
When Dad died, I talked to an ostrich.
In the waiting room, an ostrich sat down.
“Who let this ostrich in?” I asked.
The janitor stared at me.
The ostrich stared at me.
The surgeon walked into the room. He tore off his white mask and put on a serious one.
“You don’t even have to say it,” I said.
The ostrich put his wing around me.
*
We didn’t have the greatest relationship, Dad and I. We didn’t talk. He treated me like shit. I loved him. I realized that after.
When he got sick, I walked closer to him, sat closer. We still didn’t talk, but…
Then he died.
*
“I could really use a friend,” I said in a letter. I mailed a copy of it to everyone I could think of.
No one got back to me.
One afternoon, there was a knock on the door.
I stepped out of bed. And got dressed.
I opened the door…
It was the ostrich.
He sat down on the sofa.
“I’ll make some coffee,” I said.
*
“I don’t remember Dad ever playing with me. He was always too old. Even when he wasn’t. He loved me. He never said it. I said it a lot when I was a kid, but I didn’t mean it. Not really.”
You can tell an ostrich anything.
*
I couldn’t get out of bed. I couldn’t open my eyes. I kept falling asleep. I kept dreaming.
I dreamed I was the last person on Earth. I felt so homesick. Even though I was home.
I crawled into bed — in my dream. I lay there.
Something touched my hair. Something tousled it. Like Dad used to.
I woke up.
I looked over.
There was something on the pillow next to me.
An ostrich feather.
*
One morning…
I looked out the window.
The sky was blue. I hadn’t noticed that. Not for months.
I made breakfast.
I swept the floor.
As I opened the front door, I saw something. The shadow of the ostrich. On the lawn.
Just the shadow.
Then it was gone.

Rolli’s latest book is Plumstuff. Buy him a coffee.

