Lina kicked off her flats at the door, her ears at full attention. She kept her eyes on Nora, who was standing beside her near the door, zipping down her black ankle boots off in silence. For the past twenty minutes, her girlfriend was awfully silent, and that, along with the slight raise in her eyebrows, told Lina that a fight was coming.
I put my flats on the shoe rack, then walked to the kitchen to make coffee; our fight could go long. I came back with the tray that held two small coffee mugs. Nora was sitting on the couch, as expected, crossing one arm over her chest while she wiggled her long brunet hair around her finger, and crossing one leg over another, shaking her white-socked foot, her eyes coldly transfixed at the ground.
"So," I sighed, already eager to get this over with. I placed the coffee tray on the small table in front of Nora then sat on the couch beside her. "How was your day?"
My loving girlfriend rose an eyebrow and nodded, without looking at me, "Marvelous."
"That's nice to hear," I said, with no genuine interest. I wasn't really hoping to start a conversation, but to just wait for Nora to spit it out without having to crawl through the awkward silence. But it looked like the awkward silence was unavoidable, so I found my eyes wondering around the messy living room. My pants and long ankle skirts lying around on the backrest of the other couch, some dishes dirty on the table from our last night's dinner, and random items scattered all around, like my headphones and a ruffled ball of paper which I forgot its content. I remembered, it was Nora's day to clean, but I doubted Nora would take her chores seriously in her current state.
I took a sip of my coffee, saying with my lips over the rim. "Nice having you at work today by the way." I tried to push her further.
"Really?" she said, glancing my way briefly without turning her head. She pushed her brunet hair behind her ear and leaned in, grabbing her cup of coffee. "Not mad that I surprised you like that?"
"You didn't surprise me," I said immediately, hardly able to keep the aggressiveness out of my tone. Surprise implied I had been doing something wrong, and I hadn't been. "Do it every day if you like, you're welcome, I don't mind."
"Bet Anny would mind." She faked a smile before she sipped her coffee. "Don't wanna annoy your colleague."
"She doesn't mind."
"Yeah she does, she doesn't like me, she's made that clear."
"Well, you'll have to excuse my rude colleague, she doesn't feel that kindly towards girls who look at her like this..." I said before I looked at Nora and showed her an imitation of her unfriendly face, which consisted of my eyes narrowing slightly, one eyebrow raising over another, and my upper lip curling up in disgust.
I couldn't help but giggle at seeing her return the exact same face, before Nora shook her head and returned her face to natural, then said, "That's not funny."
"But you get the point." I nodded, controlling my giggles. "It's unwelcoming."
"Well I wouldn't be like that if she had some respect for boundaries."
"She does respect--"
She cut me off with a dismissive wave of her hand as she grimaced in irritation and looked away. I could only frown as I watched my girlfriend grow silent again. I waited patiently for her to move the discussion from her sorry excuse of jealously, and into the real reason she hated me having a job.
When we first moved in together, I welcomed Nora's idea that I didn't have to get a job, as her salary was good enough to support both of us. I liked the idea, for a time.
Relationships could be hard, that was a belief that I had been believing in more and more strongly in the last couple of years. In contrast to what I previously thought, love wasn't enough to have a happy relationship it seemed. Cause at the end of the day, I did love Nora, and there was no doubt in my mind that Nora loved me back.
But Nora was...difficult. Reasoning with her was a dream I had long ago abandoned. But since I couldn't just...let Nora have her way every time--knowing that would cause her growing even more thickheaded--I had to fight, and that was pretty much how our relationship had been going ever since we had moved in. Now, I was 25, with Nora only one year older than me--But for some reason Nora acted like there were ten years between us.
Maybe the one thing we fought about the most was who would wear the pants in our relationship. Nora was obsessive, bossy, loud and braggy, and even though I wasn't, I found myself over and over having to stand up to her aggressive attitude. Respect was an important thing in a relationship, and it seemed it wasn't always granted freely, peacefully. I knew that if I didn't do my best to stand up to her at every turn, it would only result in her growing more demanding, more controlling, more bossy and repulsive.
"I mean..." Nora said looking forward after a long silence. "Why is it that important for you to work. It's not like we need the extra couple of bucks you put on the table."
Here we fucking go. "They pay the bills," I said through gritted teeth. It wasn't an extra couple of bucks. But if there was one thing Nora liked to remind me of more than the fact that I didn't have a college degree, was how insignificant my meager salary was, compared to what her job as an Editor brought a year.
"Bills are already paid." She put a fake smile as she looked at me.
She was right, we could do without my salary. But it wasn't only about the money for me. I liked the freedom that my job provided. When we first started living together, Nora took care of everything: bills, rent, food, making me need for nothing, and it worked out just fine. But months into our new living arrangement, I realized it wasn't going to work.
Nora really had only herself to blame. I was a lazy person, too lazy. That was how hard she'd managed to push me; I gave up my right to laziness cause of her bullshit.
Whenever I wanted something, like a new pair of headphones, or new pair of jeans, or a new channel subscription, or anything that weren't absolutely necessary for my survival, I'd have to fight a war for it, starting with arguing and ending with us basically shouting at each other. It was always like, what's wrong with your headphones, they broke? Why, how? Oh my god you're so stupid, take care of your things. Jeans! Your jeans are fine, Torn? How many times have I told you not to bend like that...They're jeans Lina, they tear. I don't care, you can get two more months of use out of them, if I bring you a new one now you'll not treat it with care, you think I piss gold and silver or something? KFC! KFC! Why the hell do you want KFC for we have chicken and we have flour eggs and milk...matter of fact I'm starving, make us some. No cola, bad for the teeth.
It was true, that I always got all of what I asked for, but not once, had I got it without at least a twenty-minute fight, after which I would always be too mentally drained to even enjoy it. It wasn't like Nora was cheap; the hundreds of expensive gifts and take outs she used to give and take me on while we were dating in highschool and college had been a detriment to how generous she was, especially when it came to spoiling me. So, at least at the start, I had no idea why she acted that way.
So I had gone ahead and landed a job, started a career of my own, as a cashier in our local library.
I only felt how truly mentally draining that arrangement was after I received my first paycheck. That day, I held a big bunch of bills in my hand, and felt free, free to save that money, to buy a month salary's worth of chips, to buy a pair of jeans, then tear them, then buy a pair of jeans, then burn them.