Gary The Bird or How I Spent My Winter Vacation

Submitted into Contest #63 in response to: Write a story from the perspective of a bird migrating for the winter.... view prompt

37 comments

Fiction Funny Fantasy

Every. Year.

Seriously.

EVERY … SODDING … YEAR!

Come six months … nested or not …and we’re off.

Over.

And over.

And over.

Like a clock.

Tick tock. Tick tock.

Twice, in fact.

Down the globe. And up the globe.

Down the globe.

And up.

Again.

And again.

And again.

It. Is. Doing. My. Nut.

You may ask: Why do we do it?

Well.

I’ve never actually been convinced myself.

Boredom, mayhaps?

Possibly.

Masochism?

More than likely.

But who’s to say?

Don’t ask them, though, whatever you do.

Outlandish responses.

That’s all you’ll get.

And they say the most fantabulous things.

It’ll be fun, they say.

It’ll be an adventure, they tell me.

An adventure.

If I wanted an adventure, I’d … I’d … well … I’d find it closer to home.

My home.

Where I hatched.

Where I saw the world for the first time.

Through a crack in the shell.

Ahh.

And what a beautiful world it is.

Home, I mean.

Scotland.

I like Scotland.

I really like Scotland. I’d gladly stay here all year.

Who wouldn’t?

I mean, who’d want to leave?

I’ll tell you who.

These arseholes.

They always want to fly off with the sun.

An adventure.

Sure.

In Scotland, I’ve got a nest.

It’s roomy.

It’s comfortable.

It’s nice.

Okay, so it snows. Now and again. But it’s not bad. And anyway … I like snow.

It’s pretty.

But they inveigle.

Historically, they tell me, historically we’ve always flown south for the winter months.

Historically, my feathered arse.

Historically we used to rule the skies.

But we don’t anymore.

Do we?

No.

We’ve been relegated.

Haven’t we?

To the status of, and get this: target.

Yep.

Birdstrike.

And that’s a thing.

Airplanes.

To worry about.

Have you ever seen jet engines?

Very big. Very dangerous.

Getting caught in one of those would put an end to our little holiday real quick, wouldn’t it?

And to get to the airplanes … you’ve got to get past the power lines!

Don’t get me started on the power lines.

Zzzzzzzt.

Poor Joey.

Never saw it coming.

As far as I’m concerned; stay on the ground, in our nests, in Scotland, and there’d be no danger of any of that sort of thing ever happening!

Makes perfect sense to me.

I think.

Yet here we are. Migrating.

Again.

Currently over … where are we? … Dover? … oh … Dover.

I should’ve known. Seeing those things there.

The magnificent, the regal, White Cliffs of Dover.

Fantastic.

Oh, I’ve never seen those before.

Ever.

Only every six months for the past five-and-a-half years.

We do it only because they insist on doing it. The migrating thing.

And if I was the decision maker? Well … it’d be different then, I’ll tell you.

I’m Gary, by the way.

And these flying here with me are … my friends.

My. Friends.

My nemeses, more like.

Morons.

To call this lot birdbrains would be a compliment.

Actually, they’re my flock.

My flock.

My. Friends.

My. Flock.

My flocking friends.

Anyway.

I, along with my fellow flockers, am a plain swift.

A plain swift.

Apus unicolor.

How fantastic.

Plain. That’s good, isn’t it?

Plain.

Not a flamboyant swift. Not an elaborate swift. Not even a mildly interesting, I’ll-talk-to-him-if-there’s-no-one-else-at-the-party swift.

Just … plain.

PLAIN!

Hell. Even plane would be better.

So plain, in fact, that our scientific name doesn’t even warrant full Latin.

Thank you very much.

It ain’t easy, I’ll tell ya.

My wings … are small.

They get tired.

I get tired.

I just want to rest.

In my nest.

But not today.

As it goes, my brethren and I are, as we always have done, on our way to the winter nesting grounds.

In North Africa.

On an island.

An island, of all things.

Granted, home is an island. But it wouldn’t be if we never left it in the first place!

Do you know what you have to fly over to get to an island?

Water.

WATER!

I don’t like water.

And I don’t like fish!

But what else is there to eat?

When you’re flying over water?

To get to the island?

Yeah.

Fish.

And the island we’re going to?

Get this.

One of the Canaries.

The Canaries?

Really?

Who comes up with this stuff?

 I mean honestly.

They coulda called ‘em anything.

The bears?

The sharks?

But no.

They chose … the canaries.

What can you do?

Anyway.

We number about four thousand. A modest crowd, us.

Four thousand plain is as plain does swifts.

Big ones. Small ones. The ones that always have to be at the front, leading the charge. And the ones we always have to wait for, bringing up the rear.

And then there’s the one that we picked up somewhere around Seville. He’s not a swift. Plain or otherwise. He’s a house martin, he is.

Probably lost from his flock, we thought at the first time we saw him.

Turns out, right we were.

Not the most social of avians. Not the sharpest beak in the bunch either.

A bit annoying, at times. But he’s adopted us. Travels with us whenever and wherever we go.

And, predictably, he’s called Martin.

He, like me, tends to blend in around the middle of the squadron.

Not too noticeable to anything that wants to grab us and plenty of warning should a jet engine be approaching.

Flapping away. In his own little world.

Well … at least he’s happy.

Bless him.

I watch over him. After a fashion.

Don’t let any of the others give him too hard a time.

I can do that when I set my mind to it.

Intimidate.

I’ve done it before.

And I’m sure I’ll do it again.

In six months.

Like I did six months ago.

I told them. What I thought. All of them. And when I did, I laid down the law.

That’s it, I said, no more, I said, we’re staying here from now on and that’s final. I have made a decision and I think it would be good for all of us, even Martin, to stay here. On this island. Canary Island. It’s warm. All year. No need to go anywhere else. There. Done.

They said I was acting like an idiot. Like a hatchling. Like a petulant hatchling.

I said that regardless of what they do, I’m staying. Even if they decide to fly back north, they can do it without me.

I’m staying.

Full stop.

My mind was made up.

And that’s when I heard the unbearable, undeniable truth.

Now I don’t want to ruffle any feathers, Martin said to me, but everything, Martin said, everything we do … we do together. We belong together.

The flock.

Don’t we?

And you belong with us.

Don’t you?

Gary.

One collective mind. One allied body. One shared desire. To migrate. And we do it. Together.

It’s how we’ve always done it, he said.

And it’s how we’ll always do it.

He said.

Then I looked at him. And he looked at me.

And he knew that I’d eventually, as ever, capitulate.

And then I did.

And he knew I did.

And that’s when he said Gary, Martin told me, with his cracked beak and wonky eye.

Face it, Gary, he said.

You’re flocked.

THE END

October 15, 2020 19:25

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37 comments

Amy Utami
12:44 Oct 20, 2020

I don't know, if it's supposedly funny, but I laughed hard! I love it! 🐣🐣🐣😂 Your writing style reminded me of an old friend and it's amazing. I just love it, enjoy it, so entertaining. Mostly because I know how hard is it to put such on point criticism into a story like this. I was gave up one mine 😅. I really wait for your next work 🐣😉 Thanks for such a good story.

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Lourenço Amorim
11:58 Oct 20, 2020

I really like the short-sentence writing style of yours. Clever story and charismatic character. Nicely done.

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Charles Stucker
10:12 Oct 20, 2020

One of the best humor tales I've read in a long time. Reminds me of a tale about Fokker aircraft and Messerschmidts. I have nothing to say for improving it. Now the title...It might be the best possible, but..."The Flockers" or maybe "Birds of a Feather..."

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Prachi Kumbhare
09:54 Oct 19, 2020

Written so differently. The story is so catchy that I was hooked up to it till the end. The ending was great. Waiting to read more of your stories, Joseph. Keep up the great work!!

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Philip Clayberg
16:56 Oct 18, 2020

Great ending of a wonderful story. Never saw it coming. Thank you so much for writing your story and making me laugh.

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Sjan Evardsson
15:27 Oct 18, 2020

Thanks for the laugh. The informal nature of the first-person narration is spot-on. It feels more like sitting down to a beer with the narrator as they spin their tale. Assuming, of course, one could find a bar that would serve a plain swift, and not meaning on the menu. :) Stay safe and keep writing!

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P. Jean
10:39 Oct 18, 2020

What a great take on this prompt. It will be interesting to me to read the comments you get. Your form is so easy to read and follow but they, the readers would never let me get always with it.

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