Note: A follow-up to Plunging Into the Abyss per reader request.
Tim
If my wife Diane were the sort of spouse that begrudged my passions, that nagged me every time I left the house alone, it wouldn't be as difficult to face her after what I just did over the last twenty-four hours. But she isn't. In fact, while she doesn't share my passion for exercise generally, cycling specifically, she doesn't begrudge it either. 'Have fun, have a good ride,' is what she said to me before I left the house to meet Addison Weil for what Diane thought was a group bike ride in Ocean City, New Jersey. It WAS a group ride, a "group" ride of two; namely, Addie and myself, and we did things that married people aren't supposed to doโat least if they wish to stay married.
I cringe at the specter of divorce, all the emotional and financial mess that comes with the territory. I've never been there, but couples I know have, and what they go through is not a pretty sight. I love Diane; I'm IN LOVE with Addie. The distinction is clear as fine glass to anyone with the misfortune to stumble into that frustrating situation. Look, I've been married for thirty years. The novelty wore off eons ago. I had accepted the boredom that comes with all that and needs that went unfulfilled simply because I know that no one person can fulfill all needs. In my thirties and even forties, I still lived under the illusion that one person could. At sixty, I know better. In short, I was reasonably comfortable, the best one can expect from being married to the same person most of one's adult life.
Then came Addison Weil to knock me out of my comfort zone. She didn't mean to, nor did I mean for her to. It just happened, as they say. And now I'm just a few miles from my home, where my good wife Diane, I'm sure, is eager to hear what happened in Ocean City. What will I say and how will I say it? The whole truth and nothing but the truth? Maybe, maybe not. Maybe something in between.
Thoughts still meander as I pull my Toyota Matrix into the garage, rack my bike on ceiling hooks and lug my equipment bag into the kitchen. Diane is mixing the salad that will go with our late Sunday lunch, spaghetti and meatballs. She wears an apron over casual blue slacks and a blue pullover blouse. She looks up and pads toward me in house slippers.
"Have fun?"
Something is clearly out of kilter. Stay married as long as us, and you pick up subtleties in behavior. Normally, she'd be all smiles. The smile she wears is pregnant with something other than sweetness and mirth.
"Lots of fun and great weather besides," I say. "Those meatballs look delicious," I add, trying to skate free.
She opens the fridge and takes out the Italian salad dressing. "Glad to hear it. So how many made it down?"
"How many?"
"Yeah. I mean, did you have your usual full crew?" She knows there's about ten riders that make up our 'full crew.'
I dump my equipment bag against a wall, then go to the sink to wash up while Diane sets out the silverware on the kitchen table. "No, not quite."
She stands by the table, arms folded against her chest when I turn around. "Well, I'm curious how many because three people from your group called on the landline on Saturday afternoon wanting to know if you were riding on Sunday. Silly me, I thought they knew all about your group ride in Ocean City. 'Group ride? He didn't tell us,' was their basic reply."
My stomach churns. "Right, well, only one person showed up."
"And who was that?"
"Um, nobody you know. A new rider that joined the Daring Derailleurs a few weeks ago, Addison Weil."
She nods. "Addison. A female, I assume."
"A female, correct." I look down at our meal, the salad, meatballs, spaghetti and Ragu sauce, all in separate serving dishes. It smells deliciousโand I'm losing my appetite.
Briefly, Diane looks away, then faces me again. "And did you know this before you left?"
"Know what, that she'd be the only one coming?"
"Huh huh."
"I figured as much when I got to the ride start and she was the only one there."
"So you lied to me on the phone when you said the GROUP was having such a blast that you all decided to make a night of it."
"Not exactly."
"No? What do you call it?"
I take a deep breath. "Look, I knew how you'd feel if I told you the whole truth, understandably so. She's married too, by the way."
She looks wounded, wounded and mad, glaring at me as if she knows the whole truth but is afraid to ask. "Bet her husband wasn't there, was he?" She bares her teeth.
"No. He doesn't ride."
"And if he did, would he have joined you?"
"Possibly. Look, Dianeโ"
"Don't look Diane me, okay? You fucking lied to me. Next, I suppose you'll tell me this isn't what it looks like. Or, to drudge up another clichรฉ, you can explain everything."
I imagine myself on the edge of a quarry, daring myself to plunge into the deep, cold water. Friends egg me on, shouting for me to jump. 'Chicken, gutless wimp,' they yell. Still, I freeze, knowing I'm damned either way, risking life and limb by jumping, risking cries of coward by not.
I sit down and motion for her to do the same. We face each other over a wood table large enough to sit four. She puts her hands in her lap, tucks her arms close to her sides, hunches her shoulders. It's a comfortable AC-cooled seventy-something degrees in here, but you'd think it's around freezing with the way she's sitting. Steam no longer rises from the spaghetti, meatballs and sauce. Our meal is getting cold.
"I can't explain everything, just some things," I say.
"That's a start."
"I've been faithful to you as long as we've been married, thirty years. I never cheated, not once. I didn't plan on what happened this weekend. Addie and I planned to ride down the coast, hit the beach if we had time and then head home. Same as we would have done had the rest of our group showed up. That really was the plan. Then, well, something else happened."
"Something you weren't about to tell me had those riders not called, right?"
"Honestly, I don't know. I wasn't sure how to handle the situation."
She bangs her fist on the table, begins to cry. Her pale skin reddens. "Damn you, Tim, damn you! So what is this Addison to you, pussy on the side or something more?"
"I don't know." I lie.
"You don't know? The hell you don't know. See, Tim, if she's just pussy on the side, you'd tell me. 'Oh, it doesn't mean anything, we were both horny.' Something like that. And that might even get you off the hook. It would take me a while to trust you again, but I might so long as you promised to end it. But your reaction tells me she's more than just a POA." She reaches for a tissue, blows her nose. "There's more to it, isn't there?"
I still stand on the edge of that quarry, frozen and sad. God, how I hate situations in life when you're confronted with nothing but hideous choices. "I still love you, Diane," I say, and mean it. "I never stopped loving you."
She looks down, shakes her head, chokes back sobs. "But you also love someone else, don't you? Some young chick who's in good shape, who rides bikes, who's slimmer and trimmer than your aging, dumpy, overweight, sedentary wife."
I squirm and grip the edges of my chair, desperate for wiggle room. "First of all, she's no young chick. She's around your age, mid-fifties. And second, love her? It's more infatuation than anything else." The second part isn't a lie but hardly the whole truth either.