Wendy was forever leaving stuff around the house, wherever she happened to last be using whatever it was. "Have you seen my hairbrush?" or "Have you seen my earrings?" she would ask, presumably expecting me to keep track of her various belongings. Earlier in our married life I had made the mistake of picking up after her and then taking the blame two days later when she had once again mislaid an item. I was trying to be helpful, but quickly realised that the safest course of action was not to move any of her stuff. All of which explains why I left her handbag at the top of the stairs when I saw it lying there that Saturday morning.
I went downstairs to the kitchen and started making breakfast. Wendy's routine on a Saturday was to lie in bed until I had made fresh coffee and warmed up some bread in the oven. I had just poured myself a cup of Vietnamese Sang Tao Number 8 when I heard the surprised cry, the rumble and thump and the moans of pain. It didn't take a genius to work out that she had fallen down the stairs. How bad was it? Our trip to the local hospital saw her back home that afternoon with a neck brace, bruising to the face and a very nasty looking black eye. No bones broken, although the doc who checked her out asked her to go back for a routine follow up on Monday morning.
We had a very quiet weekend. Wendy took some painkillers and spent most of the time lying in bed, talking to her mum and various friends on her mobile phone and doing some shallow internet socialising as far as I could tell. My role seemed to be as some sort of butler or nurse. She did get out in the garden for some fresh air on Sunday morning, but the weather was not very friendly and she went back indoors quite soon, leaving me to get on with the autumnal tasks of pruning bushes and sweeping up dead leaves.
Our next door neighbour, Bob, a builder by trade, was busy with the same tasks, but when Wendy went indoors he stopped what he was doing and came over to the garden wall, clearly looking to chat with me.
"Hi, Dave. I saw your wife this morning. Is she OK?" he asked.
"She'll recover." I replied.
"How did it happen?"
"Oh, she blamed me. Said it was bound to happen, she was a bit careless, but it was basically my fault. She seems to think I was trying to trip her up, or something."
Bob seemed quite surprised. "Wow! Is that what she said?"
"Yes. Anyway, I think she's learned her lesson."
Bob was still looking a bit nonplussed. "Well..." he said, "I think you're being very understanding, given the circumstances. If she needs a shoulder to cry on, Marjorie can be very discreet."
Bob turned away to get on with his gardening, leaving me to scratch my head. Bob's wife Marjorie was a nice lady, but I thought it a bit odd that he was providing reassurance about her discretion. Presumably he thought Wendy would not want the local gossips chin-wagging about her clumsiness.
On Monday morning I drove Wendy over to the hospital and waited while she got her check up. I called my boss to let him know that I would be a bit late. Wendy was a while longer than I expected, as it seems the hospital has a one to one interview with the patient if the injuries could possibly have been the result of domestic violence. Better safe than sorry, I suppose. Anyway, I eventually dropped Wendy off at the bank where she works as a loan officer and got into my office later that morning.
I work as a government purchasing manager, so my work schedule is fairly flexible and I have my own separate room, not because I'm important, but mainly so that meetings with suppliers and colleagues are completely confidential.
Not long after I got settled in that morning I started getting phone calls from some of Wendy's friends and colleagues and I was glad to have that privacy. They all seemed to doubt her explanation that she fell downstairs. The callers were all women who didn't believe Wendy was that clumsy and they were either seeking reassurance from me or threatening me or both. Of course I protested my innocence, but they were all quite adamant. Jenny, her best friend at the bank, told me that even if everyone went along with the line that the black eye, bruising and sprained neck were the result of an accident, she hoped I would exercise some restraint if I was ever tempted to be violent towards Wendy.
That afternoon it seems news of Wendy's injuries reached our office, probably via Jenny's husband, George, who is a colleague. Anyhow, our boss came by to see me. I've always had a good working relationship with Jimmy and we are very straightforward with one another. However he took me completely by surprise when he asked if I needed to take some time off to deal with any domestic issues that I might have. As I hesitated, he went on to say that he could help to arrange counselling or anger management therapy if that would get things back on track. By this time I was beginning to realise that the louder my denials, the less weight they seemed to carry. I just told him things were okay and that we didn't need to start making this into a major incident.
By the end of the day I was getting tired of protesting my innocence, so when I pulled up outside our house that evening to be greeted by our other neighbour telling me that "Hitting a woman is no way to get even", my reply was simply to say, "You're absolutely right, Steve." I walked on up the path to our front door, but as I was putting my key in the lock, I thought about what he had just said. What was he implying? If he had misunderstood what had happened and jumped to the wrong conclusion, it would have been simpler for him to have said that hitting a woman is unforgivable. That would have been very straightforward and to the point. But why did he think I would be getting even? Maybe he thought Wendy had damaged the car or ruined my favourite shirt or something like that. Strange that he thought I'd raise a hand in anger towards her under any circumstances.
Wendy was home early, having been told to take sick leave for the rest of the week. It seems the bank thought she needed rest and recuperation, or more likely they didn't want to have her battered and bruised face in front of the customers. She said she was worried that people doubted her story about having fallen downstairs. Clearly, she was having the same trouble as I was, but there's not much you can do if some folk have their own version of reality. I didn't think there was any point in telling her that her friends and colleagues had been giving me a hard time, so I made dinner and we ate quietly, then we watched TV for a while before going to bed.