There is NO explicit sex in this story.
"Honey, it's not what it looks like. I can explain."
Right! That pathetic bit of sophistry has been around since before the dawn of recorded history. I'm sure the first chronicled account appeared in a set of drawings on the wall of a cave.
The first picture would have shown the offended mate catching his woman in flagrante delicto, his club over his shoulder. Her hands are up in a gesture that tells him to wait. "Honey, it's not what it looks like. I can explain," she must have been saying. The next picture would show her explanation. The interloper has a bigger club. He has killed more prey and is better able to support her children. That was probably the most powerful explanation available at the time. It is not, however, available to my husband.
I can't believe after all the crap I've had to put up with he does this to me.
He's a writer. That means he gets to stay home and do God knows what, while I go to work every day to earn the paycheck that pays the bills. Perhaps I overstate it. He does make money writing, sometimes pretty good money. But it's not consistent, and without my paycheck, our house would belong to the bank.
He's actually a pretty good writer. I won't deny that. I'll even concede that he probably works longer hours to produce his stories and articles than I do to produce an income. But he does some really crazy stuff.
Last August he insisted I come with him on a stakeout. Who were we staking out? A woman I work with. Why her? Why not her?
I took a vacation day to go on an adventure with him and where do we wind up? Outside my office, waiting for her to get off of work.
"I could have told you when to show up. She works the same hours as me."
"But she might leave early."
"She never leaves early. We're sitting out here dripping and thirsty and we could have just showed up at ten to five."
"You have to respect the process."
"What process? I know where she's going β home. I know when she's leaving β five. What kind of stupid process is this?"
"You start with things you know about the subject, and you watch them to learn what doesn't fit the pattern; things that can reveal their secrets."
"What if she doesn't have any secrets?"
"Then that's what we'll learn."
"Can you take me home now?"
"No. We'd lose her. Who knows what information we might miss out on?"
"Yeah. Who knows?"
"Besides, unless I sit out here hour after boring hour, how am I going to be able to accurately describe what it's like to stake somebody out, to follow them? How else can I find the few moments that might be worth writing about except to experience it? How else could I realize I should have brought a bottle of water than to recognize I'm so thirsty it hurts? It might never have occurred to me had I just assumed what it would be like."
"I share your pain."
Outside of the fact that she treated herself to a solo dinner at the Italian Restaurant around the corner from her apartment, I did learn one extremely valuable life lesson. Before you engage in any important life activity, whether it be following someone you work with for no earthly reason, taking a certification exam, that big meeting at work or getting married, for God's sake go to the bathroom! It wasn't until she got to that restaurant and ordered dinner that I could finally get out of the car and waddle with my thighs tightly pressed together to the nearby Taco Bell for relief. I swear that when I saw myself in the mirror I looked jaundiced.
That was far from our only adventure. One night I was awakened by the phone at 3:13 A.M. Johnny was not in bed next to me. The phone call explained why. The police had him in custody for being drunk and disorderly. It made no sense. I had never seen him drink to the point where he lost control. That was irrelevant. He needed me to come down to the station to pick him up.
According to the officer, he had no ID with him and it had taken this long for him to sober up enough to tell them who he was and how to contact me. They were kind enough to let him sleep some of it off and be taken home without charging him. The fact that he had no criminal record tipped the scales for them.
As surprising as this was, his explanation on the way home astounded me.
"How could you let yourself get so drunk that the police had to pick you up?"
"I wasn't that drunk."
They all say that. Was he a closet alcoholic?
"I just did it to get arrested."
"Do I look that stupid?"
"No, really. I had to find out what it was like to get arrested. But even more important, I had to find out what it was like to stay in jail. That's why I left my wallet home."
I was silent. It wasn't that I was angry. This was just too bizarre to comprehend. What kind of questions do you ask when he tells you this kind of yarn?
"I also had to pretend to stay drunk for a while in jail because I wanted to know how vulnerable a street drunk is in a cell with real bad guys."
Now I was angry. "Do you have any idea what could have happened to you in there?"