But that night, as he slept in his crevice, his throat began to swell. Not with sickness. With song . A song he had never sung before — a deep, bubbling, underwater melody that rose from his chest like a drowned bell.
He dove not for a fly, but for a gleaming movement near the shore — a small fingerling, a trout’s child. He struck once, twice, and lifted the silver sliver into the air, shaking it against the rock until it stilled.
Pastrmka, still in the shrinking lake, listened to that song and felt something she had not felt in a hundred summers: regret. She had not cursed the thrush. She had only told the truth. But truth, in a dry season, can be crueler than a beak. That evening, Vrana did something unexpected. She flew to the highest peak, gathered a beakful of dry lichen, and dropped it into the lake. Then she dropped a feather. Then a stone.
“You have eaten a piece of me,” she said. “Now you will carry a piece of me forever.”
Crvendac startled. “Thinking of what?”
Crvendac, with his soft beak and drowning heart, climbed to the highest rock and sang the trout-song one last time — not in pain, but in full voice.