The Toad, the Turtle, and the Duck is a short story by david sedaris (prefers his name spelt without capitals) about a group of complete strangers bitterly discussing the order of things within the animal kingdom.
This is my first time reading this story. It gets a bit dark towards the end. I hope you enjoy it.
Send me a message for your free pdf copy of this book to follow along.
The complaint line started at the edge of the swamp
and stretched westward, ending, where the turtle
finally arrived, at the base of a charred pine stump.
He fell into place behind a glassy-eyed toad and had
just commenced a jaw-aching yawn when a duck
showed up and took the position behind him,
muttering, “What a bunch of idiots.”
The turtle, his mouth still open, nodded in
agreement.
“This is my second time in this line, can you
believe it?” groused the duck. “First they told me I
wouldn’t need any ID, then, after I waited almost
three hours, this ball-busting river rat goes, ‘I’m sorry,
sir, but if you don’t have some form of identification,
there’s nothing I can do.’
“I was, like, ‘Why the hell didn’t you tell me that
earlier?’ And she was all, ‘If you can’t be civil, I’m
afraid I’m going to have to ask you to leave.’ ”
The turtle groaned in sympathy, as something
similar had once happened to him. “It’s the oldest
trick in the book,” he said. “They screw up, but
somehow you’re the problem.”