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A Wake
He was just sitting there.
I almost tripped over him. It was nighttime, and the air sagged with damp heat. Cicadas trilled, their crying filling the air with a lonesome sort of buzz. My t-shirt clung to my skin.
He was just sitting there, all alone in the middle of the sidewalk, pinker than the inside of a seashell and fuzzy as peach-skin. His eyes were open, slightly, as if he were just waking up and didn’t quite have the strength to face the world. His tail was tucked under his hindquarters, a wisp of dirty cotton.
I knelt next to him, bringing our faces close. I looked at his lips, his two tiny incisors still pure white, untarnished by wear. I could see blood coming from the corner of his eye, a tiny brown tear-slick. I guess he fell out of the tree.
He was just sitting there, and I felt my lips press together as I watched him. Did he have any brothers, I wondered. Did his mother cry when he died?
When I got home from my walk, I did some research. I found out that squirrels have large litters. As prey animals, they have more babies in order to obtain a better chance of genetic continuation. So as it turns out, mother squirrels have an evolutionary understanding that at least a few of their children will not survive to adulthood. Chances are, this one wasn’t even mourned.
He was still sitting there when I got back. Crouching down, I scooped him up in the tissue I’d brought with me as I raced back to where he lay. For a moment, I just held him. He was heavier than I expected, and limp. Life’s heat was leeching out of him fast.
I laid him at the foot of the tree, under its watchful gaze. I covered him in clover.
--
The next morning, I woke up and made myself a bowl of cereal. As I chewed, eyes still idle from sleep, I happened to glance out the window. On my deck sat a squirrel, peering inside with unblinking eyes.
He was just sitting there.
![](http://cdn.teenink.com/art/June07/Raindrops72.jpg)
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thoughts about a dead squirrel I cound on the way home from work.