My Fragile Male Ego
Copyright 2022, by B. Watson
One of my favorite stories is Jezzaz's
Words
, in which a cuckolded husband completely destroys his wife and her paramour--as well as their relationship--with little more than a few carefully chosen words. While explosive, extravagant revenge can be a lot of fun, there's something about a thoughtfully-crafted surgical strike that shows us our own weakness and cruelty. Bones knit and stitches fade, but realizing that you're a completely worthless douchebag...yeah, that's going to leave a mark.
This is my attempt at that sort of thing. If long, dialogue-heavy, completely sex-free stories in which the MC tries to take the high road aren't your bag, please feel free to give this one a miss.
It was our last argument, after I had Patricia served with the papers, but before we went to court. We were both pretending, playing a part for each other. I was pretending that I was still willing to talk things out, even though the coffin lid had slammed shut on our marriage as soon as the private investigator showed me a picture of her making out with Bradley Jacobs. By five minutes into their first video, it was in the grave and I was dumping dirt on the lid.
As for Patricia, I don't know exactly what she was pretending. Maybe that her continued infidelity was still a legitimate matter for discussion? Maybe that there was some way for us to reasonably agree that we would remain married while she fucked Bradley on the side? My wife, Patricia Wilson,
nee
Anderson is a lawyer--in fact, Bradley is one of her paralegals--and finding ways to be "reasonable" about completely unreasonable things is what she does for a living. At home, I suppose she does it
pro bono
: the phrase "Matt, be reasonable" has been a regular refrain for most of our 25-year marriage.
After I served her with the papers, though, she added another phrase to her repertoire: "fragile male ego." As in, "Matt, this isn't about me and about who I do or don't sleep with. It's about your fragile male ego."
God, I hate that phrase. And, sure enough, we weren't too far into this last discussion before she decided to throw it down:
"Matt, if you could see past your fragile male ego, you'd realize that this doesn't threaten you at all." She gave me her most reassuring--her most
reasonable
--smile. "I don't love him, and in a few months we'll both move on. You and I can still ride off into the sunset together."
I had to give Patricia credit: she had a lot of balls. While she was saying this, she was fingering the stem of a glass of her favorite unoaked Australian chardonnay, which was sitting right next to a manila folder on our kitchen table. The folder, in turn, contained my petition for divorce as well as a few of the racier photos that the PI managed to capture.
In other words, the Titanic had hit the iceberg, the band was playing "Nearer My God to Thee," and they were leading the women and children to the lifeboats. Meanwhile, there was Patricia, saying that if I could be
reasonable
, if I could just get past my
fragile male ego
, we might still be able to make it to port.
The thing is, Patricia thought we were still negotiating, but I was done with working things out. I was going for closure.
"Patricia, let's stop for a second," I said, cutting her off mid-sentence. "You keep talking about my fragile male ego, telling me that, if I could just get beyond that, we'd all be fine. What exactly to you mean by that? By fragile male ego?"
She frowned for a moment, a little miffed about being interrupted. "Well, it's really simple, Matt. You're afraid of competition. You're worried that, somehow, you won't measure up." She smiled at me again--fond, slightly condescending. "But, honey, you don't need to worry. You're my guy. You're my man."
"And what is Bradley?"
She colored. "Bradley...well, Bradley's just a plaything. Like a dildo or a piece of exercise equipment. I'm not going to replace you or fall out of love with you. You have nothing to worry about."
I gave her a little frown, the slightly-dumbfounded look that husbands master when they want their wives to feel superior--usually so we can get away with something. "So, to be clear, you think that I'm worried that you're going to fall out of love with me, or replace me with a younger model?" She nodded, the fond smile widening. "And you see me as being a bit fragile about this? You think I need to be reassured?"
"Exactly! And sweetie, you have
nothing
to worry about."
I spoke slowly, as if I was piecing this out. "And somehow, this fragility is related to me being a man?"
She patted my hand. Fond. Condescending. "Oh, honey, it's not just you. All men have fragile egos." Her smile widened. "That's part of what we wives do. We prop up our guys, build you up."
I wanted to yell at her, ask her how in the hell screwing a 25-year-old was supposed to prop me up, but I knew that would only make her dig in her heels. I wasn't surprised that Patricia bought into the whole pop psychology women-are-stronger-than-men shtick--we'd been dancing around this nonsense for years. But I was tired, we were almost at the end, and I was done dancing.
"You know, Patricia, you've been using that phrase for a while," I said, eyes boring into her. "I've let it slide--one of the things I've learned after 25 years with you is to pick my battles. But if there's one thing I want to leave you with today, it's an understanding of just how much that whole argument is total bullshit." She started to object, but I kept going. "The reason people focus on the 'fragile male ego' is because it seems like an abnormality. It's like the testicles--how many times have you seen some silly video where a guy gets hit in the nuts?"
She nodded. She was going to let me go with this for a bit before pulling me back in. "A lot."