It’s been a long time coming. I’d lie down beside her in the short winter evenings and it would seem she just wouldn’t be there. Gone, absent some place. I wasn’t used to it, at least not from her. I’ve always been a bit anti-social compared to her flitting nature, but she had always been so happy with me before. Nevertheless, there had been 12 years of marriage and I was not oblivious to the changes that can come about.
Foraging in the chat rooms, the busy schedules of caring parents, I was a part of the whole scene. But I never remembered a time so distant as before this last Christmas party for her company and co-workers.
She tended to pretend to be as anti-social as I am, though I never quite believed. Of course, during the quietness that ensued after her latest one, she must have expected some prodding from me. Especially as I was not invited, and she didn’t come home until close to 5 a.m. in the morning.
The day following, she had seemed a bit depressed, or a bit distant. I couldn’t tell which. She attended to the children as normally as ever, but there was a palpable feeling of distance between me and her, which I never addressed, until one night several days after the party, when she rolled over in bed, embraced me forcefully, and said, “I love you.”
I was a bit taken aback. “What brought all this on?” I asked. I was serious, and thought it to be an easy enough question, but she laid her sweet head against my shoulder and began to weep.
“What’s the matter?” I asked. Her weeping gradually subsided into sighs and long breaths, but she kept a tight hold of me, an action I had not experienced in quite some time, so it will be understood that it had an anatomical effect on me. She must have felt my growing desire, because she pushed away slightly, as though feeling guilty for causing it.
“There’s been a change,” she said, bluntly.
“What on Earth are you talking about?” I asked, with my sleepiness vanishing like a cloud.
“The night of the party. I did something that – it’s going to change things, John.”
Now I was silent, and I couldn’t figure how to break it. A thousand questions raced through my mind. I had told her a thousand times, “I’m not jealous of you,” and yet here I was, and I was jealous and worried. I knew it was something sexual, because anything else, and it would have been matter-of-fact, easy communication. There was only one subject that caused her to be so shy.
Eventually, then, after a long and awkward silence during which we almost held each other, I asked, “Well what is so terrible that it makes it so difficult for you to talk to me?”
Again, there was a long and awkward silence. “There are some things I haven’t been telling you about,” she said. And that’s all she said, and I could feel beneath the flimsy fabric of my boxers, my penis was addled, wiggling in confusion, not really knowing what to do, and leaking love juices nevertheless.
There is really no good way to walk across a bridge of nails; no good way to swim through fire; no good way to impale oneself on a bed of thorns. “Okay,” I said, and then I merely thought of the possibilities. A thousand thoughts coursed through me in only a few seconds.
She must love me, I thought, first, since she is even talking. Also, she was as uncomfortable as I with the distance I’d felt the past few days. I wondered if she’d had sex with another man? Another woman? We’d broached all these subjects long ago, and I almost laughed, and would have if not for her serious mood, when I asked, “Well can you tell me about it?”
“I want to,” she said, and once again, left me in the dark.
Now taking her more seriously, I said, “Well, I did notice that you came home rather late. There must have been something going on.” Now I did dare to chuckle a little bit. “Oh come on, how serious can it be? Did you get a little bit drunk and do it with another guy?”
Now, her long silence seemed odd, and to my surprise, I began to entertain fantasies that that is exactly what happened, and I was surprised to find my love organ writhing in subdued excitement, not to mention wetness.
A couple of times she glanced up in the bedroom darkness to meet my eyes with hers. I could just make out her open eyes in the darkness, flashing dimly from the Christmas lights somehow penetrating our bedroom curtains. But she would look down again, too quickly, and she didn’t draw me any closer, still keeping her distance. The distance was now beginning to seem like torture.
“You’re my best friend,” she eventually said, without looking at my eyes this time. My mind, by now, was doing gyrations, trying to brace itself for any possible consequence. I kept waiting and waiting for the next part, but it never came. I swallowed, wanting to press my body against hers, make her feel my heart pounding out its lust for her. But there was something up, it wasn’t right, and I knew it. So I waited.
When it seemed that my waiting was all that was left, I finally asked, “And?”
Silence has a rhythm all its own. Amanda had always played it perfectly, and tonight was no exception. “John,” she said: “I kind of fell in love with another man.”
I was (I fancied) prepared for almost anything but this. We’d been sexually adventurous, accepting, liberal, open and honest. My pronouncement of long ago came back to haunt me: “Amanda, I love you. If you tire of me, if you have to move on, I’ll want you to go; I don’t want to own you, I only want the privilege of loving you.” I disliked hearing the echo of my own voice from years ago.
Perhaps it was my occupation as a financial analyst that allowed me to find my voice again and say: “Okay. And so, what are the options now?” My soul wanted to add, “my love,” but something inside wouldn’t let me. As adequately as I thought I had conquered jealousy, in my liberal beliefs and sexual fantasizing, this situation was too much.
“You have to hear the rest of it,” she said. I tried to think of something to respond with.
I was still struggling when she spoke again. “You’re still my best friend!” I could hear her swallow.
“Did you have sex?” I asked. A heartbeat passed, and she turned over on her back and began to laugh. I didn’t think it was so funny.
“Oh no!” she finally said, catching her breath. “That’s the idiocy of it.”
“I don’t understand,” I finally stuttered.
“I know. I’ll have to explain it,” she offered.
Now, I don’t know how most people would react in this sort of situation, but the truth is, I love, and have loved for as long as I can remember, my wife Amanda. Against what I normally would have expected from myself, I felt not anger, but compassion. I remembered my early days, before Amanda, when I had been so enamored of girls who wouldn’t give me a second glance. I knew what that felt like. And so, for some reason, I was able to go on having this conversation without becoming upset.
“Amanda,” I said, “I’m sorry. I wanted you to love only me, for always.”
“I do love you!” she said. “Oh, this is hard.”
It’s odd, how understanding can lag so far behind knowledge. Although we’d been distant the past several days, I never felt her lack of love, so I had the knowledge that she loved me. But it was hard to understand what was going on. Now, my understanding started to catch up.
“Do you want to talk about what happened at the party?”
“Nothing happened! That’s just it!”
“Oh,” I said, slow to catch on. “You wanted something to happen.”
Here was another one of those long, uncomfortable silences. “Yes,” she said, “I wanted something to happen, and I stayed until midnight, trying to make it happen.”
Now, here I am, with almost nothing on, in bed with my wife, also with almost nothing on, trying to fashion a response to this new information. And yet, she has just expressed her love for me. I’ve also remembered my pronouncement from years before, and I wonder now if I am just a bad liar.
Befuddlement was overtaking me. She did something, but nothing happened. She stayed at the party until midnight, but didn’t come home until 5 a.m.
I felt at this point that I had to decide whether I was her ally or her enemy. I swear, it was hard to decide, because I couldn’t tell what she wanted. Does she want a future with me? Does she want to continue raising the children with me? Does she want freedom? Am I boring her?
Oddly, I think some decisions come without warning. And sometimes without a lot of reason. For whatever reason, I determined I would be her ally, come what may. It’s a decision I’ve not regretted.
“I’m so sorry,” I finally said. Now, she looked at me with those big, soft cow eyes that made me fall in love with her in the fist place.
“You’re kidding,” she said, tentatively.