Hippo – a short story

This story is 2,846 words. I was tempted to divide it into three episodes in the hope that this might make it more blog friendly but finally concluded that the flow works better without interruption. Please give me your input about the length versus the episode approach as I am still learning about this medium.

Zoe and Zach were, “Like two Zs in a pod” as someone succinctly put it at their wedding. Some of the guests wondered whether this referred to their empathy for each other, their similar interests or even to Zoe’s non aggressive, sleepy, approach to life. In fact the comment, made by Zach’s best man, was merely a nifty allusion to their names and their union; it came with no additional hidden message, other than his desire to amuse.

Those who wondered whether the comment referred to Zoe’s personality were right in their assessment that she did have a sleepy, non-aggressive, approach to life. Most of them didn’t know that she could also become fierce, and verged on irrational, when riled. She was like a volcano, normally dormant, but occasionally capable of spectacular eruption. This being so it was fortunate that she and Zach had similar belief systems, including a staunch faith in reincarnation.

Until Zoe met Zach her belief system included reincarnation but the concept only lurked, hardly acknowledged and unexpressed, in her subconscious. It became fully entrenched after she accepted Zach’s marriage proposal, because it was then that Zach told her about his residual memories of one of his previous lives. He confided that he had lived another life as an indigenous American Indian. He firmly believed that he was killed by the US cavalry in 1890 as part of the Wounded Knee massacre. Now Zach was born in 1947 which means that his jiva either spent a long time in limbo, or packed in another, perhaps less memorable life, into the 57 years between 1890 and 1947. Zach harbored no memories of this intervening period, but his recollections of the massacre were vivid. They were triggered by action, times of stress and loud noises, such as thunderstorms, rather as Marcel Proust’s ‘petit madeleine’ gave him his remembrances recorded in his book, ‘In Search of Lost Time.’

Zoe based her conviction on Zack’s testimony, and her own uncanny realization that every time that she stood alone in the kitchen chopping vegetables she thought about holocaust victims. At those times her brain synapses somehow became entangled, and as she chopped, she identified with a young, thin, and very beautiful, girl (always beautiful, way to go Zoe), who was temporarily saved from the gas chambers to serve as a cook in one of the Nazi guard’s houses. Her eyes teared when she told Zack,

“As I chop I wonder about each scrap which I reject, wonder whether it will go into the thin gruel that we will eat tonight. I am hungry, but too scared to taste the food, for someone may be spying on me. I know that the 1940’s Nazi guard does not have a hidden camera, but I am frightened as there are other, more direct ways, of watching. Sometimes I can feel his watchful eye upon me. I chop more diligently knowing that my life depends on my doing this job correctly. I start to think about my lost family and then, suddenly, something brings me back to my present self and I question what I did wrong – how I died so that I came back so quickly into my present life in 1945.”

Zoe’s initial belief was triggered by her father, Rex. To be sure she never ascertained whether Rex genuinely endorsed reincarnation. Until she met Zach she speculated that he spoke of it in jest, for he unfalteringly asserted that, “If I come back, I wished to come as a hippopotamus.” The suggestion seemed to her to be counter culture for, surely, a hippo is a lower life form to that of a man. When questioned, her father gave his reasons. They almost made sense.

To understand his reasons, Zoe thought about the man. Up until the time of Zoe’s mother’s death in 1973, he was a slender, self-controlled, faithful one-woman man, who never over-indulged. When she died he was still able to wear a leather coat which he had bought for himself forty years earlier when he was 21. The world saw him as virile, intelligent, and selfless in his service of others, surely as one who was far advanced up the life continuum. “So why,” Zoe asked herself, “why does he wish to go backward? Why does he wish to reincarnate as a hippopotamus?” His hippo obsession, for she believed that it was an obsession, invaded his life, he collected hippo images, he acted like an elementary preschooler when at the zoo, and he drew and sculpted them. Sometimes, she even wondered whether his ‘thing’ about hippos was also because they are easy, for the amateur artist, such as himself, to depict.

Rex had a good sense of humor and, when questioned closely about his reincarnation wish, he said, “What a lifestyle! What could be better than being a vegetarian, without natural enemies? I can image nothing better than to be able to lounge all day in water, and to peacefully, unreservedly, eat everything I want all night. What joy to live a life, surrounded by an abundance of food yet unencumbered by obesity problems. A life in which one’s weight is counterbalanced by buoyancy in water. A life enjoyed in the everlasting warmth of the African sun.” At this point in his explanation Rex’s eyes would shine mischievously and he’d continue, “Best of all I look forward to unrestrained underwater copulation! I see myself as an alpha dominant bull hippopotamus with a herd of cows at my disposal.”

After Zoe’s mother died Rex began to put some of his future life plans into practice. It began with the installation of a swimming pool in his back yard. He commissioned a life sized concrete sculpture of a hippopotamus which he installed as a seat in the pool and took to swimming next to it every day. He had the rear end of a companion ‘female’ hippopotamus custom-made and installed on the façade of his house. He claimed that it represented the female retreating into to house to hide after action with the male in the pool.

Over time Zoe and Zach wondered about his sanity and were additionally confused to find that every time that they visited he had a different woman for them to meet. This was bad enough, what made it worse was that each progressive woman was younger than the last. They tried to tell themselves that this was of no concern of theirs until the girl who met them at the front door was Annabel, one of Zoe’s old school friends.

Zoe was indignant and upset, and the next day after Annabel had left, she coerced Zach into supporting her in confronting the old man. Rex flared up in anger, in a rage such as Zoe had never seen before. He declared that he would do as he wished and that if she and Zach didn’t approve of his lifestyle then they should stay away. They attempted to get him to see reason but he was too enraged and even appeared to be enjoying this ‘fight for his rights,’ as he put it.

Zoe, who had never fought with her father before, flared up and gave him a spontaneous vindictive response. She told him how much she disapproved of his actions. He responded in form and then, Zoe erupted, losing all semblance of control. She morosely told him that he slighted the memory of her mother. She told him that she hated what he was doing. She told him that if he persisted she never wanted to see him again. He told her that if she felt that way she should leave.

She left, still shouting, angry and unhappy. On their drive home Zach persuaded her that what the old man did was his concern. He went on to suggest that Zoe should apologize. Eventually she reluctantly put hurt aside and agreed. She was too riled up and full of righteous wrath to call immediately. She decided that she would wait a week or so before calling. She secretly hoped that some of her words might have sunk in. Unfortunately, Zoe never got a chance to apologize for the next week Rex had a sudden stoke. He died in his pool draped over his concrete hippopotamus where he appeared to be gazing up at the female rear on the side of his house. Instead of a frozen face of anguish his face was bathed in a smile.

As is often the case when someone dies Zoe was filled with regrets. Those haunting ‘could have’s and ‘should have’s kept playing over in her mind. Her grief was acute as she couldn’t reconcile herself to the cruelty of her angry words. She played and replayed the fight in her mind constantly regretting that Rex had died before they were reconciled and she had had a chance to explain that her words sprang from love not hate.

Rex left his hippo collection to his progeny. At that point in her life Zoe discovered that if one owns more than three of an ornament type one becomes a collector and so, by default, she became a hippo collector. Her favorite piece was a two-foot long sculpture of hippo’s head, with 35 degree open gaping mouth, and teeth showing. It was sculpted by Rex, in white Carrera marble shortly before he died. The curious thing about the sculpture was that Rex had given the head a strange ‘Z’ shaped scar on the forehead between the little ears. Zoe’s siblings insisted that this mark defined the head as being intended for her. The rest of the collection grew as friends and relatives gave Zoe hippos and she even bought herself a two foot long model which purported to have been made from a solid teak African railroad tie.

In 2007, on the occasion of Zack’s 60th birthday, Zoe gave Zack a trip to Africa. Ostensibly, the trip was for Zack to reconnect with some cousins who lived in Johannesburg, but Zoe also planned a three-day African Safari. This was because her hippo obsession, inherited from her father, and her continued pain at the circumstances of their last words to each other, had become sufficiently compelling that she wanted to see hippos in the wild. At the beginning of the Safari Zoe took their guide aside and told him that she was mainly interested in seeing hippopotami. She told him that, as far as she was concerned, the other animals were irrelevant. The guide registered some surprise and warned Zoe that the hippo is the most dangerous animal in Africa. He told her that there are more human fatalities associated with hippos than with any other animal, including alligators, crocodiles and lions.

On the first morning the guide took Zoe and Zach, and another couple, out in an open jeep equipped with protective steel bars and manned, by himself as driver, and two armed local scouts. The dawn was dusty and hazy and the countryside a mixture of scrub and clumps of trees. Strange birds made loud raucous calls and insects buzzed. The guide told them that he was taking them to a nearby hippo viewing spot. After a ten minute drive, over rough country, they arrived at a water hole in an estuary off a slow-moving river. They parked some distance away on a small hillock so that they could watch a group of about thirty hippos wallowing in the water.

Zoe took out her binoculars while Zach photographed with a powerful telephoto lens. The smell was pungent and fetid. Zoe commented on it, to which their guide responded, “The male hippo marks his zone in the water by defecating while swinging his tail so that his waste is scattered as far as possible. This defines his territory. He aggressively protects it and his cows.” As if in answer to the guide’s words a large body rose from the dirty water, mouth open to emit a loud bellow which resounded above the grunts of the rest of the group. The guide stood and pointed, “There he is! The alpha male! Do you see the strange scar on his head?”

Zoe trained her binoculars on the animal. She gasped with excitement, “Zach look. Zach look, the alpha hippo has a ‘Z’ shaped scar on his head! Here, take the glasses. Look.”

Zack looked, “Isn’t that scar curiously similar to the scar on Rex’s sculpture? Wait, Zoe, wait, it is the same as the scar on the sculpture. No one will believe this. Here, Zoe, you take the glasses again. I’m going to shoot a movie.”

They watched in disbelief as their guide expounded additional hippopotami facts, “The fully grown male hippo, such as the one that you are looking at, weighs about 3 ½ tons: They are second only, in size, to the land animals of the elephant and white rhino. The alpha male that you see there is probably about twenty years old and may live to fifty. His skin is thick and tough but he is scarred from the many fights in which he engages to maintain his leadership position in the herd.”

The group spent over an hour watching the hippos as they bellowed, grunted, and moved around in the water. Just as they were about to leave the ‘Z’ male and another slightly smaller animal emerged from the water bellowing through open mouths. Their conflict intensified and they lumbered out of the water taking their fight to the bank. They both had their mouths open to almost 180 degrees. Their teeth glistened in the sun and their bellows pierced the air. Even from a distance you could see that the ‘Z’ male was winning and soon the smaller animal was bleeding with several gashes on his sides. He ceded victory and turned tail to lumber into the bushes beside the water. The ‘Z’ male followed goring his retreating rear end with his teeth. Zoe was fascinated and began to climb out of the jeep.

The guide reprimanded her in a loud whisper, “Here, Zoe, it’s not safe you must stay in the jeep.” His voice carried well now that the combatants were no longer bellowing. A few minutes after he spoke the ‘Z’ male re-emerged from the scrub much closer to them. He stood in the long grass and stared at the jeep flipping his tail and flapping his tiny ears. He opened his mouth but did not bellow, then, he turned and ambled back to the water.

On the following days they travelled in other directions and saw other animals including more hippos. Sometimes at night they heard hippos moving about foraging for food in the surrounding undergrowth. Each time Zoe would wander fearlessly to the perimeter of the camp to gaze, intrepid, into the night. On the dawn of their last day she rose with the sun and silently left the camp to follow the sounds of hippo activity. She had no idea what she was doing or why she was doing it. She was zombie-like on auto pilot.

When she felt the hippo presence bearing upon her Zoe stopped and stood in a daze. She gazed intently at the undergrowth, and saw it part a couple of hundred feet from her, to allow a huge hippo to emerge. For several minutes he stood and gazed at her. She didn’t move. Then he began to move towards her gathering speed into a charge, bringing 3 ½ tons of angry hippo down towards her. She stood immobile, like a scared rabbit captured in a car’s headlights. She was unable to run, and knew that even if she tried she would never be able to out-run the beast. “Anyway,” she thought, “it will be better to die facing him, than to have him kill me from behind.” When the hippo was less than 100 feet away Zoe saw the scar and recognized the ‘Z’ alpha male. There was no time to wonder why he was so far from his water hole only time to address him. Her voice registered no panic, it was gentle almost conversational, “Who are you? Don’t hurt me. It’s me, Zoe.”

Now the hippo was so close that Zoe could feel ground tremor caused by his stampede. Then he stopped and slid to a halt in front of her. Dust enveloped them. For a moment Zoe and the animal stood and stared at each other taking in every detail. Then Zoe felt an inner urge and knew what to do. She reached out and touched his huge, slimy wet, nose. She felt the stiff hairs on his chin which contrasted with the smoothness of the soap-like skin under her hand. The contact filled her with happiness and she smiled.

It was a smile of recognition. She murmured “Daddy, peace. Forgive me. I love you so very much” She began to cry soft gentle sobs of joy and love. The hippo blinked his eyes, as though in recognition, he flapped his small ears, and gently waved his huge head to and fro to rub her extended hand. Then he snorted a low, almost soothing noise, turned and walked away.

© Copyright, Jane Stansfeld, March 2014

19 thoughts on “Hippo – a short story

  1. Thanks for stopping by. Come back soon. Every Sunday we post zoo news. Tuesdays and Thursdays we also post. See you at the ‘V Zoo’!Zebee aka Joy, or is it the other way aunord?

  2. Loved the story, which, like your book, is full of images from our shared childhood.

    Also I had forgotten that I’d told you about my native american incarnation flashback.

    …And the marble sculpture of a hippo head, that you mention, now sits at the edge of my bath, close to the warm water…

    • Thank you, Wyon:
      Sometimes I think that you know too much. By the way, you are right it IS packed with personal images including mine of the holocaust victim which I don’t think that I even told you!
      Lots of love, Jane

  3. Hello Jane,

    Lisa is away this evening, and since I’m not into cradle snatching ala-Rexy baby, it was a welcomed opportunity to savour your post – as promised.

    Regarding the length of blog posts – the shorter the piece, the more the traffic. Sounds mercenary perhaps, but there you have it.
    Your blog, Jane dear, and obviously, your call 🙂

    The reincarnation theme always holds magic and especially when well told. Your story moved fast and without a moment’s pause. As usual, I like to guess the end and got it right, this time – at the first mention of ‘Africa’. However, instead of diminishing my investment, as the story unfolded, it served to heighten the tension.

    All good wishes,
    Eric

    P.s. Cynthia is right about waving a small flag re A Sin for a Son. A little book icon on the R/H margin perhaps — when clicked, it brings the clicker (LOL!) to the Amazon page.

    • Hi Eric:

      Thank you, thank you for your very helpful input. I am in the midst of an architectural project (yes I AM supposed to be retired) and so am unable to take the time to figure out how to add the link to A SIN FOR A SON but fully intend to do so. Yes, I know that it is probably very simple but nothing is simple until you know how – good thought for a haiku? Perhaps when Dan takes an evening off.

      Thank you for your comments about Hippo – yes, I thought that I gave the game away when I mentioned Africa but am glad that the story still held your attention.

      Cheerio, Jane

      • Hello Jane,

        I’ve spent hours figuring this out – think of a man lost but refuses to ask for directions – and am happy to share the following:

        Placing an icon on the R/H side bar

        It is a little long-winded and sorry if I cover ground that you’re already familiar with. It should take approximately five minutes.

        1. Go to > Dashboard
        2. Click > Media
        3. Select > Add New
        4. Choose file – the Image of your book cover (which I believe you have saved in one of your folders)
        5. Upload to Media Library
        6. Go to Edit (Image)
        7. Copy File URL (found in the R/H box) and save it on any temporary document – Words, Excel (you’ll need this URL later)
        8. Click on > Appearance (L/H column)
        9. Select > Widgets (Scroll down to locate)
        10. Locate the (blank) Image box, click and add to your side bar – it shows ‘Sidebar Widget Area’ > select ‘Add Widget’
        11. Click the (blank) Image box on the Sidebar Widget Area – R/H
        12. Open drop down (arrow) menu
        13. Key in Widget Title > Buy my book, My Book, Don’t I look Cute, whatever (check out the book icons on my blog)
        14. Copy paste the Image URL (which you saved in 7 above)
        15. Next, scroll down to Link URL (here, you copy and paste the URL of the page on Amazon or the eTailer where your book is displayed)
        16. Click Save, Close – and you’re done!

        On your blog – the book image icon should be on the right (for your blog theme). Obviously, you can position it at the top, below your gravatar, wherever – simply go back to the widget area (steps 8 and 9). When your cursor hovers over the image box of your book icon, a star appears – drag and position.

        On your blog-landing page, if you click on the book image, it should take you straight to the eTailer website where your book is displayed.

        Let me know if you face any glitch – or, call the fire service. In the old days, they took care of everything 🙂

        Cheers,
        Eric

        • Hi Eric:
          How can I thank you, except to say thank you?. Your instructions are PERFECT and so much better than most so called guides. I’ve managed to put it up there. The image is rather larger than I’d wish and I need to get it up to the top but that’s for another day! It is not so hard when you know how but I hate to even think how long it would have taken me solo. Again thank you,
          Cheerio, Jane

  4. This was a great story! I like the theme of reincarnation that ran through the entire story, setting the stage for the father’s eventual incarnation as a hippo. I felt sad for her that he’d died before she’d had a chance to make amends for the falling out, so the moment when she and the Z hippo met with understanding was so much more touching. At least she finally found peace.

    • Janna, thank you for your visit. You are an extraordinary story teller and so your comments mean a lot. I simply loved your last story “The family Tree” It still haunts – it puts those ancient gnarled trees into a different perspective. Thank you,
      Jane

  5. I too have no problem with the length. You have to write what you feel and if your story has a continuous flow to it then you have to follow through. It was informative, witty and probed the eternal questions. Who am I, what am I here for, where did I come from and where am I going? I tried to imagine Rex with his “unrestrained underwater copulation” with all those young women he fancied and who by their presence threw Zoe into such a tizzy. lol. No doubt that in itself brought on the stroke, but then that’s speculation isn’t it? Somehow the idea of reincarnation into a worm if you are bad and/or eventually nirvana which is broadly nothingness doesn’t appeal to me.

    • Hi Ian: Yes, I agree. I imagine that Rex began to die the day that his wife died which is why he began to live his Hippo fantasy before death. For him, it would have been a pity if death didn’t bring him life as a hippo. Of course if it brought him pure extinction he wouldn’t be aware to rue over this event. Heady thoughts? Cheerio Jane

  6. This story is just bizarrely wonderful, Jane–witty, elegant, and I’ve had several good laughs (especially about Rex’s pool and house cum hippopotami). Your writing strikes me as coming from a uniquely skewed viewpoint that includes a kind of deadpan humor and perception–a matter-of-factness about unusual things.
    As to your request for input, I had no problem with the length, probably because of your own skill at keeping the wonderment going. In fact I am sometimes annoyed by those who make pronouncements about the “proper” length of a blog post. It seems, like market researchers, they are seeking and catering to a lowest common denominator. Not everything is about business and selling, and not all of us want or need to do that. Perhaps it’s my age, buy it’s also my wisdom that tells me we don’t really need faster and faster reading or more and more readers for good blogging experience to happen. Maybe just the opposite.

    • Hi Cynthia, thank you for your insightful input which confirms what I suspected. The dead pan humor is partly due to my British origins. The Brits excel in this with a touch of what I call “lavatory” humor which I don’t espouse to. By the way did your ears burn yesterday? If they did it was because I read “Future Perfect” to our writer’s group – they loved it. Cheerio, Jane

      • So glad you’re not into “lavatory” humor, Jane. We should leave that to the pubescent boys.
        I am honored that you read “Future Perfect” to your writer’s group, and glad they liked it. It must be a great source of encouragement and inspiration to belong to such a group. So far I have not discovered anything like that in these-here mountains, but spring is coming, and I’ll get out more. In a different way, thank goodness for the blog…and thanks again, for your friendship and support!

        • A further thought…..Is there some demure way to create an advert of your novel so that it appears as a regular feature of your home page that you are the author of A Sin For A Son, available through Amazon…? Just an idea, but a good one, I think.

          • Thank you for your thoughts and it IS a good idea and one which I’ll try to implement. I need to have the time and good humor to invest in the shenanigans which will be required to get there. Right now, even though retired, or perhaps because I’m retired, I’ve got a house on my plate. It is proving immensely time consuming and distracting and keeps me away from the blog and writing. Hey-ho, Cheerio, Jane

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