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The Singer So Shy

For the Just a Minute Challenge

By Judah LoVatoPublished 16 days ago Updated 13 days ago 4 min read
Top Story - May 2024
10
The Singer So Shy
Photo by Denny Müller on Unsplash

She stood near the cold fireplace, watching the second-hand tick down to the hour. In another minute, the clock's bird would emerge and warble the hour. She reached up and touched the clock, tracing the gentle slope of the farmhouse roof, then trailing down the lilac strewn side, to the white fence framed dooryard. She wished she was there, where the air would smell of lilacs rather than smoke.

Her eyes went to the farm door, where the clever clockmaker had made a frame to hold poems.

Do not weep, maiden, for war is kind.

She ran a finger along the doorframe, feeling the gentle movement that would pull the card out. She wished she had a different poem to inlay; something cheerful to match the painted lilacs, and to distract her from the dull sounds of explosions outside.

Booming drums of the regiment

She touched the delicate lilac blossoms, the paint faded from two hundred years of family history. They had been carved by her great-grandfather’s great-grandfather after the first Civil War, inspired by the poetry of Walt Whitman. She’d always liked the clock. The little scene of the farmhouse, the sound of the hermit thrush and the gentle lull of the ticking.

When lilacs last in the dooryard bloom’d

She wished she knew a happier poem, and her eyes lingered on the poem card. Do not weep, war is kind. That one was Crane. She closed her eyes and listened to the ticking. She had always found the sound soothing, and now it was a calming refrain against the muffled gunfire and screams outside.

The Air raid siren pierced through the boarded windows. An incoming bomb, perhaps, or some brand of missile. Her eyes still closed; she pictured the projectile approaching from the Western front.

The unexplained glory flies above them

Somehow, she was certain it would hit her block.

She wanted to feel afraid, but she couldn’t muster the energy. If the missile would wait another forty-five seconds, the bird would emerge. She’d always loved the activity of it: the clicking of the internal gears, the hatch opening, then the little hermit thrush emerging to sing its warbling song.

"It made a "Cuckoo" when he made it," her grandmother had told her, then shook her head, "but that wore out about hundred years ago. Sometime in the '50’s I expect. My dad said he never heard it worked when he was a kid, so at least since then."

"Why's it sing then?" She'd asked

"I fixed it! About twenty years ago. I was furloughed during the Pandemic, so I taught myself clock work and added the electronics. When you're older I'll have to teach you so it can sing another hundred years!"

Years or months, all she wanted was once more. She peeked at the time. Thirty seconds. Then closed her eyes tight, trying to hide in her memories.

“Great-great grandpa would have liked it,” her grandmother would say every time it sang, “He read a lot of Whitman. You see the lilacs on the sides and the little thrush? Those are for Whitman.”

She touched the side of the clock, and smiled at the sensation of the lilacs, many a pointed blossom rising delicate. She wondered whether they’d break when the missile hit, and through the boarded windows she heard a dull noise. The sound of the projectile approaching. She opened her eyes, and they fell on the poem,

Soft blazing flag of the regiment

Eagle with crest of red and gold

She turned her gaze to the hatch. Twenty seconds until she could hear the song again.

O Singer bashful and tender

She thought of her mother. They had read When Lilacs Last at her funeral- the quiet acknowledgement of this family history built into a clock. Her eyes fell back to the poem.

Do not weep, war is kind.

They had read that one at her father’s funeral. That’s why she’d placed the poem in the door. He was a soldier, an early casualty of the war.

Your father tumbled in the yellow trenches

She pictured the projectile tumbling to the ground, an instrument of war and a victim. Her father loved the irony of the poem. He’d often recite it like a president giving a motivational speech.

Ten seconds.

“It was written for that terrible war,” he’d say, “And it shows us how horrid this war may well become. But to me it's also about our war against Time, which we fight with or without a purpose. Do we praise the fallen soldiers? Do we mourn them if they fall in battle, fighting for their belief? No, “The unexplained glory flies above them, great is the battle-god, great! And his kingdom- A field where a thousand corpses lie!”

Five seconds.

A dull 'thoom'. The sound of cries. The explosion would make her city a field to the battle-god. But the thrush, how she wanted it to emerge and sing the “song of the bleeding throat,” before she rejoined her parents, then the thrush could receive them comrades three, two, one, the gears began to move until

Solitary the thrush

Sings by himself a song.

Stream of ConsciousnessShort StoryMicrofictionHistoricalCONTENT WARNING
10

About the Creator

Judah LoVato

Dear Reader,

I hope you enjoy perusing my collection of works, and I would love to hear your thoughts on anything you read: what you liked, what you disliked, and any other feedback you may have.

I look forward to reading with you,

Reader insights

Outstanding

Excellent work. Looking forward to reading more!

Top insights

  1. Compelling and original writing

    Creative use of language & vocab

  2. Easy to read and follow

    Well-structured & engaging content

  3. Excellent storytelling

    Original narrative & well developed characters

  1. Expert insights and opinions

    Arguments were carefully researched and presented

  2. Eye opening

    Niche topic & fresh perspectives

  3. Heartfelt and relatable

    The story invoked strong personal emotions

  4. Masterful proofreading

    Zero grammar & spelling mistakes

  5. On-point and relevant

    Writing reflected the title & theme

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Comments (11)

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  • Anna 10 days ago

    Congrats on your Top Story!

  • Christy Munson12 days ago

    Lovely intersection of irony, beauty, war, desolation, urgency, and eternity all wrapped into one heartbreak of a story. Lushly written, and haunting. Congratulations on Top Story!

  • Congratulations on your top story.

  • Hannah Moore13 days ago

    This was so very adeptly written, excellent work.

  • Amy Black13 days ago

    Brilliant, masterful piece. Some poems/stories you can emotionally feel, like silk or the touch of soft cotton. Feel, smell, see, touch. This is one of those pieces, timeless and authentic. This is a Masterpiece!

  • Brin J.13 days ago

    Judah!... I was ruined by how you crafted the very clock that ticked down the last minute of her life carry so much sentimental value. She spent her last minute adoring the object that was counting the seconds toward her death (I know I'm repeating myself, but I'm just blown away by this). This was both genius and gut-wrenching.

  • Carol Townend13 days ago

    That is a fantastic war poem.

  • Christy Munson13 days ago

    Your writing evokes strong memories and powerful new visualizations. Congratulations on Top Story!

  • I am in awe of the way you so gently unfold this world, layer by painful layer. The gap between the peaceful world of the lilac-sided farmhouse, and the horrors of war approaching her real house, is filled with such lyrical sadness. Your story has moved me deeply.

  • Teresa Renton16 days ago

    Moving and engaging story! I love how you create a soft tension with the countdown. You’ve created a sense of acceptance of their fate within your narrator where I felt both sadness and hope; hope that the narrator gets to hear the bird’s song one last time. We are also resigned to the inevitable end, albeit with a silent hope that maybe, just maybe …. ‘If the missile would wait another forty-five seconds, the bird would emerge’ and ‘it's also about our war against Time, which we fight with or without a purpose’ were two poignant standout lines for me. And the weaving in of Whitman’s poetry, just sublime 🥰

  • Great story! Well written!

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