Beaky Turns the Page

It surprised the rest of us that Beaky even got in to see The Queeg. The Queeg just happens to be the most important Pigeon in our District (and that covered all of Norwalk, most of Westport, some of New Canaan & a little bit of Darien — not that they liked us there)… and Beaky? Well, let’s be honest… Beaky didn’t have as high standing in our community he once did.

After his accident Beaky just became flat annoying. We’d be sitting on one of the lampposts projecting over the Connector on Route 7… really peaceful, like. Squnched down against the wind… six pigeons minding our own business, and then he’d plop down… him and his shnuffled breathing… well, then we’d all have to move down a couple of feet to give him wide berth. I mean, you listen to Beaky breathe for more than 30 seconds and it would drive you nuts.

It happened this way… Beaky was into fancy flying. He was trying to make a point that pigeons are great flyers, and that he, Beaky (although before the accident we just called him Ray) was an ace flyer. Anyway, he got to doing some loops and dives… darting this way and that (“Just showing off”… that’s what Manny said)… all the time Beaky was saying, “A crow can’t do this…” or “a crow can’t do that…” or “don’t give me any of that ‘as the crow flies’ bullshit… those dumb black birds know nothing about flying.”

So there he is cruising up and down the Route 7 corridor, “did they use crows to carry messages during the Great War? No. Why? Because they are stupid, they’re fucking stupid. That’s why! They are miserable flyers and they have one of the worst calls! That screeching sound they make! It makes me barf. I ask you… do you think the Allies were going to trust birds that would make you barf just to listen to them?”

We knew not to get Beaky started on the subject of crows. He just flew thru the airspace like he owned it, below the underpasses challenging oncoming trucks… made no matter to Beaky… then a tight turn to the construction site over at Merritt 7… the future home for Diaggeo… concrete, steel beam and plate glass… And there is Beaky, showing off flying in and out of the building when,BLAM… he slammed into an oversized window… one of the few that had been put up.

Beaky dropped to the earth as if he had just been hit by anti-aircraft fire. He staggered a bit… shook his head, refolded his wings, scratched his feet, did a couple of head bobs, blinked a couple of times… preened a few feathers as if to say, “I meant to do that.”

He said that he was fine. But on closer inspection we could see that his beak had swelled up to the size of a grape. He had taken the impact square on the snoot.

We didn’t see Beaky for the next few days. I guess he wanted to recover in private. I swung over to the Hospital one day to see if he had taken shelter in the garage. No.  No Beaky there.

Then one day I spotted him over on the basketball court by Jefferson Elementary School.  From the looks of things, it appeared that he had his sights set on a handsome pigeon of the female persuasion.  So I dropped down for a closer look.

Sure as hell Beaky was “working his stuff”.  Two or three head bobs, four steps to the left, pivot back to the right, a bow, a second bow, another head bob, expand the throat and then a shake of the tail… and usually by this time the pursued pigeon is helpless… she takes flight for a short distance.  Beaky would say, “that’s the ‘no’ for the record… no pretty pigeon wants to be taken for easy.”

And that’s when Beaky would move in to “close the deal.”  He would strut, not fly, to her new location.  On the way he would be sure to throw a few head bobs, a quick pivot & bow… and by the time he’d throw a second shake of the tail, our Miss Pigeon would have “thrown back the sheets.”

Ask anyone in the District.  No one had better stuff than Beaky.

So here’s Beaky… at the School Yard… doing his thing… and getting no where!  I approach him.  Then I hear that his “coo” is off, and so’s his “Brrrrr”.  I mean really off!  He sounded like an idiot!

“So… what’s the moosh, Ray?”  I asked.

Then I catch a gander at his beak.  It had a good bend in it (Manny would say later, “big and to the left.”).  “Cripes!  It looks like you took a shot from a crow!”

He glared.  Tried to say something… and then it hit me.  His crushed shnoz effected his call… he had a “lisp”… funny breathing, too.  It even threw off his throat fluffing.  No wonder Miss Pigeon wasn’t interested!  She probably thought, “this guy with the fat beak is a twerp”, and she used my presence to take wing without so much as a “look me up later, sailor.”

“Thanks Thid!” was all he said to me.  And he was off, too.

Well… the word got around that Ray (now known as Beaky) was a hurting camper and we don’t see much of him.  Manny would say, “We gotta help Beaky out… Geeze, he’s not even interested in beating up crows.”  That’s when someone offered that maybe The Queeg could set him straight.

But the trouble is that not everyone gets to see The Queeg, let alone talk to him.  Particularly this Queeg.  Hell, he had been The Queeg of Central Park, and then The Queeg of Battery Park and Liberty Island… he turned down the post at South Street Seaport (too many tourists) to take on our District.  Central Park and the Battery… that’s quite the resume.

As I say… word did get around about the tough go Beaky was having… and it was just a matter of time before The Queeg caught wind of the trouble… And for reasons unknown, he took an interest in the case.

So one day Beaky is sitting off by himself on the Route 7 lamp post near Diaggeo (Manny referred to it as the “scene of the crime”) when Sweet Grey drops down for a schmooze.  Sweet, as everyone knows, is The Queeg’s Second… has been with him since Battery Park.

“Beaky, is it?”

“Hello Thweet.”

“Bad run of luck, huh?”

“You might thay I caught a bad break.”

“Yeah, shame.  The Queeg hates to see a good pigeon, a quality pigeon, playing against a tough hand.  Particularly when the quality pigeon hates crows as much as he does.”

The birds took in the sight below.  Traffic moving at a good pace on the Connector, I-95 to the South looked backed-up (nothing new there), and the Sound lay beyond…

“Whatdaya say Beaky… fine morning like today… you and me can take a fly over to Sprite Island and have a poke around.”

Their path took them by Ash Creek’s Parking lot where they dropped a “dirt load” on a couple of shiny BMWs and then thru Sea Gull and Canadian Geese Territory at Calf Pasture Beach.  When they got to the protected south side of Sprite they landed near the strip of sand.  No gulls… that was a surprise.  And there was The Queeg taking in some sun.

Sweet Grey walked away to leave the two pigeons alone.  After a period of silence… The Queeg looked at Beaky bobbed his stately head twice and said, “Here, pay attention & learn…”

And with this, The Queeg launched into a display the likes of which few birds have ever seen…

A bow, a stutter step to the left, a quick tail shake, back up two steps, pivots to the right, a bob, a throat fluff, circle right, back step, bow, circle left, pick up right leg kick to the side, two steps back, bow, bob, pick up left leg kick to the side, back step, three head bobs, tail shake… throat flutter, circle right, circle left, deep bow, hold pose, a throat puff & step in place.

“Important.  Take your time.  Forget the coo and the brrr. Remember, the kick… keep low, keep your bearing & hold the deep bow…”

Beaky took his turn.  The Queeg kept close watch, fine tuning his moves and it wasn’t long before Beaky had his kick combination down cold… and he even put in a hop and kick.  And The Queeg shook his head and laughed.

“Good job Beaky.  You’ll be fine.  Keep your motion.  Take your time.  Remember… you don’t have to thpeak… give them a thmile and a wink and let your thtuff do the talking.  Now go an knock the shit out of a crow.”

And that’s pretty much the way it happened. 

Beaky cut back on the fancy flying.  Oh… he was still good for taking a good run at the crows; but he turned the page on the nonsense dare-devil stuff.  We would just watch in marvel as he worked a playground… and it was pointed out that he never left a playground alone.

And Manny would say, “hey… do you think I should fly into a closed window?”

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