This is off-topic, but if you're talking about that hoary old "balls on a rubber sheet" thing for relativistic gravity, that is just a bad model. It relies on actual gravity pulling the balls into the wells to "simulate" gravity. The whole point of relativistic gravity is that it's just the geometry of spacetime, and the "balls on a rubber sheet" model directly countervenes that.Your example shows EXACTLY what happens and how gravity affects the movement of something. In other words, at any point from the beginning of rolling that ball to the time it comes to a stop next to the heavy point you placed on that rubber sheet, at every single point in time, we know exactly where that ball is, how fast it's going, and where it will go next. Heck, you can, with 100% accuracy, predict exactly the path that that object will take.
I found a long article many years ago that described how it works using only geometry, but it took a while to find. Wish I'd bookmarked it.
Anyhow. Carry on with debating how many squares a dragon fits into.