks and eagles. Johan mused that the connection might be reciprocal: that a part of the squirrel’s consciousness had survived, like an afterimage encoded in Addie’s neurochip, and that it was still sending impulses to her brain. Domenico dismissed the theory. The technology had not been designed that way. She was identifying with the squirrel out of grief born from the intimacy of experiencing its final moments, that was all. Grief changed people. At any rate, the phase passed after some weeks and Addie was back to her obsessive neatness, once more wary of heights and indifferent to birds of prey.

He had never told her of Johan’s theory about the squirrel and didn’t intend to now. He looked at the eider perched on the bench as if it were his daughter and tried to meet its eyes. “Last year, around the time he got sick, your dad often used to go to the island through the terns. He joked about coming out here from his hospital bed when I’d have to leave at night. I told him he shouldn’t, thought it might mess up his vitals and keep him admitted longer. But anyway. You know him.”

Johan’s interest in arctic terns had always tilted toward obsession. He envisioned renting a boat and tracking the entire 25,000-mile migration with ridealongs the whole way, enthusiasm undimmed by Domenico’s maybe-next-years.

“We don’t know what the host animal experiences when its human ridealong dies during the link,” Domenico said. “And — I don’t know what he was doing at the exact time he passed — but I’m certain he was accessing terns during his hospital stay. And.”

For a moment, only the eider cooed in response. Then he heard a noise from the speaker, a gasp that might have been a cry.

“I’m not certain,” he said. “That’s why—”

“Papa, no.” He could hear her frown, her clenched fingers, in the strain of her voice. “It’s been a year. You always said he was alive in his work, but I didn’t think you meant literally—”

“Right. It’s just a theory.”

“There’s a therapist I saw for a few months, back in the fall, remember? She’s a little strange, but so helpful. Dad’s still here in our memories. But he’s gone.”

The oar slipped along the gunwale and he grabbed it just in time. Addie’s eider flapped its wings but stayed put. Somewhere a gull shrieked.

“I do know. Rationally, I know. It’s bunk. I just need to test it. Get near them as a human, see how they react. Assure myself. Maybe your therapist would call it closure.”

When she didn’t respond, he lifted the oar and dipped it into the water. The canoe cut through the gentle water toward the small tern-spotted island. His fingers ached as he gripped the oar. Once the boat started moving, the eiders departed into the darkening sky.

“Papa.” Addie’s voice once more, intrusive but gentle. “Against my better judgment, I’m going now. Be quick, okay? And safe.”

“I will.”

“If you drown out here I’ll kill you.”

“Love you too, sweetie.”

It was quiet now but for the slosh of waves, the shrill chatter of nesting terns, and the percussive thrum of his own pulse. He knew this island well from a bird’s perspective, having gone on ridealongs with almost all of the chipped terns over the past several weeks. All but one. Every time he checked, tern B107 showed as occupied. Ridealongs ended automatically after two hours, but with B107 there was never a pause, never a flash from red to green on the list. He’d checked at all times of day and night.

“Probably a malfunction with its chip.” He muttered this aloud. Spoken words carried weight. “That’s all it is.” He kept rowing.

Maneuvering the canoe as close to the rocks as he was willing to risk, he turned it parallel to the shore. The screen showed the occupied B107 within 30 yards, along with dozens of others. As well as he knew them, his failing eyesight in the fading light could not distinguish one individual from another. That was fine. Johan would recognize him.

The terns squawked in wary regard. Fledglings peeked out from beneath their parents. He knew well the famous defensive instinct that would lead them to attack and so he sat, immobile, until several stars twinkled in the dark above him. The birds remained on their nests, patient in their collective standoff with this tall intruder. B107, whichever it was, did not break ranks.

“Come on.” His voice was louder than he intended.

The terns shrieked. Six or seven zoomed toward the canoe, sharp red beaks aimed at his head. He put his arms up against the assault. The oar slipped from his grasp. He leaned over the edge of the boat, feeling it buck and roll beneath him, and the oar vanished into the dark water.

The pain only hit him once the birds had retreated. His arms bled from pecks and scratches beneath the holes they’d torn in Johan’s jacket sleeves. He remained still for several minutes, keeping his arms over his head in case they came back. A cool breeze cut through the holes and made his wounds sting. Slowly, he reached under the yoke and found the second oar. Stroke to starboard, stroke to port, each one accompanied by a sharp shudder. The terns, observing his slow retreat, did not move to follow him.

After twenty strokes he paused and rested the oar in his lap. His bad hip hurt almost as much as his arms. “Come on, B107,” he said again, softly. “You know me. You know me.”

But now every bird in the bay left him alone.

The sky was winter-dark and nothing shone on the waves. He could barely see the water. He struggled to remain upright, to avoid crumpling into the canoe and disturbing its balance. The fabric lining of Johan’s bomber jacket was binding to his bleeding cuts; it would dry there and hurt like hell to take off.

No answer was its own answer. It had always been a long shot. Johan had said to him once, Now that we’ve decoded animal cognition, the last great mystery is death. In the abstract, the phrase struck him as sublime. Still, even then, he’d responded: Someday we’ll solve that, too.

It was just like him to want a simple answer to a complicated question. But the simple answer was this: he had loved the man who loved these birds, and loved him still. Perhaps the birds, who did not startle at his muttered curses as he picked up the oar again, knew this and held back their aggression for that reason.

To the north, a faint green aurora shimmered. Domenico removed his gloves so he could read the glowing compass on the back of his right hand. Arms burning and leaden, he began to paddle back toward the mainland. He prayeth best, who loveth best, both man and bird and beast. It was the only line of that albatross poem Domenico consistently remembered, aside from the bit about water, water, everywhere that Johan, ever the pedant, always said people got wrong. He could hear his laugh, now — picture him sitting on the other seat of the canoe — hear him saying, Interesting hypothesis about the tern, but how could I confine myself to one creature’s mind when I already live in yours?

“Help me get home, then,” Domenico said to the empty bench, “and don’t let on to Addie what a fool I’ve been.” A line of lights marked the shoreline, hundreds of agonizing strokes away, but the eiders cooed and the terns watched and even though his afterimage of Johan couldn’t quote as much poetry as the real one, it was enough, it would have to be enough, to get him back to shore.


© 2026 by Anna Zumbro

2596 words

Author’s Note: This story was inspired by a picture from a writing challenge showing an elderly man in a boat with a large bird. The two figures looked almost as if they had an understanding with one another, and I started imagining a form of shared consciousness between them. The image also reminded me of the Samuel Taylor Coleridge poem “The Rime of the Ancient Mariner,” and the story emerged from there.

Anna Zumbro is a short fiction writer whose stories have appeared in LeVar Burton Reads, The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction, Nature, and other publications. She teaches high school English and journalism. 


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DP FICTION #127B: “On the Effects and Efficiency of Birdsong: A Meta-Analysis” by F.T. Berner

Content note (click for details) Harm to animals

edited by Hal Y. Zhang

Sarti, P., & Ricci, M. (2026). “High-efficiency capacitor tubes: A proposal for a novel energy generation method.” Journal of Power Sources, 656, 1051-1068.

Mr. Colombo said he had a new bird, and a new mélo-kit, and did Marco want to come over and see it, he asked, as he beckoned his neighbor inside. Marco wasn’t really interested—he just wanted to crash on the sofa and open a beer and forget about the long day at work—but Mr. Colombo, like most people in Rome, never really took no as an answer; he only waved his hands more forcefully and herded him in, talking without pause about plumage and trills and transducers and accumulators, and Marco followed meekly.

The new bird turned out to be a parrot, of course, a small specimen with gorgeous colors. Its red head gave off a pinky hue on the glass tubes that connected the cage to the whirring machine. Marco was glad to see that the cage was big enough, way bigger than the one with the canary, which was shoved in a corner, its tubes already turning green. Both birds looked well cared for, their cages clean, their feeders full, and if the canary was quite still, almost comatose, the parrot seemed happy enough as it showered a deluge of insults on Marco when he approached the cage—not in reproach, though; it sounded almost like a welcome.

Mr. Colombo laughed. “She’s got the mouth of a sailor, that one,” he said. “But she means no ill.” Then he paused, puzzled. “Do you think curses have more generating force?” Marco knew the answer, he had worked out the experiments himself, but he also knew that Mr. Colombo wasn’t really asking for his opinion. He doubted the man even knew he worked at the university, let alone that he was involved in mélo-power research.

As Mr. Colombo droned on, Marco didn’t have the heart to tell him that lab results had shown parrots not to be very efficient at generating power. There had been a craze recently, everyone buying them after a congressman had mentioned in an interview that he had gotten one for his mélo-kit, but Marco had seen the data firsthand, and there was no scientific support for choosing parrots. Canaries, yes, of course. Blackbirds, maybe, or wrens, according to some research. A bioengineering team in France had collected promising data even on seagulls. But parrots—nothing special.

Mr. Colombo was pouring beer in one of the feeders. Then he turned around and tipped the bottle towards his guest: “Want one, too?” he asked. Marco accepted, glad to get on at least with that part of his evening, and he let his mind wander. He thought about Sara, who was probably coming home right now. He thought of how he would tell her about this meeting, mimicking the way Mr. Colombo waved his hands, just to make her laugh. He loved Sara’s laugh; it made his day brighter and was one of the things that had first attracted him to her. And then he thought about how he would tell her that the university had not approved his funding. Again. She would not laugh at that. Definitely not.

***

Blanchard, Y., Ricci, M., & Smith, M.-J. (2030). “Four calling birds: A comparative study on mélo-power generating potential in C. livia, T. merula, S. canaria and S. vulgaris.” Journal of Bioengineering Research, 12(4), 28-47.

Marco pressed a handkerchief to his nose as he passed under the cages and through the front door, but he still had to hold his breath against the stench. It was one of the many apartment buildings that had installed a full facade of bird cages—the super had pushed the idea as a surefire way of saving on costs, yes, ma’am, he’d said, it’s just a question of putting a few pairs of birds in there, he’d said, and we’ll have enough free power for the whole building, maybe even some in excess to sell. And at this price it’s a steal, ma’am! At the tenants’ meeting, Marco had tried to point out that the data didn’t support those plans, but it was useless. When you tell a Roman there’s savings to be had, that’s it, they’ll do anything. Marco’s own mother had voted in favor of the cages.

It didn’t work out as promised, of course; it couldn’t have. Wrens did not breed well in captivity, despite the super’s promises, so the number of birds did not grow. The mélo-tubes were also cheap ones, simple tin tubes running down the facade, so they didn’t pick up as much power as they could, and there was a lot of dissipation. Even so, the cages had cost a tidy sum. The owners weren’t ready to front any more money for additional cleaning, and the lady who came once a week to mop the stairs had refused to have anything to do with the cages, so the birds’ droppings had piled up higher and higher.

When the neighbors began to grumble—and that was soon enough, as the only thing that can make up for missed savings in the eye of a Roman is a chance to complain about it—the super proposed what Professor Sarti had already dubbed “the fool’s workaround”: let’s put lights in the cages, so the birds won’t sleep and they’ll only sing more! That’s not what had happened either, of course. The poor birds, exhausted, had died by the dozens, leaving behind only the empty cages and useless machinery. That’s when the super had done what many resorted to: he opened the cages and attracted pigeons in with some stale bread. Those pigeons were still there, cooing a low hum of power, and they were the source of the present stench.

When Marco’s mother opened the door to her flat, she peered over his shoulder, and disappointment flashed over her face before she smiled at him. Marco sighed inwardly and forced his lips to smile back. More than one year had passed since Sara had left him, and still every month his mother hoped to see her at the family lunch.

His forced grin turned into a real smile when he saw the small figure hurtling toward him from the sitting room.

“Uncle!” Teresa shouted, hugging him with all the strength of her five years. He twirled her around in the air, happy for her unconditional love, then walked over to shake her father’s hand and hug his sister briefly.

“So, what’s new among the birds?” Alfredo asked down his nose. He towered over Marco and the whole family and wasn’t shy about it, as he loved to rub in his good position and huge salary at some corporate bank.

“I’m getting a bird for Christmas,” Teresa piped up.

“Oh, yeah? What kind of bird do you want?”

“A bird that doesn’t sing.”

“Yeah, imagine that,” Alfredo cut in. “She could get any bird in the world, even a peacock, and the best mélo-K to go with it, and what does she ask for? ‘A bird that doesn’t sing,’” he said in a mock high-pitched voice. “What nonsense are you teaching your daughter, Claudia?”

Claudia shot him a glance that said she wasn’t going to get in the middle of it. That didn’t stop Alfredo.

“Don’t worry, though, I’ll make sure it’s a good investment, as always. I’m also looking into the new generation of tubes for my mélo-Ks.” He said mélo-kay, Marco noticed, as if the whole word was below a man of such importance as himself. “I’m thinking titanium—apparently it offers better insulation and less dissipation…” Marco let him talk, nodding every now and then, his mind elsewhere. He wasn’t going to offer him any assistance, nor any real information. Not that Alfredo was looking for either, of course.

After lunch, Marco went out on the balcony, where Claudia was smoking a cigarette. Their mother was lucky to have that balcony over the courtyard on the back of the building, away from the caged birds. Her next-door neighbor, Mrs. Forti, had all of her windows on the main facade, and she had had no choice but to seal them all off against the stench. She now lived with her front door always wide open to let in some fresher air from the stairwell, and had sued the apartment building for the right to install an air conditioner that would go through one of the other apartments and get air from the back.

“So, Mom tells me you are leaving.”

“Yes, next week. I will be back sometime in June.”

“Where are you going?”

“Around. There are plans for a comprehensive study on power potential in many bird species. Many colleagues all around the world are working hard at collecting data, but there’s still a lot to do. I’ll be around the Middle East over Christmas for a baseline on falcons, then Yves invited me to the Canaries to compare my data on starlings to the data they collected there in the wild. And the big work will be in the spring, trying to cover the migrations, but that will depend on what funding comes through.”

“And then? Will you get tenure?”

“Maybe.”

“Maybe? You are not getting any younger, you know. Isn’t it time to look for something else?”

“I love what I do, Claudia. The work is exciting, the field is huge at the moment, and there’s so much yet to discover.”

“Still the passionate dreamer, eh? But how are you holding on in the meanwhile? Isn’t the bursary running out soon?”

“In January, yes. But I have the travel funds for the next few months, and Professor Sarti said I can teach a class in the summer. I also have an agreement with a publisher: I’ll make recordings for them while traveling for a CD compilation of bird calls. They say it will sell like hot cakes. Oh, and if you hear of anyone who’d be interested in subletting my room while I’m away…”

Claudia looked at him, unconvinced.

“I never understood why you don’t get any money from the mélo-kits.”

“The patent is in the professor’s name, so…”

“But the idea was yours.”

“Yeah…But not the funds the university used to file.”

Claudia shot him another long glance, exhaling smoke slowly. She stubbed out the cigarette and made to go back inside.

“Claudia,” Marco called after her.

She stopped, but didn’t turn back.

“Don’t let Alfredo invest too much in the kits. They’re never going to yield enough.”

***

Fabbri, N., & Ricci, M. (2040). “No more silent springs: An urgent call to mitigate the long-ranging effects of mélo-tech on avian diversity.” Environmental Conservation Journal, 36(2), 159-166.

Half of the square was fenced off for construction work, so the many buses and all the people pouring out of the central station were crammed together in the other half, a maelstrom of bodies and trolleys, tourists and workers, sweat and shoves and pickpockets. The din reminded Marco of a time when he was a child: he was crossing this same square with his father, and he couldn’t hear his own voice, so loud was the racket; so he clung to his father’s big, calloused hand, and walked as fast as possible to get away from there. At the time, the noise came from the hordes of starlings who made the sparse trees their home.

With his room let out to a couple of tourists for the rest of the week, Marco was going to sleep in his office, but had a few hours to kill before he could even show up at the university. His backpack slung over his shoulder, he skirted the crowd and stopped to consider the construction site. There had been talks of this project for years now, politicians from both sides making big promises and proclamations, this will be a new start from our city, they said, the beginning of a new era, Rome will become once again the capital of the world, they proclaimed, and will lead the way into a greener future for the whole planet. Marco was curious to see how it was going.

They had removed all of the old bus shelters to build a canopy of perforated bricks, set in an array of two-meter-wide tubes. Marco knew everything about the technique: it was said to be the latest in mélo-tech, but that was eight years ago, when the project had first been proposed. It was supposedly the best solution with large avian populations, so it made sense back when Rome was full of songbirds.

That was not the case any more. Starlings had been stolen, pigeons had been lured away into private cages, parakeets had been starved to death. Fines were imposed on those who endangered the birds, but still Roman people found a way, in the unshakable belief that anything that belonged to the city was fair game, because it belonged to them personally. It was a massacre. Even seagulls had learned to steer clear of the city. The few birds left—a few dozen pigeons, some sparrows here and there—would never be able to generate the kind of power needed to justify such an infrastructure unless they were repopulated.

Now the construction site looked abandoned—Marco didn’t know whether for a strike, for lack of funds, or because they had found some ancient artifact that would stall everything for a few more years. A small family of pigeons had taken refuge between the bricks, cooing softly as they scanned the area for crumbs and fought over an old piece of sandwich. Something lodged in his throat that felt like guilt.

“At least they are alive.”

Marco turned around. He hadn’t noticed the woman who had stopped next to him. She was around his age, with dark hair and the same kind of worn-out jeans that he was used to wearing—but she held herself with such grace that she made them look almost fancy. She had a rainbow tote slung over her shoulder, and a pair of painted wood bangles clacked on her wrist whenever she moved.

“There’s so few of them left,” she said with a tiny smile. Marco nodded and smiled back. She handed him a yellow leaflet. “Birds need new protections. We’re holding a rally in front of the Parliament at four, if you want to come.”

Marco wasn’t sure whether it was her smile that swayed him, or the sad pigeons. “Gladly,” he said.

The woman beamed at him. “I’m Nina,” she said, offering up her hand. She had a flight of sparrows tattooed over her knuckles.

The rally, that afternoon, was a swirl of people: families with children waving stuffed parrots above their heads, young people with alternative hairstyles and smelling vaguely of joints, baggy-trousered trade unionists, people in suits and people in overalls, all worried, sad, seething, asking for a change. People took turns on the small stage, repeating appeals and sharing stories. Nina gave a heartfelt speech asking for national and international action to save the birds before it was too late. “We can’t all be like Venice,” she said.

Having just come down from there himself, Marco couldn’t agree more. Venice had become the prime example of how to bring together bird protection and power generation, with a solution that also fostered tourism and the city’s centuries-old glass blowing tradition. When art experts had first heard about the idea of installing a mélo-power engine in St. Mark’s Square, there had been an uproar. But it turned out to be a work of art: an ever-changing canopy of tiny, glass-blown tubes, each one hand-made and crystal clear; when they turned foggy from the pigeons’ cooing, the tubes were sold as souvenirs and replaced with new ones. The birds, once considered pests and almost eradicated from the city, were now pampered. Official signs encouraged tourists to feed them with approved seed packets sold by the city, and vets were hired to ensure the pigeons’ well-being, not to mention an army of sweepers that went out every night to clean after them. The whole system worked well enough to power the island’s street lights, but its delicate balance was impossible to duplicate elsewhere.

When Nina stepped down, she handed the microphone to Marco. He hadn’t expected to talk, but Nina looked at him encouragingly, so he did. And he didn’t plan what he said. It just happened.

“Hello. My name is Marco Ricci, and the birds’ catastrophe is my fault.” He looked around, but nobody had registered his name. Of course—it had never been his name on the patents, after all. So he continued: “I mean that literally. It was my idea, taking power from birdsong.”

And then, yes, silence fell on the square.

Afterwards, Marco couldn’t remember what he had said in that silence. He could remember Nina, looking at him fixedly, her face impenetrable. He could remember his burning need to explain how the dream for a greener future had turned into disaster. And he could remember the whole crowd listening, and the journalists, too. One thing he knew all along: he was kissing every last chance he had at university goodbye. He would have to look for another place for the night.

***

Ricci, M. (2045). “Brother mine.” The Big Issue Italy, 392, 12.

And then all the birds banded together, the girl said, and they elected a king to protect them. What’s a bird, asked the boy, her brother probably, not much more than a toddler.

Marco smiled, then pulled himself upright and packed the newspaper he was using as a pillow. The park bench was perfect for an afternoon nap in the sun, but when children came around after school, he knew he had to scamper. Better to start looking for a place to spend the night, anyway.

As he shuffled along the path—his rucksack clutched close under his arm, his hands pushed deep into his pockets to stave off the cold—he kept those kids’ words close to his heart, like a shining pearl. Children were still talking about birds, wondering about them, imagining a future where they could soar free again in the sky. There was still hope.

After the UN resolution that had banned mélo-kits and all mélo-power technology, Marco had expected to end up in jail. He deserved it, he thought, and wanted to atone for all the damage he had caused. But nobody ever came for him. So he kept doing whatever small things he could: he spoke at rallies, helped with charity events and fundraisers, kept watch over rescued chicks. He only earned a little money selling copies of The Big Issue Italy, but donated every cent he could. The recently approved EU funds would help the birds enormously; their numbers were growing already, thanks to the repopulation efforts—but even the best outcome could not wipe away his guilt.

He checked his rucksack pockets: he still had half of the sandwich he had scavenged that morning, that would do for today. He stopped at the fountain to drink—thank God water was still free in this city— and went on his way.

In front of the railway station, the huge mélo-tubes they had started to build all those years ago were still unfinished; long abandoned, they were teeming with weeds, and often rats. But they offered space enough to lie down comfortably, and good cover when it rained, or when the wind picked up, so they were the first place Marco checked. Somehow it felt right that he should sleep there, in the remains of the machine that he had almost destroyed the world with. He peeked inside one of the tubes and found it empty, save for a few crumpled sheets of newspaper—this was a lucky day.

He pushed the rucksack over the rim and hoisted himself. He grimaced when his shoulder protested against the weight, and let his body roll down the inside of the tube. Only when he reached the bottom did he notice the fluttering.

He froze. Months and years of field research had left him with that instinct, because birds were easily spooked. Five minutes later (or ten, or one hundred—Marco had been forced to sell his watch one year before) there was the fluttering, again. Slow like a glacier, holding his breath, he reached for the sheets of paper and moved them.

And there it was, that tiny, brown flutter. A sparrow, alive and free, here in this tube. It tilted its head to one side and gaped at Marco, as if to weigh him, then turned around and went back to its business, foraging for crumbs.

“Hello, little brother,” Marco whispered. And slowly, slowly, he took out his sandwich to leave more crumbs. In his mind he composed a poem, wondering if the magazine would ever publish it.

That night, as he fell asleep, a smile fluttered on his lips, like a hint of hope.

***

Brown leaf a-flutter.

I’m sorry that I’ve wronged you,

O little brother mine.


© 2025 by F.T. Berner

3496 words

F.T. Berner has always loved weaving words together in many languages, so she became a translator and then a writer. She lives in Italy with her husband and, sadly, no pets—so she listens to birdsong through her windows. You can find her online at ftberner.wordpress.com and @ftberner.bsky.social


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