He stood at the moment in which we all have at some point, to our regret, shared: the instant when our goals, hopes, and dreams collide with reality. Standing in his foyer, Elliott Smalling listened to the sounds of his wife having energetic sex in the master bedroom a floor above him and realized that his marriage had just committed suicide.
Elliott recalled what she had last told him: "There's nothing wrong with
us
. I just need a little
me time
."
It brought to his mind the ongoing debate that he, as an advertising copywriter, had with himself many times about the nature of words. He trusted the words of his wife because he wanted to believe that there was a path past a bump in the road to the good life he had always envisioned. But in the back of his mind he had known that much like sex can be disconnected from love, words can be detached from meaning, allowing two people to say different things with the same words.
Elliott considered it most damaging that her lies had been designed to keep him in the dark so that he could be her unwitting support system, like an ant infected with
Ophiocordyceps unilateralis
, the fungus that takes over the brain of the insect and compels it to climb as high as it can so the parasite can release its spores, killing the ant in the process. He recalled the insight of Tom Wolfe:
Evolution came to an end when the human beast developed speech! As soon as he became not
Homo sapiens
, "man reasoning," but
Homo loquax
, "man talking"! Speech gave the human beast far more than an ingenious tool. Speech was a veritable nuclear weapon! It gave the human beast the powers of reason, complex memory, and long-term planning, eventually in the form of print and engineering plans.
It reminded him of what Hamlet said when interrogated by Polonius about what he was reading: "words, words, words." They could mean something, or simply be a means to an end, conning someone into going along with a plan to their detriment. Well, thought Elliott, that had clearly happened. He was the beta man paying for the house in which his wife railed an alpha stud; as the old saying goes, "alpha fucks, beta bucks." Karl Marx would say that time is money, and this meant that she was stealing from him the one non-renewable resource in his life, his time.
Unlike most men in men's fiction, who raged and drank and beat people up, or women in women's fiction, who cried and blamed themselves and ventured on introspective journeys to find out where they had gone wrong, he simply felt loss. Something which could have been good was now ruined forever. Even if he took her back, he could not forget, and could never trust her words again, nor really esteem her as he had. She had revealed something ugly in herself that she had, out of selfishness, chosen to give the upper hand.
He sagged for a minute against the railing of the stairs; all of the energy and light had left him and he felt hollow. He felt like his workday had extended itself. He now had to handle this mess and avoid damage to his constituents, the three children they shared, since having grown up in the midst of the Boomer divorce epidemic, he knew that divorce shattered children as well as families, generally leading to drug and alcohol problems among other self-destructive behaviors well into adult life.
When a sweaty Marina Smalling opened the master bedroom door to acquire refreshing soft drinks for herself and her lover, she found her husband in full business attire, standing in front of a white board.
"What the fuck?" she said, then caught herself. "Elliott, it's not what it looks like! It's --"
Her husband held out a hand. "Send the meat puppet home, and we'll talk." Her lover, whom Elliott recognized as one of the more outspoken volunteers from the nature center where she had been spending a lot of her free time over the past two years, departed hastily with a furtive glance over his shoulder.
Elliott pointed to the white board, which read:
L
=
P
2
/
R
"In this case,
L
is likelihood of someone taking a particular action,
R
is risk, and
P
is payoff. Payoff is squared -- that's your power law -- but divided by risk. When risk is too high, unless the payoff is astronomical, humans avoid acting. But if the payoff is huge and risk low, we take action. This tells me that you consider the loss of your marriage to be either a low risk or a mild loss."
Elliott took a deep breath. "I consider that to be mostly the result of divorce laws in our state," he said. "If we divorce, you get the kids, alimony, child support, and half of everything that I have, including my business. This gives you incentive to cheat, basically, which I hoped was counter-balanced by your desire to remain with me and have a happy life together to the end of time. Mathematically, that tells us that you are no longer looking forward to that prospect and either want a way out, or want me to take on a lesser role, like cuckold."
"Either way," he said, "it means something to me, as a man and a human being, which is that you are no longer
looking forward to
my company. If I die tomorrow, you will not really have lost out, will you? Same if I were to just pack up and leave. Sure, you'd miss me when the lawn needed mowing, the bills paid, the kids entertained, or the back door oiled, but other than these humdrum everyday activities that any man can do, you would be fine on your own."
"Elliott, I --" Marina began.
"Take a word of advice: don't. Whatever you are going to say right now, statistically speaking, will most likely be a lie." He pointed to the whiteboard. "You can see here the four possible use cases that face us now.
Attendez, s'il vous plaît.
"
Breach:
you cheat, I stay, and I will feel wronged and retaliate.
Reconciliation:
you stop cheating, I stay, and there will be a goodwill gap here because trust is lost.
Dissolution:
you cheat, I leave, and the kids are harmed the most but there is no dishonesty.
Merger:
you cheat, I cheat, and we give the kids a normal home but no longer rely on trust.
"Now, as you know," said Elliott, "I have tried to avoid bringing my work mentality into our house. I really dislike the people who treat their wives and children like coworkers or contractors. It has that creepy
Brave New World
and
Star Trek
feel to it, a kind of
bourgeois
convenience that fuses technological consumerism with a Soviet-style functionalism. I guess that's the
zeitgeist
of how the postwar world turned out. But you are going to have to choose one of these paths."