Isn’t there always a bird in the airport?
Here’s one who got by without a passport,
surprising the uniformed TSA folks,
and setting off a lazy series of jokes
about flying for free. This sparrow
navigates the crowded, narrow
lanes that lead to the waiting 747s
about to penetrate the local heavens.
We wait and watch and read
and listen to the nearby child plead
with her parents to do something
about the poor bird reappearing
now here now there but clearly
scared and lost and probably
an orphan! The parents say, “Hmmm.”
So the child, flushed and overcome,
takes matters into her own hands.
Breathing hard, she stands and scans
the sun-shot, glassy cage we’re in.
She’s off, nearly as fast as her twin—
the bird in question. At first it’s cute:
a kind of game called LAX Pursuit:
she dodging totes and roller bags,
the other swapping zigs for zags.
And then the bird careens into
a wall resembling something blue
out there. The child’s scream
shatters each vacation dream
and brings the dreamers to their
feet to stand and mostly stare.
The cops show up. They close
around the scene, blue shadows
who whisk the child away.
The parents tag along in disarray.
Someone with a handkerchief
disposes of the lost and brief-
lived bird. Magazines reopen,
someone checks her suntan lotion.
The dreams return: a turquoise sky,
drinks that stun, fish that fly.