"Freefall," Rebecca Quinn thought to herself as the elevator lowered her and her Husband down to the lobby of her office building so they could go have lunch together.
"Freefall...That's just what my life feels like right now," she had to stifle a perverse chuckle at the irony of the comparison between the elevator and her place in life.
Rebecca had been married to Neal Quinn for almost 22 years. The first dozen or so had been decent, but there was no mistake the two had drifted apart for the last decade and Rebecca had been having an affair on and off with a man from her office building for past year.
Part of the marital strain had been each's steadfast pursuit of a career. Rebecca was an ad executive in Manhattan and Neal was a real estate developer in greater New York City area. Despite the fact that their collective careers provided for a relatively lavish existence, there had never been enough time or energy for growth and passion between the two. It wasn't until both their children had gone off to college that Rebecca and Neal realized just how little they shared in common. It was sometime during that realization that Rebecca had began the affair.
In hindsight, Rebecca knew it was a very selfish thing to do, despite the fact that she was sure Neal had strayed several times over the course of their marriage as well. Raised in the church by a very loving and devoted Mother and Father, out of guilt, once the initial thrill of the affair had worn off, Rebecca put an end to it in hopes of maybe trying to re-kindle a spark with her Husband.
Part of that process was trying to take an active role in getting to know each other all over again and spending time with one another. Trying to coordinate an occasional lunch date with each other was part of that plan, even though Neal hadn't shown much zeal for the idea.
As the two stood there in the elevator, making their way down to the street to head to an Italian eatery a couple of blocks away, Rebecca was at a loss trying to make small talk with the man she had known for nearly 25 years.
"You're awful quiet," she probed.
"Just got a lot on my mind, we can talk about it at the restaurant," Neal dismissively quipped as the elevator continued it's descent.
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What her Husband had told her over lunch had left Rebecca feeling sick to the stomach. While Neal had casually finished his meal as he laid out the sordid details about why the Securities and Exchange Commission might soon be snooping around and asking questions about some of his business dealings, and perhaps even why the FBI might be coming to their house to serve a warrant to look around, Rebecca just sat there stunned, unable to look at the food in front of her.
"You don't know anything," Neal said firmly between sips of wine.
"Is there anything to know?" she asked.
"There shouldn't be anything now," was his cryptic retort as if saying the less she knew, the better.
Of all the years of Neal being a jerk and a cad, the last thing she thought she would ever hear was that he had done something so egregious, that it might compromise their life and tear the family apart. And all over greed.
"We have everything we could possibly want, and it just isn't enough," Rebecca reconciled to herself.
Knowing the restaurant was the wrong place to make a scene, Rebecca privately cursed her Husband for the gutless act of bringing her to a public place to break the news.
"I've got to get back to the office," Rebecca blandly spoke, nearly drawing blood from the inside of her cheek as she fought to hold her tongue.
"I'll walk you back," Neal added as if nothing had ever happened.
Numb to her surroundings, the thousands of other New Yorkers milling about on the sidewalk were one big blur to Rebecca as she made a bee-line back to her office, her Husband constantly a step or two behind her simmering, deliberate pace.
"Slow down Rebec...," Neal started to say as he reached out to grab her by the arm, seeing the next few seconds playing out before they happened.
BAMMMM
"OH GOD...I'm sorry," Rebecca's voice pierced the din on the street after she had plowed directly into the homeless man on the street who, with his back turned, had no way of avoiding the incensed female ad exec who was trying to stay two steps in front of her Husband.
"Get out of our way you stupid piece of shit," Neal Quinn gruffly barked at the stocky vagrant his wife had just plowed into before taking his wife by the waist and hustling her forward before the stunned panhandler even knew what happened.
"I was trying to apologize to him," Rebecca spat. "It was my fault not looking where I was was going."
"Don't fucking worry about the Goddamn Bum," Neal gritted his teeth, his penchant for not caring who he runs over showing itself in spades.
"They ought to get all this garbage off the street," Neal said just loud enough for all the interested parties to hear before disappearing with his wife back into the mass of bustling humanity.
"OH...SHIT," Rebecca growled a few steps later. "I think I left my purse back at the restaurant."
"Are you sure the guy that just ran into you didn't take it?" Neal snapped.
"No," Rebecca groaned, picturing the purse in her mind sitting underneath the outdoor table they were eating at.
"Let me call the place," Neal said as he reached for his phone to call information.
"This wouldn't have happened if you didn't have the audacity to break that stupid news to me over a public lunch you Sonofabitch," Rebecca groused, her anger shooting like daggers from her eyes as her Husband dialed the restaurant.
"The waiter said it's not there," Neal moaned as he hung up the phone and put it back in his pocket.
"FUCKING GREAT," Rebecca hissed. "Just don't worry about it...I'll just call and cancel all the credit cards when I get back up to the office...I only had about $40 in it anyway."
Sensing his wife's obvious frustration, both at him and at the purse situation, Neal Quinn carefully excused himself once they had reached the entrance of Rebecca's office building, giving a weak, fleeting and unanswered, "I love you" before turning to head back to the garage where he had parked his car.