jambo


My TV is off, so while we wait for the new neighbor, I ask Stella to tell us a story.


Stella rubs her right front foot against the wall. Her foot is swollen again, an ugly deep red.


“If you’re not feeling well, Stella,” I say, “you could take a nap and tell us a story later.”


“I’m fine,” she says, and she carefully shifts her weight.


“Tell us the Jambo story,” I say. It’s a favorite of mine, but I don’t think Bob has ever heard it.


Because she remembers everything, Stella knows many stories. I like colorful tales with black beginnings and stormy middles and cloudless blue-sky endings. But any story will do.


I’m not in a position to be picky.


“Once upon a time,” Stella begins, “there was a human boy. He was visiting a gorilla family at a place called a zoo.”


“What’s a zoo?” Bob asks. He’s a street-smart dog, but there’s much he hasn’t seen.


“A good zoo,” Stella says, “is a large domain. A wild cage. A safe place to be. It has room to roam and humans who don’t hurt.” She pauses, considering her words. “A good zoo is how humans make amends.”


Stella moves a bit, groaning softly. “The boy stood on a wall,” she continues, “watching, pointing, but he lost his balance and fell into the wild cage.”


“Humans are clumsy,” I interrupt. “If only they would knuckle walk, they wouldn’t topple so often.”


Stella nods. “A good point, Ivan. In any case, the boy lay in a motionless heap, while the humans gasped and cried. The silverback, whose name was Jambo, examined the boy, as was his duty, while his troop watched from a safe distance.


“Jambo stroked the child gently. He smelled the boy’s pain, and then he stood watch.


“When the boy awoke, his humans cried out, ‘Stay still! Don’t move!’ because they were certain—humans are always certain about things—that Jambo would crush the boy’s life from him.


“The boy moaned. The crowd waited, hushed, expecting the worst.


“Jambo led his troop away.


“Men came down on ropes and whisked the child to waiting arms.”


“Was the boy all right?” Bob asks.


“He wasn’t hurt,” Stella says, “although I wouldn’t be surprised if his parents hugged him many times that night, in between their scoldings.”


Bob, who has been chewing his tail, pauses, tilting his head. “Is that a true story?”


“I always tell the truth,” Stella replies. “Although I sometimes confuse the facts.”

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