I looked up from a sandwich and saw a compact falcon etching circles above the atrium glass, sunlight firing the slate cap. Pigeons ballooned, then snapped tight as a stoop knifed through them with disciplined silence. Only drifting feathers confessed the outcome. A guard, curious, borrowed my binoculars and grinned like a conspirator. We compared notes, agreed the city felt cleaner with raptors patrolling, and parted lighter. Fifteen minutes later, my train left, and everything ordinary had quietly shifted.
Near Glasgow Central, a rowan bowed under fruit and gossiping commuters. A silky flock arrived, crests jaunty, wing wax tips glowing like varnished embers. They swallowed berries, passed them daintily, and hopscotched wires with polite whistles. Strangers gathered, sharing warmth and lenses without ceremony. One man phoned his daughter, holding the speaker up so she could hear the trills. For a week, the tree became a festival. When the berries vanished, they left a hummingspace that still tastes sweet.
A child tugged my sleeve, whispering, “Is that a jewel?” There, low over the Medlock, lightning-blue stitched water to shade. We traced its arc to a metal brace, then held our breath through a clean plunge and successful rise. The child’s laugh surprised ducks into ripples, and even cyclists slowed, smiling at our chorus. We logged the sighting together, added a tiny drawing, and promised hot chocolate to celebrate. Later, the notebook smelled faintly of damp reeds and victory.
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