the littlest big top on earth


My neighbors here at the Big Top Mall know many tricks. They are an educated lot, more accomplished than I am.


One of my neighbors plays baseball, although she is a chicken. Another drives a fire truck, although he is a rabbit.


I used to have a neighbor, a sleek and thoughtful seal, who could balance a ball on her nose from dawn till dusk. Her voice was like the throaty bark of a dog chained outside on a cold night.


Children wished on pennies and tossed them into her plastic pool. They glowed on the bottom like flat copper stones.


The seal was hungry one day, or bored, perhaps, so she ate one hundred pennies.


Mack said she’d be fine.


He was mistaken.


Mack calls our show “The Littlest Big Top on Earth.” Every day at two, four, and seven, humans fan themselves, drink sodas, applaud. Babies wail. Mack, dressed like a clown, pedals a tiny bike. A dog named Snickers rides on Stella’s back. Stella sits on a stool.


It is a very sturdy stool.


I don’t do any tricks. Mack says it’s enough for me to be me.


Stella told me that some circuses move from town to town. They have humans who dangle on ropes twining from the tops of tents. They have grumbling lions with gleaming teeth and a snaking line of elephants, each clutching the limp tail in front of her. The elephants look far off into the distance so they won’t see the humans who want to see them.


Our circus doesn’t migrate. We sit where we are, like an old beast too tired to push on.


After our show, humans forage through the stores. A store is where humans buy things they need to survive. At the Big Top Mall, some stores sell new things, things like balloons and T-shirts and caps to cover the gleaming heads of humans. Some stores sell old things, things that smell dusty and damp and long forgotten.


All day, I watch humans scurry from store to store. They pass their green paper, dry as old leaves and smelling of a thousand hands, back and forth and back again.


They hunt frantically, stalking, pushing, grumbling. Then they leave, clutching bags filled with things—bright things, soft things, big things—but no matter how full the bags, they always come back for more.


Humans are clever indeed. They spin pink clouds you can eat. They build domains with flat waterfalls.


But they are lousy hunters.

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