How do women respond when faced with the dreadful reality of men being unfaithful in their marriage. This story is about a wife being touched by the very same issue and who tries to cope with the situation by being more adventurous with her new acquaintance.
--------------------------------
I finish cleaning the kitchen and boys' bathrooms before nine o'clock. It's fortunate that the one for guests shines as an example, as well as ours, the one by the bedroom, which I took care of yesterday. When Richard was with Barbara, they had a cleaning lady. Whenever I mentioned it, he disarmingly said, "But Barbara worked six days a week and you're at home". After all, my job is not a job, since I do not go to the office and earn the national average.
To think that I intentionally took fewer assignments in order to spend more time with my family. He loved me for who I was. In contrast to Barbara, I did not travel abroad every month. It was the receptionist she employed at her dentist's office who reminded her of the wedding anniversary and the boys' birthdays.
In the beginning, I was a dream come true: a quiet, modest traditionalist with a non-burdensome job as an editor, dreaming of family and home. The ahs and oohs I heard regarding my culinary skills and the reticent statements he made during business dinners, when he was still taking me to them. Praise about my hidden talent for ironing shirts and color sorting clothes.
Yes, I liked it. Ironing really relaxed me, and the clothes stacked in the wardrobes gave me a sense of control and balance. "You're my treasure, I'll hide you so no feminists find you," Richard laughed, and I thought it was quite funny at first. Because I was doing what I wanted...
***
"What are you up to?" Richard looks over my shoulder at the laptop on the kitchen table.
"What do you mean?" I sound like my stepson Jacob, for which I immediately chastised myself. "Why do you ask?" You haven't talked to me like that in a long time.
"Because it's been a while since you made your famous Wellington sirloin."
"I go above and beyond on special occasions."
"I invited Martha and her husband to dinner tomorrow. It would be nice to prepare something special, you know how picky they are."
"Tomorrow?" I look up at him.
I have a book to finish and I promised to have it back by the end of the week, but Richard has no idea. He insisted I quit my job for so long, so persuaded me that I finally agreed. And I started taking jobs behind his back, if only to cover my own expenses.
Eh, those dinners with Martha and Ron. Like Richard, they are doctors and during these meetings they only discuss work. Undoubtedly there are more suitable topics that can be discussed at dinner, and yet the descriptions of female secretions, diseases and physiology in general do not spoil their appetite.
I do not like Martha at all. For many years, she and Richard shared one surgery office before opening their own clinic for women, so they spent a lot of time together. Richard sometimes seems more concerned with Martha's problems than with mine. In any case, according to him, I have no bigger problems than the fact that the salt runs out or that the boys do not oversleep for school.
Martha treats difficult pregnancies, detects cancer at an early stage, which means that she generally saves lives. In addition to working in a clinic, she teaches at the university. You can't help but look pale around her. I understand that it's not right to be jealous of someone who does so much good for others, but I have a strong impression that this woman is holding back a lot to hide her superiority.
***
I give fifty dollars to my overly greedy and ungrateful stepsons when we arrive at the shopping center. The only way to finish shopping in peace is to send Jacob and Michael to the movies. Initially, they didn't want to stay home, now they exhaust me with various requests: they insist I get another t-shirt or a new video game. Today, I have no time for this, and even less money. Expenses of this nature must be negotiated with Richard in advance. Which boys are putting on me, no surprise there.
While at the supermarket I load up as much as I need to prepare a whole week's worth of meals in my basket. In the end, I pack my bags into the car and am pleased to say that there is still half an hour until the end of the screening. I need coffee as much as my disheveled hair needs a conditioner. I would be satisfied with frothed milk for coffee, but I am tempted by the cakes at Marry Dane today.
"Latte macchiato," I say sleepily to the young saleswoman. "And a piece of black walnut" I add before I change my mind.
A warm, yet refreshing scent follows me behind. Something like citrus in moss. It's sweet and fruity, but slightly rough at the same time.
"Double espresso," the man says as I put my wallet in my purse.
A happy tune seems to emanate from his voice. As if a "double espresso" was a tease, a provocation. As soon as I sit down at the table with a piece of cake and my coffee, I discreetly glance at him. White shirt open at the neck. Black narrow suit pants. Jacket slung nonchalantly over one shoulder.
Tall but not overwhelmingly thin, with thick, wavy, wheat-colored hair and pale eyes. I don't see their color, I'm sitting too far away, and haven't picked up the glasses I usually work with. He has golden skin, as if he just came back from skiing or the tropics, and a bossy smile. Plus a humped nose, large mouth, strong jaw and clearly defined cheekbones. His features are so sharp and distinctive that they become beautiful. Definitely magnetic.
I feel like I've seen that face which reminds me a bit of Vincent Cassel in the best of times. The clerk smiles at him as if the archangel Gabriel himself had descended to her from Giotto's fresco and heralded the birth of her royal descendant. Yes, a guy like him can definitely steal a woman's soul with just a look.
The husk of a walnut slides between my top ones as I grin to myself. Damn it. The same as always. Bloody diastema. My tongue involuntarily moves over the gap between the teeth, trying to push the scale out with the tip, but to no avail. I dive into a cavernous bag in search of a toothpick. I should have taken them with me...
"Is this seat taken?" That teasing sound again. Or rather, something along those lines.
Blue-green. His eyes are blue-green like Madagascar sapphires. That's a moronic comparison, but I recently saw these stones in an advertisement for some jewelry company.
There is an archangel standing over my table, a tray in his hands. I look behind me. Empty tables all around. Interesting. Maybe a Jehovah's witness, you never know these days or perhaps an interviewer. I look at him - there aren't any gadgets under his arm. Besides, he's way too well dressed. But who sits next to a stranger when there are plenty of vacancies nearby? Crazy, he's got to be.
"I don't like eating alone" he says in an even happier tone, and my goodness, he gives me a smile that could melt the frosting on my piece of cake.
"Sorry, I didn't mean to scare you". While he may look a little crunching, in his case, total seriousness may not be possible.
A thought just occurred to me, perhaps there are hidden cameras? Another look around, but only truants are walking nearby.
"You can always scream."
I realize I am still staring at him with my mouth open as he tilts his head innocently.
"Okay, I'm not disturbing you, have a nice day" he says, pretending to be contrite, of course in a very exaggerated way, and starts to move in a different direction.
"No! I cry a little too loudly." Please sit down. You surprised me.
He turns and takes his seat on the other side of the table.
This man has a fascinating face: his features go from angelic to demonic in an instant.