Wings Over New Haven
A Sestina of Self-Interest

One Thursday I choose to walk home from work,
leaving my lab in Anlyan’s north wing
foregoing the Yale Shuttles on Orange Line
to trek through New Haven with shoulder bag
in tow, learning that my shoe choice was poor,
blisters forming as I walk up Grove Street
***
Turn on Whitney, shops, pubs along the street,
luring doctors and interns after work.
A man leaning against the brick, health poor
and clothes tattered, points to a sign - a wings
and ribs joint - with his cane. Eyes rimmed with bags
chin stubbly and scarred with a crooked line,
***
“Haven’t eaten all day, they closed the line
for disability. I’m on the streets.
Any cash to spare?” He nods toward my bag.
I hesitate, just twenties from some work
done for research studies in the south wing.
Blessed is the one who considers the poor,
***
The psalm echoed in my head. Help the poor,
it's the right thing to do, familiar line.
How much could it be for a plate of wings?
Ten, not twenty. “No cash,” eyes on the street.
“Only my card,” I lie. “Well that could work,”
he pleads. I’m stuck Jacksons weighting my bag.
***
Inside, I pull my card out of my bag.
Cashier eyes us, she’s surely seen the poor
old guy through the store window while she worked.
He limps up to the counter, there’s no line.
Workers stop, stare, Why’s this guy from the streets
in here and why’s this girl buying him wings?
***
“Sky Master” he says, sixteen boneless wings,
“And celery”, he adds, she fills the bag.
Must gain quite the appetite on the streets.
“That’s extra,” she looks to me, like I’m poor
and duped. “That’s fine,” card swipe, sign on the line,
twenty-two dollars. Funny how life works.
***
Saucy scent of wings seeps into my pores.
He clutches his bag, checkered with red lines,
says “Thanks” at the street. I need more heart work.
About the Creator
D.K. Shepard
Character Crafter, Witty Banter Enthusiast, World Builder, Unpublished novelist...for now
Fantasy is where I thrive, but I like to experiment with genres for my short stories. Currently employed as a teacher in Louisville.
Reader insights
Outstanding
Excellent work. Looking forward to reading more!
Top insights
Compelling and original writing
Creative use of language & vocab
Easy to read and follow
Well-structured & engaging content
Heartfelt and relatable
The story invoked strong personal emotions
Masterful proofreading
Zero grammar & spelling mistakes
Excellent storytelling
Original narrative & well developed characters
On-point and relevant
Writing reflected the title & theme


Comments (12)
Hey, D.K, I like the air of realism a lot here! And moving, but now I’m fascinated by sestinas (had to look it up). I’ve probably read one and forgotten about it. Very intriguing structure.
Absolutely incredible.
Powerful piece! Loved: “ Blessed is the one who considers the poor, The psalm echoed in my head. Help the poor, it's the right thing to do, familiar line.” So glad heart won out over mind. I’m with JBaz… better to buy the food than give cash✅
Fantastic!!! ❤️❤️💕
I prefer that she bought food instead of handing the cash , even though it was more than she originally wanted to spend. I like how you portrayed the conflicting emotional thoughts.
Nicely done 😁 I especially love that it came to more than twenty anyway!
The irony that his meal costed more than the $20 she didn't want to give him, was not lost on me! Loved that detail!! Reminds me of that saying "no good deed goes unpunished!!" Great work DK!!
Awww, this touched my heart so much! The world needs more people like you!
Absolutely stunning, D.K.!! This piece is so full of humility and truth- with every line I could feel the scene coming to life. A masterfully drawn window into a very human moment, which invites the reader into gentle conviction and reflection. Thank you for this lovely, lovely piece!
Altruism is easy in theory, hard and edifying in practice. This is very well wrought!
This is wonderful. I think a lot about these conundrums- in Ancient Greece, so many myths surrounded the god dressed as beggar, a theme that encouraged hospitality and compassion. Today’s culture is different, but kindhearted people like you are still putting heart work and head work into it.
Nothing to say but 👏👏👏👏