Surrounded by packing boxes and lawyers' bills the Hapless Husband asks, How did it happen?
If you want to know why she cheated you need to accept that like many women your wife lied to you when you shared your sexual histories. Remember that night? A little drunk, limbs entwined, whispering for no real reason, the hooks of love snagging on your fast beating heart. I call it a lie but your wife meant no malice. Some experiences just don't count, are not included in the "official number." The number was seven, remember? Everything neatly accounted for, the ex-boyfriends, the stories, names, and dates -- everything seemingly tallied up. You had no reason to be suspicious, not with a girl like her. And she was gorgeous -- not tall but perfectly proportioned with a smile that brought down the defenses of the grumpiest person. She left out the others because, well, they happened so long ago and the men didn't mean anything to her, and she was a little ashamed of herself. Such editing is only natural and it happens all the time. Usually it doesn't matter but your case, Hapless Husband, it mattered a lot.
Your wife didn't cheat because she was unhappy. In fact, she was content with your marriage. She had no real complaints. You did nothing wrong the day it all started.
You had a silly argument about the laundry. You don't remember it? Of course you don't. Why should you? "You need to separate the whites from the colors. You can't dump everything in at once." That's what she said. "You yell at me if I don't do the laundry and you yell at me if I do. Make up your mind." That's what you said. It went on for a while. And then the silence.
Your wife, Alice, sat, angry, on the bed upstairs while you sat, angry, in front of the TV. She scrolled through her Facebook newsfeed. A friend request popped up from a guy at work. He was someone in the IT department who had fixed a glitch the previous week. She hesitated, not wanting to mix work with family and friends, but she decided it was harmless and clicked "confirm."
The dialogue box on your wife's laptop popped into view as you became absorbed in a History Channel show about military hardware, the laundry argument receding into the distance. They didn't chat for long and it was completely innocent, of course. But it was the beginning, so I thought you should know.
Now you probably think that they started screwing straight away. You're angry. But the point of this exercise, Hapless Husband, is to explain the reality of your wife's betrayal and for that you have to be patient. Nothing happened for weeks. Their occasional interactions were completely normal -- professional but friendly. Then one night the dialogue box popped back into view and everything changed.
IT guy typed "Your skirt was so tight today ;)."Your wife stared at the screen. She didn't know what to say. If you had been in the room you would have heard her characteristic snort of amusement. The cursor blinked an invitation. Let's step back a moment to try to understand what happened next.
Your wife likes attention. You know that, of course. Although, in the interest of accuracy we should add you'd forgotten this fact about Alice. Really, when was the last time you complemented her looks? She's a pretty girl, your wife. You never meant to stop remarking on her appearance. It was never a conscious decision. And we should also say that your wife did not much notice your lack of admiring attention. However, when she read "Your skirt was so tight today ;)" it gave her a thrill. She had been noticed, seen, admired, looked at. In the end she settled on "Thank you," and that neutral sounding response was, of course, really an invitation to look.
It also set up a dilemma the next morning. What should she wear to work? Yes, now your wife is thinking about herself as an object to be observed by another man. She doesn't want to wear something drab and ordinary but she doesn't want to go overboard and wear something too sexy. She settles on something in between.
Now, at last, we can go back in time to one of her lies. You remember she mentioned working at a video store before heading to college? You know about the boyfriend she had at the time but you don't know what happened at the video store. The manager was an overweight, loser who barely kept his job. By any definition he was a creep. Alice (she's not your wife yet) is just beginning to notice the attention she commands from men -- the smiles and minor flirtations she receives at the cash register and the looks she receives at the store, on the subway, and on the street. To Alice, the Creep knows so much about music and films -- the names of bands and directors role off his tongue so effortlessly. He's friendly and she wants to please her boss. Yes, she notices to the up-down looks, the innuendo jokes, the stack of blank-cover porn videos he takes home every evening. But, to Alice, it seems like a backdoor invitation to an adult world.
Alice was confused by the arbitrary touching that the Creep indulged in. A touch on her back as she passed through the stockroom door, the brush-by behind the counter, the "accidental" touching of their hands as videos were passed between them. Then one late afternoon she thought she was alone and rifled through the Creep's porn video selection -- "Cum on her Face II," "Glory Hole Whores," "Nympho Cockwhores," "Housewives do Anal" -- but looking up there he was, eyeing her with amusement. She blushed deeply and stammered an apology. He said nothing.