THE LORE OF DAEDALUS AND MY FATHER was published in a print edition of Bathtub Gin.

Black oil sunflower, millet, and peanut heartsslide through the fingers as smoothly as waterwarmed beneath the bright winter sun.A finch stands on stiff scaled legs—sharp toes in seeds six feet high abovethe frozen ground: a sea of frothy snowlittered by barbs of black thistle slippingthrough the mesh of a feeder stocking.As he cocks his head to a swift shadow above,the sun illuminates a path of pollengold feathersrippling along his twisted neck.Immobile, he takes flight in the talons of a goshawk.And two become one at the bird feeder in winter.

Author’s Note: This poem, a stanza of which is excerpted here, was based on a story borrowed (with permission) from a friend whose father nursed a sick rooster back to health in her childhood home. If you watch them intently enough, I think you’ll see that birds probably have a guiding mythology all their own.