AUTHOR'S NOTE:
I'll be honest: This isn't a pure Loving Wives story. Sure, there's a divorce and all that crap, but I wanted to explore some different themes. In my first LW story, I wrote a suspense story about revenge on the cheating wife. In the second, I wrote about how a husband deals with the immediate aftermath of discovering his wife's infidelity. Here, I wanted to take a longer look. I wanted the husband to question whether the relationship was doomed to fail from the beginning, whether his own make up contributed to things, and whether he can learn from past mistakes and move on. So I guess this really could've fit into any of several categories.
I picked to post this in LW for several reasons, though. First, DanielQSteele's current "When We Were Married" saga really got me off my ass to write something a bit longer and more involved. No, this isn't as involved as that one, but it's the longest thing I've written in some time. Second, as usual, I really love the comments in this section. Call me a comment whore, but they really tend to be more numerous and more in depth. (Hats off and many thanks to HarryinVA, Angiquesophie, Harddaysknight, Ohio, DanielQSteele, Curiouss, Juanwildone, Bruce22, and so on and so on.) Third, my last epic (choke sputter) work was a 9-chapter story published in Novels/Novellas, and nobody read the goddamned thing. At least in LW, I know it'll get read.
Finally, I confess to pandering. To those who complained not enough sex in the last one, this one will have a few sex scenes. (If you want too much sex, then read the aforementioned 9-part Knox County series; it's loaded with sex.) There is no sex, though, in this first part. I think you'll see why.
I'll do my damnedest to get this written as quickly as possible and post as soon as I can, but no promises. Sorry.
Thanks again, and please take a moment to comment when you're done.
*
ONE
It was 2:30, the dead time between the lunch rush and the dinner crowd. The bar was damned near empty, and the waitresses had already cleaned up and gone home for a few hours before the dinner shift. In other words, the perfect time to either make up the evening's specials or work on new recipes. And that's what I was doing now: Trying to come up with the perfect carrot soup.
Sounds easy, you say? Not really. Sure, I could cook a ton of crappy, woody carrots in some water mixed with salt-drenched soup base, puree the whole crappy mess, stir in some cream at the end and call it carrot soup. But that's not what I do. No, the perfect carrot soup needs to taste like a silky mouthful of carrots. Okay, not really carrots the way you think of them. Think silky carrots on steroids, carrots where you can taste the sweetness and have a velvety mouth feel that makes you want to lick the whole damned bowl clean and say, "Holy shit, I never realized I liked carrots that much!" When you've done that, you've come up with the perfect carrot soup. And when your produce purveyor has given you a great price on several boxes of farm fresh carrots, this is what you do.
I had been working on this half the morning and for the past hour after the kitchen clean up. What I'd come up with so far was cutting the ends off the carrots, running them through a mandoline to shave them to an eighth of an inch, saute over medium heat in butter, then add some minced shallots, celery, and garlic, quickly add some cinnamon to allow the oils to come out, then top with stock and simmer until it was all soft and the flavors melded. Once done, blend the whole thing, run it through a fine mesh strainer, and add some cream. Reheat the now smooth, orange, velvety goodness, and taste. It was still missing something.
"Taste this," I said to Clara as she strode past me toward the back door.
She got a frustrated, I-need-to-get-the-hell-out-of-here look, and leaned over the steam tables with her mouth open. She took a slurp and let it sit in her mouth before swallowing. Then she raised her eyebrows at me and nodded.
"Close," she said.
"And?"
"Fennel bulb," she announced. "Try some fennel bulb with the saute."
We'd been doing this for the nine years I'd owned the place, and she somehow always knew how to make something better. Still, fennel bulb?
"Really?"
She nodded. "Not too much," she said, shrugging into her jacket. "But definitely fennel bulb."
And with that, she was gone until the next morning.
And me? I went back to square one and used fennel bulb. A half hour later, I was nodding my head in amazement. In my defense, though, it was better with the wild fennel bulb than with the regular old fennel bulb. More mild, but still adding a depth of flavor that accentuated the sweetness of the carrots.
I was crumbling a molasses cookie into the center of a soup bowl--the crunchy texture and warm spice of the cookie chunks would contrast nicely with the soup--when the bartender stuck his head in the kitchen.
"Phone," he said, then turned and walked back to the bar.
I ladled the soup around the cookie, grabbed a handful of spoons, and carried it out to the bar. The usual after work crowd was just drifting in, and they perked up at the sight of the bowl in my hand.
"What're we trying today?" Lonnie Mackie asked, sitting straighter on his barstool to get a peek.
"Carrot soup," I said.
"Carrot soup?" he said, the disappointment etched on his face.
"Try it," I said, placing it between him and his workmate, Charlie Ford. "Good for your eyesight."
"Fuck my eyesight," he grumbled, picking up a spoon as I walked toward the phone behind the bar.
"It's Nina," Mitch said, handing me the phone before pulling out some beers for the regulars walking through the door.
"Hey babe," I said into the phone. "What's up?"
"Not much," she said, sounding nervous. "I was wondering what time you'll be home."
"Sixish."
She paused, and I decided to wait her out. She'd been like this for the past few weeks, all quiet and pensive and skittish. My first few attempts to bridge the gap had not gone over too well, but the last week had taught me that patiently waiting her out went miles toward soothing the tensions.
"For sure?" she finally said.
"Pretty much," I responded. "Why? You need me to get something?"
"No," she sighed. "I was just wondering if you could watch the girls for awhile tonight. I've got a party to go to."
"A party?"
"Yeah," she said, sounding defensive. "You know. One of those Pampered Chef things."
I chuckled. Pampered Chef? Overpriced crap. "How about you stay home instead? Maybe pamper this chef?"
"It's a girl from work," she continued, ignoring my comments. "She's doing it to save up for a car. I just thought, you know, maybe I could go get some things from her."
"Yeah," I said. "I don't see a problem there." Well, maybe I did see a problem. Still, the mood she'd been in lately, I thought it better not to complain. Better to just let her unwind however she thought best.
"Please be home by six, okay?"
"Sure, babe," I said. "Six it is."
"Thanks," she said, sounding relieved for the first time since I'd come on the phone. "I really . . . well . . . thanks, Tim."
"Sure," I responded, wondering what she had almost said. "I'll see you then."
And before I could say more, she hung up on me. Not even so much as a 'Bye,' let alone an 'I love you.'