The Crow Wars by William Falo

 

     She always woke up before the other crows to access their 

situation despite reaching the same conclusion every day. They 

were in serious trouble. The empty spots on the tree increased 

every week, injuries hobbled others, while food became scarce 

because of farms being abandoned after extreme weather and numerous 

woods plowed down to make room for new buildings. It forced 

the murder of crows to live around a trailer park and scavenge 

for food from the trash. Worse yet, they were often at war 

with the humans that lived there. 

     Another crow bounced over to her side cawing out something 

she couldn’t understand, but his presence comforted her. She called 

him Crasher after he hit a window so hard it made him incoherent 

and sometimes confused. 

     The humans started calling a name. “Morgan.”

     Before long, chaos overtook the area. A siren grew louder,
 
people ran outside, and knocked on every door She recognized the
 
man from the remote trailer joining the others. 

     Some humans ran out with sticks. She flew higher. In the 

past, one of them shot her mate and he tumbled to the ground. 

They threw him in a dumpster. No matter how hard she tried, 

she couldn’t get his body out. She only saved a single feather. 

     The next day she flew over the trailer park and saw a man 

near a remote trailer. The front door was open. “Help me.” Someone 

inside yelled. She remembered the one the other humans were looking 

for. She needed to act fast and she flew straight into the trailer 

landing in the living room. She looked around and saw a girl tied to 

a chair. Outside, the man was coming back. She pecked at the rope 

while the girl trembled in shock. When the man reached the door, 

Crasher dove straight at him and hit the man’s head.

     The man grabbed a stick.

     Crasher dove at the man again while she continued to peck at the 

ropes. The girl tried to wriggle free. “Are you a crow?” 

     She cawed.

     “I’m Morgan.” She said. “That man is going to hurt me.”

     She looked at her then continued to bite at the ropes. Finally, 

the rope frayed enough to allow Morgan to escape. She ran down the 

street screaming for her parents. The man swung his stick and 

connected on Crasher with a sickening thud. She cawed and flew at 

the man hitting the back of his head. 

     In the distance, a policewoman was hugging Morgan. 

     She flew to Crasher’s side and placed her head on his body. 

     The girl yelled out. “The crows saved me.”

     “Impossible,” someone said.

     “They did,” Morgan said. 

     She stayed by Crasher’s side. It all seemed too much for her 

to bare again and she would let the humans kill her before she left 

him. Then Crasher moved.  

     He stood up like nothing happened then cawed out some sounds she 

didn’t understand. She stared with her beak open until he placed 

his head on her wing.

     They took flight. Morgan pointed at them. “Thank you, crows.”

     The next day, the crows stretched their wing’s and she 

saw damaged feathers, others balanced on broken feet, some scratched 

at scars, one had a band around a leg, and a few were missing

eyes. They were all  broken. It was a dangerous world for crows. 

The will to fight the humans left her. 

     The people from the trailer park approached the tree. She 

cawed out a warning, but the humans put food of all kinds around 

the tree. Morgan led them. When the humans left, she flew down and 

all the others including Crasher followed her. They ate all the food.

     At night she roosted next to Crasher, but she looked at the 

lone black feather in a crook of the tree before she closed her eyes.
 
     She flew to a tree that overlooked the farm. What she saw 

made her feathers tremble. A large number of the animals they 

feared the most were headed toward the trailer park. They walked 

with their heads up, for they knew no fear, their large eyes saw 

everything and their sharp claws left scars in many crows in the 

past. She wished there was a way to convince them to go somewhere 

else, but these monsters never listened to anyone. She lifted off 

and flew back to the tree to warn the others because she knew the 

battle with the humans was over, but the war with the feral cats

was about to begin. 

William Falo studied Environmental Science at Stockton University and he was a volunteer fireman and a letter carrier. He lives with his family including a papillon named Dax. His fiction has appeared or is forthcoming in the UK Speculative Journal, Fragmented Voices, Train River’s first fiction anthology, and other literary journals.

Art by Debbie Berk