A lion, all gold and sand and sunset, wandered into a suburban living room, curled up beneath the pendulum clock, and lay against the leather couch. The family—a husband, a wife, a teenage daughter—were gentle. They looked at this king at their feet, and had no thought to hurt him. They had lost their dog, and were in the market for soft company.
The girl named the lion Frederick. She read him stories. She took him to the window, and showed him the fence around the yard.
The father scratched Frederick's ears each morning as he drank his coffee and read the New York Times. The mother cooed babytalk to him while she washed the dishes.
Frederick had no time to think. This was his home now, he knew intellectually.
But his name was not Frederick. He felt that. His claws were dull. His eyes were half-mast, house-cat-sleepy, even with the sun. He was not a house-cat, and he forgot.
They loved him and they loved him and they took the wild right out of him.
He was a year into his picket-fence when a scratch came at the window in the evening mist. A deer stopped in its tracks, locking eyes with Frederick, unmoving.
Frederick stood, nudged open the door through which he’d come, and roared. The deer fled.
The lion stretched his legs and and ambled out toward gold and sand and sunset. He did not look behind.