case of the disappearing fish
kelly | 7 June 2006 - 10:51pm
When Rob and I moved into our house, the people who lived here before us not only left the motherfucking vine, but they also left fish. Three of them. In an aquarium. This seems perhaps slightly less odd once you know that one of the walls in our house has a built-in aquarium, and so without water and fish in it, this space looks rather stupid. I'd like to believe they were thinking of that when they left the fish, but considering this wall aquarium is in the basement and thus no one ever sees it, I suspect they were just fucking tired of taking care of the damn fish.
Since the fish were in the basement, I never remembered to feed them. We only go down there once a week to do laundry, and so once a week was precisely how often the fish got fed. Finally I decided to remove the tank from the wall and bring it upstairs into the dining room so that I would actually remember to feed the fish and so that we could actually enjoy seeing them.
One morning, after having the aquarium upstairs for about a week, I sat down to eat breakfast and happened to glance at the tank. There were only two fish. I rubbed my eyes and counted again. Two fish. I called for Rob and made him count them. Still only two. We looked all over the tank for a dead fish, but couldn't find one. Rob immediately blamed Bridget, but to this day I maintain that she is innocent. We had the tank on a stand, and because she couldn't see the fish at eye level she had never exhibited more than a mild curiosity about them. And these fish were fucking boring, even for fish. They rarely moved - mostly they just sat there, suspended in the water. Honestly, they seemed rather sad. Bridget was way too busy batting at bugs on the other side of the windows to pay much attention to depressed motionless fish.
Also, the aquarium had a cover, although there was a two-inch opening at the back along the entire length of the tank. But, first of all, the stand was unsturdy and had Bridget leapt onto the top of the tank I feel quite certain she would have toppled it. And secondly, she's not exactly a huntress. She cannot kill a mouse when it is presented to her, injured, on a silver platter. There is no fucking way she has the skill or reflexes to grab a fish out of water, especially with only a two-inch wide space to work with.
I thought that surely the fish was just hiding somewhere, but when I came home from work and checked the tank, there was still no fucking third fish.
The next morning I checked the tank again. And this time there was one fish. One fish! We emptied the entire aquarium, removed the ceramic bridge and the plastic seaweed plants and the mermaid figurine. We sifted the gravel and disassembled the filter. But, no fish corpses to be found.
Since it seemed practically impossible to me that Bridget could be responsible for this, I drew the next logical conclusion: someone was playing a joke on us. Someone with a key to our house. So I called my brother, who was in high school at the time, living with my parents here in Redneck Valley.
"Hi. So um, I have a weird question."
"Okay."
"Have you...like, are you stealing our fish?"
"Huh?"
"Because if you are, it's fine. I mean, it's pretty funny actually. Every morning we come downstairs and BAM! another fish is gone. It's a brilliant prank, really. But I just need to know that it's you because honestly it's starting to freak me out a little bit."
"Let me get this straight. You think I'm sneaking into your house in the middle of the night and taking your fish?"
"Are you saying you're not?"
"No, I'm not taking your fish."
"I don't believe you."
"Okay."
"So you are?"
"Of course I'm not!"
"Then who is?!"
"Nobody is. Freak."
The next morning I came downstairs and warily checked the tank. One fish. Still there. He was hovering just above the gravel, looking lonely. The next day, he was still there, in the very same spot. And the next day. And the next. I named him Blue because he seemed so sad. (And, you know, because he was the color blue.) I considered the possibility that Blue had eaten the other fish, but they had lived together for so long that it seemed unlikely.
Blue was so apathetic and inactive that I expected him to die at any moment. He didn't even come up to the top for food; he'd just nibble on any bits that happened to float down next to him. But he somehow continued to live. After a week of his moping around, I contemplated flushing him. (Look people, I didn't want the damn fish in the first place.) Instead I gave him to a co-worker, reassuring her that it was okay if he died because he was miserable anyway. Two days later I asked her how he was adjusting to his new home, and she reported that he was constantly swimming around and that she had never seen a happier fish.
A few weeks later I was sweeping under the hutch in the dining room and something that looked like a leaf slid across the floor among the dustbunnies. Upon closer inspection, I discovered that it was the dried body of a fish. And then I remembered that in college a friend's fish had jumped from its tank and flopped around on the floor while she shrieked and finally mustered the nerve to snatch it by the tail and plop it back into the water. And I thought about how our three fish had seemed depressed and I thought about how Blue was downright jubilant to leave our tank for a new home and I looked at Bridget who was blinking at me ever so innocently and I solved the mystery.
Our fucking fish committed suicide.
- 4015 reads


HILARIOUS!
Fish do jump out..this is a common occurance. I tried not to view my many fish-deaths as suicide, because, really, that is depressing.
Fish like to have other fish around. I am sure if Blue had had more friends, he'd have been fine.
the whole time i was reading this post, i was yelling at the computer, "they jumped! they jumped!" i love it when i'm able to solve a good mystery before the ending is presented to me.
my fish died a much more tragic death, due to the sheer stupidity of its mother. i had a beta in that lived in a glass vase with the stones on the bottom and the pretty plant on top- you know the ones. well, my plant began to die when i moved into an apartment which did not get any decent sunlight. one summer day, i decided to sit the plant out on the deck to get some good sun. needless to say, the plant perked up gloriously, but the fish.... well, the fish was boiled alive.... oooops.
hi kelly. i stumbled across your blog and i love it! the humor in your writing really amuses me.
your fishtank story was hilarioius...it had me laughing out loud. when we moved into our house, the owners left a fishtank in the wall downstairs too. except they didn't leave the fish for us. i really don't know what they were thinking, because the fishtank was in the wall between the boiler room and another room. oh well. i don't think fish make for good pets...they just sit there. but they are nice for decoration. my friend had four fish in her tank, and one of the fish ate all the rest. may the fishies R.I.P. hehe :)
~gora_kagaz
I remember as a kid finding dried guppies and zebra danios on the floor all the time. Ick. It didn't stop until we got a lid that covered the whole tank.
The least you could have done was popped them a Zoloft into the tank. The warning signs of depression were clearly evident.
I read this somewhere a long time ago, "The average aquarium small fish has a mormory of about 15 to 20 seconds. So if a fish goes out of the water and it takes them 30 seconds to die they will think their entire life was spent dying."
I think the cows did it.
Brilliant story, brilliantly told.
I have this recurring image of Blue, talking to the other fish: "Don't do it, man. I know it seems hopeless, but things will get better."
"Stay back! Don't come any closer, man, or I swear I'll jump!"
"Be cool, man. I'm not moving. Look, here are my hands. OK, fins. We'll just talk, OK?"
"No more talk. I'm tired of talk. It's always the same. Day in, day out. Castle, rocks, fake plant, BONK glass, turn, fake plant, rocks, castle, BONK glass ... I just can't TAKE IT ANY MORE!"
"But this isn' the answer, man. Look, just come down off the edge and ..."
"I said DON'T MOVE! I'll jump, I will!"
"Be cool. It's OK."
"It's not "OK". It'll NEVER be "OK", man. Have you TASTED the fucking food??? Christ, at least when she was only coming downstairs once a week and the room was in the basement and it was dark you didn't have to SEE what they were feeding us. I can't do it, man. No more."
"Fine. Jump. You'll be OK, won't you? You'll be dead. It's the rest of us who have to pick up your burden. But sure, go ahead. Jump, you fucking coward."
"I'll do it. Don't think I won't."
"Fine then. Fucking do it."
"I will."
"DO IT, then."
*splash*
"God damn. He did it. I thought he was bluffing."
"Whoa. Dude. Lookit him flop down there. He's almost under the hutch."
"I hear all he can remember is like 20 seconds. So by now he thinks he's spent his whole life dying."
"Who."
"Never mind."
"Hey, where's Hector?"
"I wonder if I would fit through that crack?"
DAMN NILBO! You crack me up!!!
Funny!
Nilbo's comment about the fish being in the dark leads me to think that the suicide fish were doing what comes natural to animals with pee-sized brains: They were heading towards the light.
That's so sad, and yet, so very funny.
that happened to our fish who was blue. I couldn't find him. I thought he pulled a Nemo and got stuck in the filter.
He blended in with the rocks on the bottom. I asked Shaun, "I thought when fish died, they floated to the top?"
"Not your retarded fish."
From what I understand the other two fish could not take another moment of watching Full House. I mean for Neptunes sake, it would be on like 24/7. Then I would watch Kelly lick the TV when no one was looking.
I have a bad memory and all but I will never get that stupid song out of my head ihave heard it so many time.
"every where you look (every where you look) is a heart."
He didn't seem to enjoy the company of his fellow tankmates, Tanya. But, then again, they were total downers. :)
OMG, nicole, that is too funny! And terrible, but mostly funny.
Welcome, gora_kagaz! Thanks for your comment. And I agree - I love the idea of an aquarium, but in practice the whole thing disgusts me. You should have seen me trying to catch the fish with the net when it was time to clean the tank - their scaly bodies grossed me OUT. I've found a better solution is to pop in the Finding Nemo DVD - one of the options is a continuous underwater scene. No feeding or cleaning required!
Gosh, Andrea, I had no idea this was such a common thing. Fish are stupid.
Crack me up, yonzie!
I've also heard that a fish memory recycles every 15 seconds, William, but I'd never thought through what that meant for my suicidal fish. Wow - I'm both intrigued and depressed by the thought. And the cows! Of course.
Nilbo, That Was Awesome. I adore you.
Tanya, he's all mine. But I will share. I'm totally into that.
Hee, yonzie! Except they'd already been brought upstairs into the light. Maybe they hated the light and thought they could jump back down into the basement. Sadly, we'll never know...they left no note.
Yeah, Sarah. Mostly funny. :)
Thank god you have retarded fish too, Kristine! Although I think I would prefer a dead one sinking into the rocks rather than the upside-down floating corpse. That freaks me OUT.
It seems more likely, Blue, that the other fish were trying to get closer to John Stamos. His sex appeal spans species. The chance to slide down the screen against the image of his hot bod is totally worth flinging oneself out of the tank.
one day it's boobin it up, the next it's dead, dried fish.
never know what you'll find here.
Poor fishies. You should have flashed them your luscious rack. woulda cheered em right up.
that was really suspenseful and funny.
What can I say, Metro? I like to keep y'all on your toes. :)
Ha, Amy! A most excellent plan. And dude, I bet the distortion of the water and/or glass would totally make them look way bigger! Rock.
Hi anna! And thanks.
I thought we had a fish commit suicide once, but I never found the body. I'm convinced another fish ate the WHOLE thing.
ok, that was funny. i think i would have liked to see what a dried up fish looks like actually.
Hi MainlineMom! I once witnessed one fish in an aquarium eating another fish whole. It was horrifying.
It was so shriveled that it was nearly unrecognizable, kristen, except that it had maintained its color and I was able to distinguish the fin.