Note: This is a companion piece to "Dare to Dog," following the evening from the perspective of the man on the bus. Like the other chapters, this is a standalone story and the other parts are not required to understand or enjoy it.
I knew my marriage was over. It was the married equivalent of 'dead man walking.'
Six years is a long time to go in a relationship that probably never should have got off the ground in the first place. Six years of fooling myself into thinking that it could get better. Six long years of ignoring the signs of just how much worse it could really be.
I guess I'd known, well, since the honeymoon. I just didn't want to admit it to myself. After all, who wants to confess to themselves and the world that they'd made a terrible mistake?
One of Elizabeth's relatives had given us a cheap, discount timeshare week as a wedding gift in Spain. I'd never been to a timeshare before and had considered it an adventure. She'd never been to a timeshare before and considered it beneath her.
She'd sent me off to get coffee that first morning, but the 'cafΓ©' was little more than a cabinet and a coffee pot. They'd not even had proper styrofoam cups to carry hot liquid, only those tiny transparent cold cups.
The girl behind the counter had filled them with boiling hot coffee as if it were a normal, every day occurrence. I looked at her as if she was having a laugh, but she was completely serious.
"Uh," I stammered. We'd already established that she didn't speak English and I didn't speak Spanish. "
Leche? Sucre?
" I hoped that my ability to remember Spanish words through osmosis was at least understandable. Was
sucre
the Spanish word for
sugar?
I couldn't remember, but it was the best I could do.
She shook her head. I looked at the cups worriedly, but going back empty-handed wasn't an option. Like I said, I should have seen the signs even then.
I seriously questioned the wisdom of trying to carry them back to the room on the other side of the property, especially since they didn't even have napkins to wrap around the cups. Slowly I tried walking without spilling. I failed numerous times. It would have been comical if it wasn't so absolutely pathetic.
As luck would have it, our room was the last one in the last building on the opposite side of the property. I had to kick the door with my foot in order to get her to open it, as my hands were full. The look on her face told me just how annoyed she was that I'd made her answer the door instead of opening it myself.
My new bride was a "strong woman," I'd told myself. I liked strong women. She didn't take crap from anyone. Opinionated. Intelligent. I liked that. Somehow I'd convinced myself that these were her characteristics - all positive takes on what I would come to find out are simply sugar coating that she was, in fact, an abusive bitch.
"Hot, hot, hot," I said as I gingerly crossed the threshold and put the cups on the kitchen counter.
Burned fingers. Tiny drops of coffee on the floor. The berating began.
"What's that?"
"They didn't have any hot cups," I'd said.
"And the cream and sugar?"
"They didn't have any."
"You expect me to believe that they didn't have any hot cups, cream or sugar at 8 o'clock in the morning?" Her voice was nasty.
I ran my fingers under the cold tap. I hadn't believed it myself, but it was what it was. The water was soothing at first, but forced me to wince anyway. This was going to blister.
"Did you
ask
," she accused.
"Of course I asked," I said, trying to keep my voice calm.
"Go back and ask again," she said, turning to leave the kitchen.
I snorted. "I don't think so," I said. My fingers were really starting to sting. "If I go anywhere it's to find a first-aid kit."
She came over and looked at my hands. Angry red welts were starting to form on a couple of my fingers. She looked up at me. "Don't be such a pussy," she said.
She picked up one of the cups and sucked in air as the hot liquid immediately scalded her own hands. I noted the satisfaction I felt that she had gotten a taste of what I had experienced, even if the liquid had cooled considerably during my careful balancing act on the way back to the room.
"Yeah, well," she said dismissively. "I don't want it now."
She threw the coffee down the drain in the sink where I was rinsing my fingers under the cold water. Immediately afterwards, she flipped her hair dismissively as she turned and walked into the bedroom.
The thought came unbidden and violently.
My god, what have I done?
It had been less than 48 hours since the wedding. Had I really just married the wrong woman? No, that couldn't be. I couldn't have been
that
stupid, right?
Why
had
I gone through with it? I knew I could never recount the coffee story to anyone without them asking the question. Who would knowingly go through such pain and agony for a woman who showed no appreciation - someone who was
proud
of the fact that she "didn't do sympathy?"
I was scared of her and didn't even know it. I was scared that if I had returned to the room with only black coffee (which I drank) and nothing for her, I'd catch hell. If I returned empty handed when there was coffee at all, I'd get it. If I'd sat and drank coffee at the cafe alone, I'd get it. The path of least resistance seemed to simply suffer through bringing something she didn't want in the hopes that I might avoid some of her wrath.
It wouldn't be the last time that the warning signs were there. I'd lost count of just how many times I wondered why we were together. Of course, it wasn't like that every day. Just
most
days, it seemed.
Elizabeth was one of the most beautiful women I'd ever met in my entire life. She also had a wicked sense of humor. I think the moment that I fell in love with her was the first time we'd found ourselves in bed and she amused herself (and me) by having an entire conversation with my penis during our first blowjob.
"Oh, look!" she'd said. "He likes it when I talk to it!"
I'd watched, fascinated, as she cooed and told me how cute it was before engulfing me into her throat.