--THIS IS THE PART WHERE YOU REALIZE EVERY
BROKEN WINDOW IS A PIECE OF YOU
Firm
At
my wife’s office party, someone gets the idea to share dark secrets. The only rule is the secrets have to be true
and something no one knows.
We’re
all a bit drunk, and so we write our confessions down on slips of notebook paper,
tossing them into a Tupperware bowl that smells of paste and buttered popcorn.
K.
plies his fingers through the heap like he’s tossing a salad or massaging
someone’s scalp. He does this with his
eyes closed, humming mystically.
“Here
goes,” K. says, reading the first one:
“I once caught
Dad in bed with another man. My father
was wearing earrings, lipstick and a wedding dress.”
Even
though that’s not my secret, I still feel queasy and guilty, as if everyone in
the room thinks it’s mine.
But
nobody comments. No one even seems to
breathe.
Next
K. reads:
“My uncle came
to live with us when I was eight. For
four years, he sexually abused me several times a week. When I finally told my mother, she slapped me
and called me a little slut.”
There’s
still no air, no response from anyone, though several of us reach for our
drinks and take long pulls.
It
goes on like this for over an hour, forever, until the Tupperware bowl is empty
and we’re all sweaty and trembling.
Afterward,
when K. says, “Group hug?” no one moves.
I
think about the weak secret I shared, the one that got read aloud, but then I
think about the thing I should have shared, what I’ve never told anyone--how I wed
my wife in order to be near her already-married sister, who I really love.
When
K. says, “I’m impressed. You were all quite brave,” my wife leans in, clutches
my hand, giving it a firm squeeze.
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