Danny's wife offered me coffee as she explained that my best friend was out of town. I'd known of his trip but had forgotten. It was Monday night and I was here for the usual football game and beers. Michelle tolerated me. She was slightly suspicious, I think, of my single lifestyle and my influence over Danny. To tell the truth, we did not get along; we were opposites. I was sort of free and clumsy, taking things as they came and letting the next day take care of any trouble. Michelle was contained and totally in control. Things in the world seemed to move towards her as she needed them, events fitted themselves to her plans, people fell in line. She irritated me with her smugness and I'm sure I irritated her. She was tall, her flesh firmly shaped to her frame, unblemished and with a natural tan. She always wore her blond hair tightly scrimped into a bun. Her glasses were large; objects of practical use, not aesthetic in any way. Her clothes were likewise practical; they were like the model answers to questions the weather and temperature asked. I couldn't imagine her ever being caught out with the wrong coat or without a jersey if needed.
I sat on a stool at the kitchen counter and watched Michelle slide effortlessly through the required motions of making coffee. Her grey skirt fitted like a second skin around her hips and beneath her short, tailored grey jacket she wore a white top. The lapels of the jacket accentuated the mound of her breasts. In the background NPR prattled on. Outside a late fall sunset had painted the horizon an improbable pink. The tick of the radiators measured the slow passage of time.
"You can stay and watch if you want," she said in a voice that was almost husky.
"Watch what?" I asked, noisily sipping the hot coffee.
"The football of course, or whatever it is that you watch," she replied, annoyed.
I continued loudly sipping my coffee, mainly because I could see it irritated her. I could see that she didn't know what else to say to me, but she was too polite to just abandon me in the kitchen. Suddenly I remembered something from earlier in the day. Danny's car crookedly parked in the back of a restaurant on Route 7. But Danny had already left town.
"So what were you doing at the Lantana at lunchtime today?" I asked. Michelle first went pale and then a mottled red. It was most flustered I'd ever seen her.
"What are you talking about?" she stammered.
In these kinds of situations I let my instincts guide me.
"The guy I saw you with in the restaurant. Who is he?" I had, of course, not seen anything of the sort. I'd just driven by and seen Danny's SUV crookedly parked.
She said nothing. Instead she pulled my cup away and filled it from the pot, spilling a little on the counter. Her hand was trembling.
"He's just a friend. Why are you asking me these questions?"
This time I sipped my coffee silently, looking at her from above the rip of the cup.
"He looked like more than a friend to me," I said, achieving a renewal of the blush. "Does Danny know about your friend?" I asked. Again she said nothing, this time turning away from me.
"Look," she said quietly, fearfully, "it's nothing. I just went to lunch with a guy from work. That's all, nothing happened. It was just lunch."
"And in the car afterwards," I said, wildly guessing, "what about that?"
Michelle spun around, her eyes now wide with a feral fear. "Were you spying on me?" she demanded.
I spoke calmly, softly, reasonably. "I saw what I saw. I wonder what Danny will make of this? I truly do; his perfect little wife out whoring herself in crappy Italian restaurants.
"It wasn't crappy," Michelle said. There was a moment of silence before we both laughed breaking the tension for a moment. She stepped closer to me and rested her elbows on the counter top, her face level with mine. There was a depth to her brown eyes I hadn't noticed before; a certain sadness perhaps. She gently bit against her bottom lip as she pondered her words.
"I know we haven't always got along," she said softly, "I don't really know why. Perhaps it's because I see in you something of myself, something I wish wasn't there. I love Danny," she went on after a short pause, "you have to believe that. I have my demons but he's happy; we're happy. I don't want to destroy that, I can't destroy that. So I'm begging you, Paul, please don't say anything to him. It will crush him. You know it will."
I ran my finger along the rim of the empty coffee cup, allowing her words to echo a while in the silence of the house.
"Then why suck off guys in parking lots?" I asked, fixing her eyes with mine.
"Please, I'm not trying to excuse myself. I know what I did was wrong. Jesus, don't you think I know what I'm risking when I do this stuff?"
"This stuff?" I interrupted. "How often do you do this stuff? How many men have there been?"
She stood up and walked away, pausing in the kitchen doorway. "I don't have to explain myself to you," she shouted, "fuck you, fuck you!"
I listened to her stomp angrily up the stairs. I fetched a couple of Danny's beers from the fridge and followed her. The bedroom door was closed. I didn't knock.
Michelle was sitting cross-legged on the bed. Her skirt was hiked up around her thighs, the stretched fabric of her red panties clearly visible. She made no attempt to cover herself. She had shed her jacket revealing the sleeveless white top. Across her lap was a magazine on which was spread the dried, crumbled leaves of marijuana which she was mixing with tobacco. A small freezer packet of dope was on the bed next an orange pack of cigarette papers and a cheap lighter. I shifted some of Danny's clothes onto the floor and flopped down into a plush green chair. I twisted off the cap of a beer bottle.
"Full of surprises aren't you" I remarked. She said nothing. I watched her expertly roll the joint and lick the gummed edge of the paper. She flicked the lighter and squinted as the smoke curled up before she inhaled deeply. A single bedside lamp battled the gloom of the day's end. Outside an autumnal breeze whistled through the telephones lines. I drank the beer down and opened another. Michelle shifted off the bed and doused her joint in my discarded beer bottle. She walked over to the window, her back to me.
"So, Paul the Inquisitor, what do you want to know? What will save my soul?"
"I'm serious," I said. "I think Danny deserves to know what kind of wife he has. I would want to know myself. Why shouldn't I apply the same standard?" She said nothing. I could see the uncertainty in her shoulders and in the tilt of her neck. She didn't believe me but she also didn't trust me. I pulled out my cell phone.
"Let me see, there are eleven numbers to dial, that's all. And then ... bang, your fake marriage is over. Eleven numbers and then just the slightest pressure on the send button and that's it for you."