Prologue: Which bathroom is he supposed to use?
Things were going very well. Each minor crisis was met with
a renewed vigor, the flock spent another summer without incident, Lagertha was
becoming almost as large as the fully grown birds, and Coq Au Vin and had settled
into a workable routine with each other. We avoided each other for the most
part with a distanced mutual respect and once every two weeks or so he decided
that life would not be complete unless I delivered to him a good booting. You
could tell in the days leading up to it because he would posture in front of me
and this will be difficult to describe. When chickens forage around, they are
bent over, searching the ground for morsels, and pick up this or that tasty
bug, treat, cracked corn, or whatever. They look intense, but serene. Coq Au
rarely forages, but when he does, he also looks intent and serene. As I’ve
described before, he usually doesn’t eat what he finds, but calls a girl over
and gives the treat to her. Sometimes it is only out of a sense of his inner
altruism, sometimes he launches into his weird stiff-legged mating dance. But
on the occasions where he is posturing for a fight, he bends down with the same
intensity but with an underlying seething hated that causes his movements to
almost tremble. He’ll pick up something useless like a piece of straw and put it
back down with equal muscular tension. As he does this he grumbles under his
breath: “I’m gonna pick up THIS piece of straw … and now I’m gonna put it over
HERE! Then I’m gonna pick up THIS piece and put it over THERE! THAT’LL show YOU
who’s the *REAL* boss of THIS yard!” … and on and on. That’s how I know a flurry
of talons and feathers is only a day or so away and a good booting is in order.
On those days he pleads with me. “Please, sir … oh please. My life can not be
complete on this day unless I’ve had a sound kicking!” and I am forced to oblige.
Thus, life went on in this way but the nature of the flock
was about to be drastically changed, and for a long time to come.
While watching the flock foraging the yard one fine autumn
day, I took special interest in how lil Lagertha had grown.
“She’s magnificent,” I thought. “Just look how much greener
the beetle-sheen is on her black feathers than the older girls! Her legs and
tail feathers are becoming stunningly long too, and … ah crap.”
Disheartened, I turned houseward to ignore the issue I had
discovered with the deep, deep wish that I was wrong and that it would just
simply go away if I closed my eyes hard enough. My respite was short, though.
The following day, herself and I were out in the yard to
make the decisions on early fall activities. What plants needed to be pulled,
what summer junk needed to be tossed or put away, etc. The flock was once again
out foraging and basking in the early autumn sun. My wife outwardly began the
same conversation to me that I had with myself only a day before. I had said
nothing to her, she was musing the same way I had been.
“Look at how beautiful Lagertha’s tail is and how tall she’s
getting!”
“That’s because ‘she’s’ a rooster, my love.”
“Ah crap!” my lovely bride said in complete echo to the tone
that played in my head yesterday.
With our mutual discovery of the same problem, I could no
longer keep myself in denial. She had just seen the same thing I had seen and
confirmed all of my suspicions and fears.
We made no decisions that day except to change her name from
“Lagertha” to “Floki” (a tricky, enigmatic character from the same Vikings program that
she and I were enjoying from which we had chosen the name “Lagertha”.
Little did I realize at that time just what an epic struggle
was about to befall our household. This was the harbinger akin to the mythic
tales of old that belie a story of Arthurian proportions.
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