Snow Owl

Shot through the cage in very low light therefore the quality is not that great but I still like the way the owl looks back.

Shot through the cage in very low light therefore the quality is not that great but I still like the way the owl looks back.
First Sleep – Cliff Martinez
[audio:Cliff_Martinez_First_Sleep.mp3]A phone rang in the background. People trying to reach others on the edge. I observed her from the other side of the room. Her polite smile. Her naughty laugh. The way she drank a shot, so elegant and sexy. It was raining outside. The whispers of so many strangers mingled with the drumming of the raindrops on the roof. I wandered through the crowd to get a better look at her. The seat next to her was empty. She turned and glanced at me with a half smile around her lips. I slid my shot across and ordered a fresh one. We drank.
“Can you resist an impulse?”
“I don’t know. It depends.”
“On what?”
“On what I’ll gain out of the impulse. Will it give instant gratification or do I need to persevere? What about you?”
“Oh yes! I always give in to my every impulse. You know that is why I’m talking to you, based on such an impulse.”
We went out to sit on the porch and watch the rain. In the distance, landing lights flashed. Planes took off and landed at regular intervals. The warning lights on the airport radar blinked cryptic messages. There was that special smell of wet earth.
She went in to get some food. It was a Chinese dinner. She came back with two bowls filled with lightly spiced egg noodles and two pairs of metal chopsticks.
“I do not know how to eat with chopsticks.”
“Neither do I but I like the way chopsticks feel in my hands, especially these metal ones. Let’s keep them as souvenirs.”
She smiled and started picking up noodles with her fingers. She was quite good at it. It was not messy at all. I tried to emulate her as best as I could.
“You know, I lived in Shanghai with my parents when I was a child. It was a different city back then. No high rises. No glitz. No sleek highways. I remember this old fisherman in the fish market from whom we always bought our fish. He taught me how to eat noodles without chopsticks. It was funny how I ended up talking to him. He spoke very good English…”