So now Odin keeps a package of smoked, dried sausages in his desk drawer and never goes for a walk on his lunch break without one in his pocket, now that the grey crow has tracked him to his office. He goes out, the crow lands in the grass and Odin crouches there, holding out a sausage, C’mere, c’mere, lunch little buddy, across the street from a diplomat’s residence — guard, flag, servants — then gives up and tosses the sausage to the crow.
The crow marches up and down the street like Groucho Marx chomping on a cigar, then hides the sausage by the curb. Odin walks to a nearby park, but not without being accosted by the crow a second time. Sorry, pal, just one today.
How would his suit smell if he packed sausages everywhere he went? Like a mad relative, that’s how.
The park was recently re-opened after running wild for decades and is green and overgrown. Crows watch him from the trees and there is an observatory.
What say the hanged?
How unlikely it is that we are even here, we lucky crowd, conceived against millennia of opposition, branches withered and frozen, starved and broken and trimmed and yet here we hang, fat and ripe and feeling sorry for ourselves.
There is a science to luck and that science is put yourself in its way. Life might follow you into your room and roll on its back at your feet while you sit there at your desk, but luck is outside, barking at cars and jumping from branch to branch and looking you in the eye and smiling.
This is so beautiful. Your blog is a perennial treasure for me. Years and years of beautiful work, of writing that stays with me and comes to mind in the most unexpected moments. Thank you for such great pleasure Mig.
Wow, thanks! That means a lot.