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<h1>Zk | magic-in-music</h1>
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<p>There was a sort of succulent quality to the air, as though, were I to bite down on it, it would all come bursting forth at once. Dribble down my chin. Stain my shirt. It would be sweet, almost saccharine. It would beg for a pinch of salt to quell all that sweetness.</p>
<p>I didn&rsquo;t know whether or not I&rsquo;d be able to stomach it, honestly. I was dizzy. I was apart from myself. Above, and beside. I was looking down at myself. Were I to do so, to bite into time itself, I would surely overflow.</p>
<p><em>Was</em> overflowing, I realized. Was bending forward at the waist where I was sitting. Those black choir chairs were comfortable, but made you sit up straight, so I couldn&rsquo;t slouch. I was bending forward, resting my elbows on my knees, and then bowing my head, bowing further.</p>
<p>I was overflowing, and there was nothing I could do to stop it. We weren&rsquo;t singing, the basses, we were watching the altos rehears a part, so it wasn&rsquo;t too far out of the ordinary for me to be hunched over, breathing shallow, watching myself from above.</p>
<p>I was overflowing, and there was nothing I could do to stop it. Hunched over, breathing shallow, and watching from a few feet up, a few feet to the right, so that I could see my shirt tear even as I felt it against my back. I was so thin, then. So thin.</p>
<p>I was overflowing, and there was nothing I could do to stop it. I watched my shirt tear, and my skin follow. I watched it split along my spine and peel back. It was bloodless, but not painless. The feeling of those wings, newborn and weak, slipping from the wound was raw.</p>
<p>I was overflowing, and there was nothing I could do to stop it. I watched the wings stretch and extend from the wound on my back. &ldquo;Aha,&rdquo; I thought. &ldquo;This is it. This is finally it. It&rsquo;s finally happening. I am becoming something greater, and here I am, so unprepared!&rdquo;</p>
<p>I was overflowing, though, not transforming, and there was nothing I could do to stop it. The growth did not stop at wings. An eye. A beak. The graceful curve of a head. Plumage.</p>
<p>&ldquo;No, this isn&rsquo;t it.&rdquo; I panicked, and could think of nothing else but to apologize. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m sorry. I&rsquo;m so sorry.&rdquo;</p>
<p>The bird cocked its head as it climbed free of my back and perched on my shoulder. It cared not for apologies. Why would it?</p>
<p>Another pair of wings followed.</p>
<p>Another.</p>
<p>Another.</p>
<p>My hands were buried in my hair, I could see - barely - through the forest of pencil-thin legs crowding my shoulders, my neck, my head. Their weight had forced my shoulders down until my head was nearly between my knees.</p>
<p>We were singing now, and I was silent. How could I sing, when all I could do was beg silently for forgiveness? How could I sing with the weight of a dozen crows slowly crushing me into my seat? How could I sing when I was overflowing? There was nothing I could do to stop it</p>
<p>Chaos. The director stopped the choir, and as one, the flock lifted off. The weight was lifted off my back. The cacophony filled the air. I was borne up through the air by the birds. The birds were splitting, multiplying, avian mitosis. I was borne up, up. Up.</p>
<p>I was told afterward that my body stumbled, unthinking along the row and toward the double doors, that the director had sneered, &ldquo;It sure would be nice if we had all our singers here today.&rdquo; I was told that folks defended me, saying I was sick, I was pale, I was feverish.</p>
<p>I don&rsquo;t know, I wasn&rsquo;t there. I was above the Flatirons. I was beyond terror. I was beyond joy. I was beyond sensation, beyond any emotion except for that bottomless, black guilt. Sticky. Tar-like. Bitter. The flock numbered in the thousands, and still we flew up.</p>
<p>The blue of the sky became white, blinded, became black, and I was sitting in the hallway. I was with my body again. I was sobbing. A teacher stared. Students gave me a wide berth.</p>
<p>I cleaned myself up. I went back to choir. What else could I do?</p>
<p>A bird had plucked something from me. Something precious. Something unknowable. Something important and integral. Something hard. Something emerald and glassy. Before the white of the sky overtook me, I saw it in its beak.</p>
<p>The caw it gave as my vision left me and my ears filled with static was&hellip;triumphant? No, not quite. Triumph implies that the birds could do anything but succeed. In that sound was inevitability.</p>
<p>After school, Ash and I tramped through the &lsquo;mini-forest&rsquo; and, impelled by something of the avian within, I collected five sticks.</p>
<p>They had to be as straight as possible.</p>
<p>They had to be balanced as close to the middle as possible.</p>
<p>They had to be the same length without me breaking them.</p>
<p>They had to have been from different trees.</p>
<p>They had to have fallen more than a year prior.</p>
<p>When I got home, I lay them in a row, asked my question, and, one by one, broke them in half.</p>
<p>What had I lost?</p>
<p>Why does memory stain me with that black, tarry guilt?</p>
<p>I had forgotten about the birds until recently, but every time I feel that ecstasy &mdash; that ekstasis &mdash; I am pitch. I am tar. I am sticky with apology. I am the living embodiment of &ldquo;I&rsquo;m sorry&rdquo;.</p>
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