It had been a challenging couple of years, and recently it had only gotten worse. I wasn't sure what had caused our problems, what had caused my once loving and devoted husband to begin distancing himself from me, both physically and emotionally, but it had been happening. I could feel it like a layer of frost developing between us, and I was unable to thaw it. Oh I had tried, God how I had tried.
At first, when I noticed that he seemed to be pulling away from me, I had put it down to stress. James has a difficult and demanding job, I knew that. But he had always had challenges in his work life and yet they had never encroached upon our marriage before. Not like this. Perhaps the issues lay with me then? Had I changed, had I given him pause for concern? I had always loved him, ever since our first date.
He had taken me out to lunch because I was new to Sydney, having arrived only a week before from Perth, without family and without friends. He took pity on me he said, felt sorry because I was so alone and lost. He worked in the same office as me, and had been the IT guy that came to help me out when I had the ubiquitous issues a new starter normally has, and as we sat at the pub for a counter lunch and he chatted about the massive and new city I found myself in, I heard nothing of it, saw nothing but his eyes and his smile. I was instantly smitten.
With James pulling away from me more and more, with our tender caresses becoming fewer, and our time between the sheets dropping to alarming levels, I must admit that I feared he was having an affair. We had been together for close to twenty years by now and in my shame, I doubted him. I confessed to our daughter that I thought her father might be stepping out on me, and I wore a slap from her for my troubles. So, after talking with some friends, and even sending in an anonymous letter to one of those newspaper relationship columns, I did what everyone seemed to be advising me to do. I talked to him and tried to simultaneously up my game.
James, though, dismissed my concerns. "There's nothing to worry about Nikki," he had said, with his voice even tempered, some might say devoid of emotion. Yet his eyes spoke volumes to me. There was something, and it indeed was something to worry about. Every attempt I made to get him to open up was rebuffed, gently but firmly. My attempts to woo him back physically also seemed doomed to failure. I had returned to the gym, I had trimmed up, toned up, gotten a new wardrobe of lingerie and tried to tantalize and titillate my man. Yet for the first time ever, he began to turn down my approaches. I was crushed, I was embarrassed, I was hurt. Yet I never gave up.
I had tried to tempt him with dates, with trips to places that I knew he loved to do things I knew he liked. And though we went on many, they always seemed to be dispassionate and lacking.
Finally, at wits end, and though I knew my daughter Olive would be offended and angry, I again started to think that James was visiting his charms upon another. James is a smart man, so I had to go cap in hand to my parents for help, both financially and logistically. Private Investigators aren't cheap, and James would certainly know something was amiss. My parents and James had never really gotten along. And as I spoke to my mother in particular, she seemed to take a form of guilty pleasure in the fact that he might be, or as she said "Is definitely," cheating on me. But though the PI firm was tasked twice with tracking him over a period of twelve months, it came back clean. He was not having an affair, even though he did travel a great deal for work now and had plenty of opportunity.
Then, since Olive's eighteenth birthday a couple of weeks ago, James was barely speaking to me. He was spending more and more time away from the house and away from me. If he wasn't on trips for work, it was time with his friends, or visiting relatives and extended family, or who knows what. My husband was now a part-time room mate, and nothing more. It broke my heart. It devastated me.
And now, here I was, forty one years old, sitting in my office at work, with tears glistening in my eyes, threatening at any minute to break their dam and rush down my cheeks in an unending torrent.
"Are you ok, Nikki?"
It was Cheryl, a work colleague and close friend. She had stuck her head into my office earlier in the day to enquire about lunch, but I'd only mumbled a half-answer back to her. Now it seemed she was checking in again as the lunch break was approaching rapidly.
"Nikki?"
I looked up and tried to smile. But it must have been horrible to see. Cheryl's face scrunched up, the worry evident on her round but pretty face.
"Oh Nikki."
She raced to my side as the dam broke and I wept openly, suddenly choking back large gulps of air in my misery as I struggled to find rhythm in my breathing.
"He's left me."
It was all I could get out. I heard, more than saw the door close with a firm thud. The world was blurry as I tried to see past the tears, past my misery. A shape that must have been Cheryl settled in by my side, and I soon had a tissue wiping at my face. Cheryl knew of the problems that I had been having with James, she was one of the few friends that I confided in previously. She and her husband, Mattias, were friends of ours, and she had begged me to speak to James, to get him to "Unburden his soul and whatever is eating at him." She didn't believe that he could or would cheat, or that he had fallen out of love with me.
Now the tissue wiped at my nose, and I realised that it had filled with snot. I tried to blow it out when Cheryl told me, it was running down my face onto my lips and into my mouth, and cascading down over my chin. I could barely clear it. The tears, the sadness, the great bursts of sobbing became wailing.
I heard something else, a door? Then Cheryl mumbled something to someone and it closed again.
"He left me Cher, he's gone."
And the tears didn't stop flowing.
She held me, gripped me tight and rocked me back and forth, whispering something, I'm not sure what the words were, but it was clear they were an attempt to sooth me, to assuage my pain, as though I was a toddler who'd scraped my knee and everything was going to be alright. But it wasn't. It never would be again.
I reached for the letter, and clumsily, I pushed it into her hand. I hadn't read it all, I had stopped almost as soon as I started, when the tears stole my ability to read more than the first few words.
"What's this?" she asked quietly, concern in her voice.
"Letter," I sobbed. "Came this morning, with this." I held up the small circle of gold. James' wedding band. And the tears came again. "Read it to me, please. I can't.. I can't do it, I can't."
Cheryl took the letter and I think she put it back on the desk. I'm not sure, I buried my face into her shoulder and clung on for dear life, as though she were my only floatation device and I risked drowning in an ocean of despair and self pity.
"Later Nikki," she started.
"Now!"
My single word response was hoarse, my voice muffled by her embrace. "Now." I said again, quieter, pleading, begging.
"Nikki," she appealed, "please, this is personal. I shouldn't." she continued, trying perhaps to save me some dignity. But I had none. Not anymore.
"Read it. Please."
And so she did.
"Nikki," she started after picking the letter back up, and trying to both hold me close, and manipulate the letter such that she could read it easily. "I'll stop anytime." I nodded.
"Nikki," her voice was shaking as she read the missive of my marriage's demise. "I am leaving, something I thought I'd never say, write or consider, but here it is. In fact, leaving is not the correct phrase, I have already left. I'm gone and I am not coming back. You broke my heart." Cheryl stopped as I gasped.
"Broke his heart? How?" I asked. What had I done to make my James leave and leave broken-hearted? I was the one whose heart had been broken, broken by the decline of my marriage, and then his sudden departure. He hadn't even considered doing it in person, to be honest and open with me. I had received a letter at work, and his ring. It was cold, and it was cruel.