My boyfriend broke up with me last night.
Standing in the hallway of my apartment, I started shaking as he went on and on about how no good I was, how being with me had practically ruined him. Somewhere between you drain me and I’ve never loved you properly, his face shifted. Nose lengthened, jaw squared, teeth the size of piano keys, all gums and rage, like that horse from Tangled who hates everyone but the frying pan. And instead of talking at me, he was chomping and chomping on hay.
That made me feel better. The shaking stopped. I stepped around him, opened the front door, and told him he’d better get off to his stable. I think he may have kicked at that because my shin’s got an blue lump on it this morning. Ungrateful beast!
After a hefty dose of caffeine, I think about horses and wonder if stallions go around shagging every mare in sight. I’m pretty sure he had. I make it to my shift at Tesco by 8 a.m., and think I’m holding up pretty good, considering.
The automatic doors sigh open. Cold air laced with petrol and damp gravel. Tesco isn’t really a supermarket. It’s Noah’s Ark with a barcode scanner. Every species crammed into fluorescent aisles, grazing on bargains.
I work till seven, mostly on till three — what Steve, the rat king of managers, calls “the chaos shift.” The one where pensioners collide with teens nicking Monster cans and everyone in between forgets their PIN numbers at the worst possible moment.
I’m twenty-six. I’ve been here since eighteen, minus one disastrous attempt at uni — left after my mum died and my dad bolted to Spain with a barmaid from Benidorm. Came back to this town, this flat, this job. It’s not awful. Not good, either. Just… beige.
The animals make it better.
Here comes one now. Fox in a brown cardigan. Narrow face, twitchy little eyes. Sniffs her receipt like she’s testing it for poison. ‘You’ve overcharged me four pence,’ she says.
‘Four pence?’ I repeat.
‘That’s four pence I could put toward my bus fare.’
I refund her just to see if her whiskers twitch. They do. Satisfaction achieved.
When I was little, I used to spot foxes in the back garden and pretend they were lost princes under a curse. Mum said foxes were scavengers, not royalty. She also said I should stop talking to things that couldn’t talk back. But foxes, I reckon, understood me better than most people ever have.
Behind her, bulldog in hi-vis. Jowls swinging, breath like lager gone off. Plonks four cans of Stella and a Scotch egg on the belt.
‘Clubcard?’ I ask.
‘Lost it.’ Drool. Actual drool.
I picture him rooting through bins behind the shop after midnight, triumphant when he finds kebab wrappers. Makes me weirdly fond of him.
Two ferrets dart through self-checkout, hoodies stuffed with Monster cans. One hisses when the gate beeps. Their mum comes in an hour later, buys three sausage rolls, pretends not to know them.
A peacock glides in, hair waxed to a ridiculous point, trolley full of craft beer and avocados. Feathers flaring every time he checks his reflection in the freezer doors. He winks at me when I scan his oat milk. I do not wink back.
A family of walruses blocks the snacks aisle. Bellowing over prawn cocktail crisps. One kid licks the glass of the freezer. I don’t judge. Sometimes the freezer looks lickable.
An old man shuffles up—tortoise. Places exact change for a single tin of soup, one coin at a time. Says thank you three times. I want to put him in my pocket.
Steve, my boss? Rat King. Always twitching, always chewing—biro caps, fingernails, nerves. His voice is a squeak: “Smile more. Be approachable. Customers buy more when you smile.” I imagine him gnawing the electric cables above the break room. Sparks flying. Little singed tail.
Mrs Sutcliffe from the next door flat arrives next, perennial hen in a floral dress. Calls me duckie, asks if I’ve found a nice boy yet. I tell her I had my eye on a horse, but he’s gone to the knackers. She cackles like she’s laid an egg.
The horse used to be charming. He wore suits that made him look like he’d been ironed straight out of a catalogue. We met in the meal-deal aisle, him grabbing prawn mayo, me ham and cheese, and he said something daft about destiny.
Six months in, the jokes dried up. The chewing started. Chewing on my choices, my hair, my breathing. He wanted me quieter, smaller, tidier. Wanted me to stop talking to animals like I was five. Wanted me to stop calling him Horsey when he stomped his foot during arguments.
The last straw wasn’t even big. Just him saying I’d never amount to anything. That working Tesco was for people with no ambition. Said it like ambition was something you could shove in a trolley and scan at checkout. So I started imagining him with hooves. It made the shouting funny. Less cutting when it came from a big dumb herbivore.
At lunchtime, there’s two hyenas—teenage boys—laugh at everything, even the price of crisps. Their laughter sticks like burrs.
Octopus mum wrangles twins and a basket of baby food while fielding a call from school about her older kid. Arms everywhere. I bag her stuff for her. She says thanks, eyes shining with exhaustion.
A man in paint-splattered overalls—spaniel—buys milk and a single Cornetto. Licks it in the queue. Doesn’t care.
Truth is, all this started with Mum. She could tell who’d knock on the door before they did, just by listening to the wind. Said she could see the “animal soul” of people, and it told her everything she needed to know, who’d lie, who’d love, who’d leave.
She called Dad a magpie. Said he’d steal shiny things and fly away. She wasn’t wrong.
When she died, sudden, aneurysm, I started seeing them too. Not spirits. Just faces flickering, tails twitching. Coping mechanism, therapist called it. Survival, I call it. If you know someone’s an alligator, you don’t swim too close.
By 4p.m., my body hums like the strip lights. Feet aching. Mouth aching from forced smiles. But inside, I’m oddly still. The animal thing has become a shield. Their teeth can’t touch me if I’ve already named them. Sometimes, though, I wonder what animal I am. Some days I’m mouse, quiet, fast, always braced for hawks. Other days, otter, floating in my head, keeping soft things close.
Yesterday, with him, I was prey. Today, I don’t know.
The last customer before my break is an albatross of a man, tall, draped in sadness like seaweed. He buys a bottle of gin and a bag of ice. When I hand him the receipt, his hand trembles. For some reason, I want to tell him I see him. That I know what it’s like to carry a storm around your neck.
I sit in the staffroom with a cup of instant coffee that tastes like wet cardboard. Someone’s left a birthday cake on the table with only the middle missing, just a crater of icing. I laugh harder than I should. Then I cry into my sleeve until the laughter comes back again.
Near closing, the zoo thins. Shelves bare, air heavy with the smell of mop water and onions. The doors hiss open. Clip-clop. Clip-clop. He trots in like nothing happened. My now ex. Mane flicking. Hooves clattering against tile. Same hollow eyes, same chewing jaw. Heads straight for my till. I keep scanning. Bags of carrots, frozen peas, loaf of bread. My hands don’t shake this time.
‘Well,’ I say, meeting his horse eyes, ‘why the long face?’ Something in me, something small and scared, laughs. For real this time.
He blinks, ears twitching. Doesn’t know what to do with me now I’m not prey.
Later, I walk home past the carpark puddles, strip lights buzzing like cicadas. The night smells of fried chicken and rain. Easier to name others than myself. But then I catch my reflection in a darkened shopfront. For a second, I expect the mouse. The otter. Something small. Instead, I see eyes gold as streetlights, shoulders set, teeth sharp and clean. Wolf. Not hiding. Not prey. Not tamed. I smile at her—at me—and keep walking, soft paws silent on the wet concrete.