Last night. In a rented apartment.
-------------
Tchic. Not today...
He actually heard the air's whoosh; with such force had the door been opened. But it was a gray, vacant stare what prowled out of the bathroom. Calm, too calm. It didn't match the tone she'd picked for the last five minutes on her phone.
The wind whispered gale into that street, howling and testing their crystals as they shook.
"Sweetheart?"
The small, breathing rag doll in the cushion never flinched. Thank God, he thought.
For Victoria, his voice was a distant echo under the clouds humming thunder. The windows pattered with incipient drops; abnormally thick drops. The weather mirrored both her spirit and temper.
"Victoria, sweetheart?"
...
That headache again. Too many hours this week. Or had it been this month? This quarter? It was hard to remember. Which was good; the more she understood, the closer she felt to a rageful bout of destructive catharsis. Right now it was at the tip of her fingers.
How does he DARE? s
he thought.
That fucking pathetic excuse of a--! URGH!
There had to be an apt lamb among all the meaningless trinkets decorating shelves and cabinets, tables and walls -- seven years worth of little sleep--if any--and nearsightedness. But this time, burning the whole 'shitty' apartment wouldn't quench such fire. She managed to confine it within the loop of her pondering.
"...Sweetheart. Babe?"
Her trapped leonine march froze. She hated that one.
"WHAT?"
He reminded her of the baby. With the windows convulsing against their frames, making him sleep had been hard. Malcom hadn't dared to touch him since.
She followed the trail of his gesture to a tiny, blissful smile. It would only take seconds before her eyes swelled. She looked up and swallowed with secret compunction; a secret she kept from herself. She crossed her legs on the opposite chair biting down on a thumbnail.
"Um..." her clean sole anxiously shaking before him made him feel as a stray dog, with the steak inviting him to jump up and bite. It'd been a while.
Focus.
"Babe, what happened?"
"
Nothing
," she snapped, "everything's
great."
"Right... Okay."
4, 3, 2, 1...
"You know what?" she started.
He drowned down a snort.
"He thinks he's won. Yeah! HA!" she scoffed exaggeratedly, "he thinks I'm just gonna step
aside
and let him take it. He thinks I'm gonna let him take eeeverything."
Malcom knew how the conversation would end. What was the point? Victoria only listened to Victoria. He'd very much rather to take this moment and admire the toned legs, that face... or how her new fashion clung to her breasts -- he hadn't even had the chance to enjoy their new size! She was so stubborn with that, he thought.
Still, there had to be some merit to his role. He looked for something to say, something soothing or wise while Victoria shook her head to the ghosts around her mind. Nothing. Only rain. Countless drops raised their voice against the pavement, driving away the trash that no one dared to pick up. Their explosion made a white curtain that'd reach up to any man's knee.
Her eyes began to well too, but Victoria wouldn't cry; she mustn't. When he reached out, she stood up with a furious scowl -- she didn't want his help or his pity.
Malcom sighed. Prying her open to
this
much intimacy had been an ode to patience over the years, and he could only get so far. Man, could he use a drink right now.
"Was it him, over the phone? The new guy?"
There was an answer, just not to his question.
"I could leave tonight," she whispered.
Yes! That's it!
She thought.
"What? To go where?"
Oh no.
Usually, once the thought got into her head... "Victoria, no. The rain. Babe look, look outside. It's a storm."
"I'll call a cab," said Victoria, already listing items to pack.
"Is this for the meeting? That's like, Friday! It's friday, right?" his insistence went unnoticed. "Do you really not see the weather outside? Honey, listen, listen at the windows -- no one is going to drive you there like this; it's a very long drive. What happened? You still had time." He chased after her every move, hoping to make some time for her to calm down, maybe then she'd see reason.
"Who was that on the phone?"
"Hngh...could you stop getting in the way?
"Victoria, no one will drive you, not like this."
"So what? We have a car, don't we?"
"Hah! Are you serious right now!?" he turned to the couch, startled by his own volume. "Are you serious right now?" she moved quickly between drawers and the closet while he put the baby back in his crib as if defusing a bomb. "Victoria, you'll just get pulled over. Listen, why don't you tell--"
"No. Why don't YOU leave me the fuck alone!" she hissed.
Her open cursing confused him.
"... Victoria, I'm trying to help you."
"No. You know what? I'm done. I don't want YOU to do anything," she glared at his bewildered frown. "Don't you understand!? I'm so close, Malcom, so close. THIS is my
chance
. I've invested such a big part of my life preparing; I'll finally leave that shitty floor, I'll finally BE someone and leave all those smug, hypocritical cutthroats behind... And here comes this prick, who thinks that with a little smile he can bribe his way up to my job, MY job, Malcom! All those years, all those nights reading clause after clause on the screen, competing with a bunch of incompetent, treacherous... Ugh! And a hand tied behind my back just because of my tits too...and for what? A couple barbecues over the weekends and oh! He's the new favorite! No, NO! I'm closing the deal; ME, not him. ME!"
For the first time in their marriage he was worried about her mental health.
Under no circumstances would he allow her to drive tonight, at least not until whatever was happening to the sky had passed, which wouldn't be soon by what he'd heard on TV.
"I'm sorry, honey. Wait," he grabbed her arm.
"Where are the keys?"
"No. Listen, I understand what you're going through, but I can't let you drive tonight. You can't even see past the... Where are your glasses?"
Victoria hated them. Everyday she'd call a cab just to avoid the look. If she were to miraculously drive there, he was certain they'd sit comfortably inside the glove compartment.
She took a deep breath. "Give me the keys, Malcom."
"Honey, listen. I get it. I get it, okay? I understand..."
"STOP saying that! You DON'T understand. How could you? The last... what? Like-- Three, four years? You've tried every single thing anyone could possibly imagine, and
failed
. No regular job was interesting enough for Mr. Jeff Gordon. Ooh no, you had to think of the most twisted and elaborate shit to start from the ground up and even then -- when things get serious you quit. You've never stuck with anything in your whole life. 'You understand', no! You have NO idea what it's like to give up everything for a job. You're rich, you've never had to work for a damned thing."
"My
family
has money. Keep it down, alright?"
"Oh my God!" she groaned, rolling her eyes, "You know exactly what I mean! What was your first job? Remember that? I mean, a race driver! For God's sake! Normal people worked their skin off in two shit jobs while you were out there racing go-karts and drinking champagne at four. What? Did you think that was normal?"
"Victoria,
calm down
. All I'm saying is--"
"I know exactly what you're saying!"
"... I'm saying--"
"I don't understand how you live like this, you know? Doing nothing all day and getting shitfaced at night. All you care about is drinking and fucking. It's all you think about," she grimaced.
"What!? Oh I'm sorry. I'm sorry I want to have sex with my wife. And, doing nothing all day? Really? Remember the baby?"
"We wouldn't even HAVE the baby if it wasn't for you!"
"Tchic..."
"Why did you have to
bite it
open? Why!? I mean... My God, are you fucking twelve?"
"Are you seriously still on that!?"
"You FORCED me to be a mother in the most important moment of my career! And now you want me to throw everything away for fucking rain?"
The baby wailed. His head throbbed. He pressed his eyes with his fingertips, desperate to grab a thought, any thought. She stood in front of him with a hand out.
"Give. Me. The keys!"