Chime
This junction of a cycle path and a footpath saw a lot of traffic,
both feet and wheels, and a lot of bell-ringing near-collisions.
Now, the flock of birds that made their home in the giant tree
towering over this intersection became so used to the chime
of the bicycle bells that it became part of their language.
They spoke it fluently, like natives, even reproducing that
dissonant metallic reverb that truncates the traditional trill.
None could tell it apart from the real thing. And so, in the quieter
moments of earliest morning or perhaps of dusk you might see
a pedestrian twirl around in fright, head swivelling frantically,
sure that at least five angry cyclists were approaching so fast
as to be nearly already on top of him. But in fact there were
no cyclists and the ear-jostled victim would walk on flummoxed.
What is this? Mischief? Such was the ventriloquism of those
birds that no human ever solved the mystery, not one ever even
looked upwards. I knew, of course, but then I’m one of those birds.