one day I would

be the beloved mayor

of Sulle Scalle, or a man

of such renown that I would be

invited to a personal audience with

his holiness the pope himself, who thanked

me for my many well-noted acts of generosity.

The

springs

inside the

pretty tin bird

wore down, in time,

and it ceased to sing,

but by then it did not matter

if anyone believed my lies or not

such was my wealth and power and fame.

However.

Several years

before the tin bird

fell silent, I woke one

morning in my manor to find

it had constructed a nest of wire

on my windowsill, and filled it with

fragile eggs made of bright silver foil.

I regarded these eggs with unease but when I

reached to touch them, their mechanical mother

nipped at me with her needle-sharp beak and I did

not after that time make any attempt to disturb them.

Months

later the

nest was filled

with foil tatters.

The young of this new

species, creatures of a new

age, had fluttered on their way.

I

cannot

tell you

how many birds

of tin and wire and

electric current there

are in the world now-but I

have, this very month, heard speak

our newest prime minister, Mr. Mussolini.

When he sings of the greatness of the Italian

people and our kinship with our German neighbors,

I am quite sure I can hear a tin bird singing with him.

Its tune plays especially well amplified over modern radio.

I don’t

live in the

hills anymore.

It has been years

since I saw Sulle Scale.

I discovered, as I descended

at last into my senior years, that

I could no longer attempt the staircases.

I told people it was my poor sore old knees.

But in truth I

developed a

fear of

heights.

ABOUT THE CONTRIBUTORS

Dublin-born Roddy Doyle has written novels, play, and screenplays. His novel Paddy Clarke Ha Ha Ha won the Booker Prize in 1993. His Barry-town trilogy has been filmed as The Commitments, The Snapper, and The Van.

Joyce Carol Oates has published more than fifty novels, as well as numerous short story collections and volumes of poetry and nonfiction. Her novel Them won the National Book Award.

Joanne Harris is the author of The Evil Seed and Chocolat, which was a number one best-seller on the London Sunday Times and was shortlisted for the 1999 Whitbread Novel of the Year. Runemarks, published in 2007, was her first book for children and young adults.

Michael Marshall Smith is a British novelist, screenwriter, and short story writer. He has won the British Fantasy, the August Derleth, and the Philip K. Dick awards. His book The Intruders was picked up by the BBC for a major new drama series.

Joe R. Lansdale is the author of scores of novels and short stories, including the popular Hap and Leonard mystery series. He is a multiple winner of the Bram Stoker Award. He lives in Nacogdoches, Texas, with his wife and family.

Walter Mosley is the author of more than twenty books in many categories, but is perhaps best known for the highly regarded and popular Easy Rawlins hard-boiled detective novels. Born in Los Angeles, he now lives in New York City.

Richard Adams is the author of Shardik, The Girl in the Swing, and many other novels, but is perhaps best known for Watership Down, which was a national best-seller, and was awarded the Carnegie Medal and the Guardian Award for Children’s Fiction.

Jodi Picoult is a number one best-selling author, with more than 14 million books in print worldwide. She won the New England Bookseller Award for fiction in 2003, and currently lives in Hanover, New Hampshire.

Michael Swanwick began publishing in the early 1980s, and is currently based in Philadelphia. He is the winner of the Hugo, World Fantasy, Theodore Sturgeon Memorial, and Nebula awards.

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