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The Turkey Hen



Nature, to a less discerning eye, at times seems partial to 
		certain of her creatures,
sparing some the pain of death and loss, a blessing we humans	
	have somehow been denied.

Driving home one afternoon, I came across a turkey chick,
		 struck down moments before by a car
ahead of me. The hen was feeding off the highway a short
	distance with her other six chicks minus one.

The crushed chick lay in a fresh splash of blood and entrails.
		Death was sudden and unexpected,
too fast even to alert the hen nearby who had no awareness
	of her loss – a tragedy if that is the proper word for it. 

Knowing nothing of a mother’s heart-rendering loss and pain; 
		knowing nothing of the human heart’s easy 
susceptibility, she kept walking in that gait these birds have –
	casual, yet with a certain stately bearing, her head pointed	 

to the ground, her eyes focused on anything that moved,
		utterly indifferent to her loss, untouched
like a stone. In her was only that driving instinct to survive, 
	and a compelling need to set an example for her

remaining chicks, who like her, sensed no absence of their
		 dead sibling, so that not once did she lift 
her head from feeding or turn to see if all her chicks were there, 	
	a simple matter, I thought, of taking a count – 

but then, how mercifully she could not. Leaving I took another	
		  look at the dead chick, its wing-tip feathers 
flapping in the wind of passing cars. I drove away unsettled, 
	not so much by the dead chick nor by the hen’s indifference, 

rather by the knowledge that her loss would never change her life.

Copyright © Maurice Rigoler

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