--I HAVE BEEN QUIETLY STANDING IN THE SHADE
Wives and Women
You notice the sag, the pale, drawn-down
look of your husband’s face, how it resembles balloon rubber now, or a frozen
mudslide stitched with white stubble. He
snores coronet-high, head craned against the love seat, exposing his Adam’s
apple as if offering his throat to a guillotine.
You remember the long ago sting of his
fresh kisses, how his urgent grip once left you fondling bruises at night in
your dorm room after he’d left. You’d
wept like a dolt then, recalling how he made your pelvis flinch as he counted
fields of freckles on your back, his voice a purr.
The woman across the lake is a lot like
you, or so you want to believe. Her
husband of forty-seven years passed away in August after enduring a protracted
bout with prostate cancer. You can see
her through your binoculars, pulling weeds in her hand-me-down garden. All these bumpy years, yet she’s held love
strong, weaved through the gullies and ditches every marriage eventually faces.
You watch the old woman bend and pluck,
watch her wipe sweat from her brow and stretch.
She must be near seventy. What a
solid soul. What a fine role she’s
played.
In the car, you don’t have any specific
destination in mind. You know you are
not the neighbor across the lake and quite frankly you no longer care to be
like her. You’ll drive and keep driving,
even if it’s off a cliff.
You wonder if your husband will even
notice your absence upon his waking, or maybe he stopped looking years
ago. Never mind, you’d rather eat razors
than ever again have to hear his lips smacking as he eats casserole with his
mouth open, farting in between bites.
Oh sure, you might be a bad woman, a
despicable wife, but you no longer care.
Instead you roll the car window down and let the wind disrupt your hair. You only know five or six swear words, and
still you use them all, even as they come out sing-songy in the flustered
breeze.
When the cop pulls you over for
speeding, you giggle like a toddler.
“What’s going on?” he asks, but you
won’t say. Telling him might ruin
everything, and besides, there’s a good chance he wouldn’t understand anyway.
The officer gives you a pass for
speeding.
You drive over the canyons and down into
a valley. Even in the dark of night, you
feel lighter than you ever have.
Back To Good
The man in line at the bank looks
exactly like you, only a younger version of you, a you with all his hair and
that hair brown and bark-colored like it once was.
He has his driver’s license out, pinched
between two fingers, and when you check, sure enough it says Len Kuntz and
gives your address, your date of birth, weight and eye color.
A shudder ripples through your left
shoulder like a stroke.
You’re about to tap him on the shoulder
when the teller calls him forth.
You check the clock on the wall, match
the time to the watch on your wrist, examine the blank faces of the people
around you and confirm that you’re not in some kind of time continuum gap. This is real, this is your life.
And now the other you is moving toward
the door. You leave your place in line
and bolt after him, after you.
You worry you might startle the guy,
that he’ll think you’re a whack job but you’ve no choice except to address what
your own eyes see, so before he steps into the car, you say, “Hey, Len, hold up.”
He turns, his face showing no signs of
registering recognition, but neither is he annoyed.
“What up?” he says, using your trademark
greeting from the mid 90’s.
“So, you’re like me, a younger me?”
“What if I am?”
“How can there be two of us?”
“When did you start asking so many
questions?”
“I’m different, now that I’m older. I’m not as good.”
“Not as good? Not as good as what?”
“I’m not a great human being.”
“Don’t kid yourself—I’m not exactly
winning trophies.”
“Where does it go wrong, between you and
me, between how old you are and how old I am now?”
“Again with the questions.”
“Please,” you say. “I feel so lonely. I’ve lost everything.”
“All right, all right. You’re not going to start bawling here in the
parking lot are you? That granny over
there is staring.”
You glimpse the stooped white-haired
woman the other you has just referenced.
You turn to the other you and say, “I
don’t get why you’re here, but since you are, can’t you just give me one bit of
advice, just a nugget, a pebble of anything to help reverse the damage I’ve
caused.”
The other you with your then lithe
jawline considers your request. The other
you has no bags under his eyes, no wrinkles or jowly flaps drooping off his
cheeks. The other you is a handsome
fuck.
“How fair would that be?” the other you
says.
“Please.”
“You’re always taking short cuts, always
trying to use white out to make up for the shit you do.”
“So I’m hopeless?” you ask, your heart a
dull stone sweating acid.
“Confess.”
“Huh?”
“Start there. Tell everyone everything, every little
bit. Make yourself as small as you can,
and once you’re very, very tiny, take a breath and start fresh.”
“Are you serious? That’s your fucking advice.”
“You were the one asking.”
You watch your younger self smirk before
driving off in the convertible BMW you’ll later total on a rainy night after a
drunken work party.
The sun is a scalding diamond in the
sky. You feel dizzy, frazzled. And still you take out your cellphone and
dial. When you ex-wife answers, you stutter
initially, but then you start and find a cadence and you don’t stop talking
until the purge is complete. You say, “I’m
sorry,” repeatedly. You fold your ego
into a thin envelope. You let your ex-wife
scream and swear. You blink back
tears. You start to shrink a
little. Your bones crick while
redacting. The pain is blistering and
still you feel yourself smile, because this is the beginning of become small
and tiny, the beginning of a way back to good.
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