Chapter One
The morning Tony Lucia killed Angelo Coluzzi, he was late to feed
his pigeons. As long as Tony had kept pigeons, which was for almost
all of his seventy-nine years, he had never been late to feed them,
and they began complaining the moment he opened the screen door.
Deserting their perches, cawing and cooing, they flew agitated around
the cages, their wings pounding against the chicken wire, setting
into motion the air in the tiny city loft. It didn't help that the
morning had dawned clear and that March blew hard outside. The birds
itched to fly.
Tony waved his wrinkled hand to settle them, but his heart wasn't
in it. They had a right to their bad manners, and he was a tolerant
man. It was okay with him if the birds did only one thing, which
was to fly home. They were homers, thirty-seven of them, and it
wasn't an easy job they had, to travel to a place they'd never been,
a distance in some races of three hundred or four hundred miles,
then to navigate their return through skies they'd never flown,
over city and country they'd never seen and couldn't possibly know,
to flap their way home to a tiny speck in the middle of South Philadelphia,
all without even stopping to congratulate themselves for this incredible
feat, one that man couldn't even explain, much less accomplish.
There were so many mistakes a bird could make. Circling too long,
as if it were a joyride or a training toss. Getting distracted on
the way, buffeted by sudden bad weather, or worse, simply getting
tired and disoriented -- thousands of things could result in the
loss of a precious bird. Even once the first bird had made it home,
the race wasn't won. Many races had been lost by the bird who wouldn't
trap fast enough; the one who was first to reach his loft but who
stopped on the roof, dawdling on his way to the trap, so that his
leg band couldn't be slipped off and clocked in before another man's
bird.
But Tony's birds trapped fast. He bred them for speed, intelligence,
and bravery, through six and even seven generations, and over time
the birds had become his life. It wasn't a life for the impatient.
It took years, even decades, for Tony to see the results of his
breeding choices, and it wasn't until recently that his South Philly
loft had attained the best record in his pigeon-racing club.
Suddenly the screen door banged open, blown by a gust of wind,
startling Tony and frightening the birds in the first large cage.
They took panicky wing, seventeen of them, all white as Communion
wafers, transforming their cage into a snowy blizzard of whirring
and beating, squawking and calling. Pinfeathers flurried and snagged
on the chicken wire. Tony hurried to the loft door, silently reprimanding
himself for being so careless. Normally he would have latched the
screen behind him -- the old door had bowed in the middle, warped
with the rain, and wouldn't stay shut without the latch -- but this
morning, Tony's mind had been on Angelo Coluzzi.
The white pigeons finally took their perches, which were small
plywood boxes lining the walls, but in their panic they had displaced
each other, violating customary territories and upsetting altogether
the pecking order, which led to a final round of fussing. "Mi dispiace,"
Tony whispered to the white birds. I'm sorry, in Italian. Though
Tony understood English, he preferred Italian. As did his birds,
to his mind.
He gazed at the white pigeons, really doves, which he found so
beautiful. Large and healthy, the hue of their feathers so pure
Tony marveled that only God could make this color. Their pearliness
contrasted with the inky roundness of their eye, which looked black
but in fact was the deepest of reds, blood-rich. Tony even liked
their funny bird-feet, with the flaky red scales and the toe in
back with a talon as black as their eyes pretended to be. And he
kidded himself into thinking that the doves behaved better than
the other birds. More civilized, they seemed aware of how special
they were.
The secret reason for the doves' special status was that they were
beloved of his son, who had finally stopped Tony from releasing
them at weddings for a hundred fifty dollars a pop. Tony had thought
it made a good side business; why not make some money to pay for
the seed and medicines, plus keep the birds in shape during the
off-season? And it made Tony happy to see the brides, whose hearts
lifted at the flock of doves taking off outside the church, since
you couldn't throw rice anymore. It reminded his heart of his own
wedding day, less grand than theirs, though such things didn't matter
when it came to love. But his son had hated the whole idea. They're
not trained monkeys, Frank had said. They're athletes.
So Tony had relented. "Mi dispiace," he whispered again, this time
to his son. But Tony couldn't think about Frank now. It would hurt
too much, and he had birds to feed. He shuffled down the skinny
aisle, and his old sneakers, their soles worn flat, made a swishing
sound on the whitewash of the plywood floor. The floor had held
up okay, unlike the screen door; Tony had built the loft himself
when he first came to America from Abruzzo, sixty years ago. The
loft measured thirty feet long, with the single door in the middle
opening onto a skinny aisle that ran the short length of the building.
It occupied all of Tony's backyard, as if the loft and yard were
nesting boxes. Off the aisle of the loft were three large chicken
wire cages lined with box perches. The aisle ended in a crammed
feed room, the seed kept safe from rats in a trash can, and there
was a bookshelf holding antibiotics, lice sprays, vitamins, and
other supplies, all labels out, in clean white shelves.