babies


Back in those days, the Big Top Mall was smaller. It had a pony ride, a wooden train that bustled around the parking lot, a few bedraggled parrots, and a surly spider monkey.


But when Mack brought me—a baby gorilla dressed in a crisp tuxedo—to the mall, everything changed.


People came from far and wide to have their pictures taken with me. They brought me blocks and a toy guitar. They held me in their laps. Once I even held a baby in mine.


She was small and slippery. Bubbles flowed from her lips. She squeezed my fingers. Her rear was puffy with padding. Her legs bowed like bent twigs.


I made a face. She made a face. I grunted. She grunted.


I was so afraid she would fall that I squeezed her tightly, and her mother yanked her away.


I wonder if my mother ever worried about dropping us. We always held on, but that’s easier to do when your mother is furry.


Human babies are an ugly lot. But their eyes are like our babies’ eyes.


Too big for their faces, and for the world.

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