This story starts toward the bottom of page 2 of GeorgeAnderson's classic Lit story February Sucks. At least 50 follow on stories have appeared so far, I guess because his story fascinates so many Lit readers, including me. I couldn't resist adding my take. The first line is from GeorgeAnderson's story, the rest is my own effort.
Thank you to blackrandl1958 for her editorial assistance.
" I turned on my heel and stalked out of the club."
As I left the club, I realized I was in shock: my heart rate was up, I was having difficulty breathing, my skin felt clammy. I did manage to walk back to the hotel and went up to our room. On the bed, what had been an inviting king size bed, was the new lingerie Linda had brought to wear when we shared that bed. I sat down, held that lingerie to my face and wept. Wept like I never had before: wept for myself, for my marriage, for my children, for my parents and Linda's parents, even I think for Linda a bit. If she were thinking, she had to know our marriage was over, but in Asshole's bed she probably wasn't thinking.
Eventually, the weeping subsided. Sadness enveloped me, but inside an anger was developing that I knew would emerge at some point. I put the lingerie down, looked around the room and decided on my next steps. We had each brought an overnight bag. I repacked mine, I threw Linda's stuff into hers: her clothes, toiletries, perfumes, all the stuff women seem to need even for just one night. I left the room with both bags and left Linda's bag in the hallway on the way to the elevator. Too bad if she never got it back.
At the lobby desk I checked out. The clerk asked if something was wrong with the room.
"No, the room was fine. A personal matter came up and I need to leave." He did comp the parking and had my car pulled around. As I drove away, I realized I could not go get the kids in the middle of the night. They were staying with FIL and MIL; I had started calling my father in law FIL just after Linda and I married, and eventually called her mother MIL, just to follow along.
FIL was a hell of a guy. A Vietnam vet, he walked with just a bit of a limp, and you could see the beginnings of scars when he was not wearing sox. I asked MIL about it once, and she said he never talked about it. They had not met until a few years after he was home and out of the army, and she had learned his Vietnam experience was better left unbroached. Sometimes, he would be standing in their backyard, just standing there, like he was studying the woods behind their property. MIL told me to leave him alone, but once I did go out and asked if he were ok.
"Jim, life is good today," he said, "but I am still learning, decades later, to leave the past in the past. When bad things from the past rear up, I just have to ride them back down. Give me a few minutes, and I'll be inside to talk about grand kids and our miserable football team." I did leave him, and he did walk in a few minutes later and, just as he said, we talked about grand kids and football.
Since I didn't feel right driving to FIL's and MIL's house in the middle of the night, I drove home, parked and went inside. The house was very different than it had been a few hours ago. Then it had been happy: noisy with two kids getting ready to go to their grandparents for the night, loving with two parents looking at each other with those special, intimate looks only a loving husband and wife can give each other, in anticipation of very special times to come later that evening. But now, the house was dark, cold, sterile, no noise, no happiness. I knew I was imagining it, but even the house seemed to have some sense of foreboding.
I went upstairs to our bedroom and lay down, still in my clothes, to try to sleep, but when I closed my eyes I could see Linda and Asshole, in bed together, her moaning and making noises only I had ever heard her make. I started to cry again, but then sat up.
"Fuck this, I'm not going to sleep anyway," I said out loud. I got out of bed and went back downstairs, pulled on a coat and headed out to the backyard. As I stood there, looking up at the stars, I realized I was standing like FIL stands sometimes. And I thought about what he said: "when bad things rear up, you just have to ride them back down." What the fuck does that even mean, I wondered. It certainly doesn't mean I have to accept what Linda has done, FUCK, what she was doing right then. I'm not sure how long I stood there, feeling sorry for myself, but eventually I saw a bit of light creeping in from the east.
Still too early to go get the kids, so I decided to go for a run: burn some energy, eat up some time, take my mind off thinking mode for a while. For me, running has always been a great alternative to real life: besides being great exercise, it really does disengage my mind so my thoughts freewheel around my brain. And sometimes I even come up with helpful ideas. I changed into my winter running clothes and set off.
Perhaps not the best idea, because my mind really did disengage. Good news: I guess I had a really great run, because I didn't think about Linda and Asshole for at least an hour. Bad news: I was at least an hour away from home, exhausted, no money and no cell phone. I did see that I was close to a 24-hour convenience store. I went in and begged use of the clerk's cell phone. Understandably, she did not let me even touch her phone, but she did call a taxi for me. The taxi arrived, drove me home and I ran inside to get some money to pay the driver. By the time I had a shower, it was still early morning, but not too early to go get my kids.
I drove over to FIL and MIL's, about a 30-minute drive. Of course, they were all up when I arrived, and I realized they were getting ready to go to church. I guess I just stared at them, and FIL pulled me aside to ask what was going on, where was Linda? I just looked at him, and then, god dammit, I started crying again. He wrapped me up in a hug and sat me down.
"Jim, is Linda okay? Has there been an accident? Tell me what's going on." I took a deep breath, and thought about making up some story, but instead the whole horrible night came spilling out of me. FIL was shaking his head, I think partly in disbelief that
his
daughter could do what Linda had done and was still doing with Asshole.
"Jim, go to church with us this morning. I know you don't usually go, and I'm not suggesting God is going to give you an answer, but just sitting with us, with your two kids, in a calming, serene place, I think it would be good for you." I had no reason not to go with them, no real reason to take the kids home early, so I pulled myself together and walked outside with them. Thankfully, we weren't going in FIL's truck. He drives a giant Ford F250 HD with a snowplow attachment on the front and extra weights on the back to give it more traction in snow and ice. One of his parttime jobs in retirement is snowplowing. I think he just likes doing it, because he doesn't charge much. Anyway, we got into MIL's SUV. The kids sat in the back with me, one on each side. They could tell something was wrong and just held my hands.