The Gathering of Friends
This story was inspired by an excellent minimalist story called "Suffer" by blackelite1. I think the ability of one short story to inspire another is a sign of a well-written and engaging tale that captures the reader and stimulates their imagination. Because their story inspired this, I took the liberty of recycling the names as well.
This is a story of the end of a marriage.
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Adrian stood silently, his tears mixing freely with the light, misty rain as it struck his face. The last three weeks had been nothing less than a journey through Hell, but that journey would end tonight. He stood by the corner of his property, hidden by trees, as he watched the figures moving as silhouettes in the bedroom window. How considerate of them to close the curtains! If he hadn't already known, the car in the driveway would have been enough to reveal the identity of his wife's visitor. Caleb had always been the one ne'er do well within their group of friends. He was the underachiever who seemed to pass from job to job without ever forming a real commitment to anything. He seemed to handle relationships in much the same way, but for some reason he had attached himself to Adrian's group of friends and never left.
Adrian struggled to remember how he came to join their little circle of friends, and for the life of him he could not remember. He had occasionally overheard the wives talking about Caleb and they seldom had anything good to say. It seems they tolerated him because he was a friend to their husbands. In rare instances, the husbands would also complain about Caleb, and it seemed they tolerated him more out of habit than intention. It is true that Caleb could sometimes be amusing but rarely was he helpful. To say the least, he was not the one you would call when you needed assistance. Adrian might have been the only one who saw something good in Caleb, and he would come to his defense on those moments when the complaints grew too loud. That, too, ends tonight.
Adrian struggled to gain control of his anger as his pain fueled his imagination with images of retribution. He would smash Caleb's face, break his ribs, and stomp on his balls, but whenever his fantasies of revenge turned to his wife, they dissipated. He loved her. Living a life without him would be the only revenge he could embrace. She would be out of his life, and he would move on to rebuild.