thing works.
d) Demand to know what went wrong; make him talk and
talk about it in order to calm your own neuroses.
Answer: C
It’s August, so sumptuous that I couldn’t bear any more
black squares, but no, it’s
been nothing but hearts, Nick
acting like my husband, sweet and loving and goofy. He
orders me chocolates from my favorite shop in New York
for a treat, and he writes me a silly poem to go with them. A
limerick, actually:
There once was a girl from Manhattan
Who slept only on sheets made of satin
Her husband slipped and he slided
And their bodies collided
So they did something dirty in Latin.
It would be funnier if our sex life were as carefree as
the rhyme would suggest. But last week we did …
fuck
?
Do
it
? Something more romantic that
have sex
but less cheesy
than
make love
. He came home from work and kissed me
full on the lips, and he touched me as if I were really there. I
almost cried, I’d been so lonely. To be kissed on the lips by
your husband is the most decadent thing.
What else? He takes me swimming in the same pond
he’s gone to since he was a child. I can picture little Nick
flapping around manically,
face and shoulders sunburned
red because (just like now) he refuses to wear sunscreen,
forcing Mama Mo to chase after him with lotion that she
swipes on whenever she can reach him.
He’s been taking me on a full tour of his boyhood
haunts, like I asked him to for ages. He walks me to the
edge of the river, and he kisses me as the wind whips my
hair (‘My two favorite
things to look at in the world,’ he
whispers in my ear). He kisses me in a funny little
playground fort that he once considered his own clubhouse
(‘I always wanted to bring a girl here, a perfect girl, and look
at me now,’ he whispers in my ear). Two days before the
mall closes for good, we ride
carousel bunnies side by
side, our laughter echoing through the empty miles.
He takes me for a sundae at his favorite ice cream
parlor, and we have the place to ourselves in the morning,
the air all sticky with sweets. He kisses me and says this
place is where he stuttered and suffered through so many
dates, and he wishes he could have told his high school self
that he would be back here with the girl of his dreams
someday. We eat ice cream until we have to roll home and
get under the covers. His hand on my belly, an accidental
nap.
The neurotic in me, of course, is asking: Where’s the
catch? Nick’s turnaround is so sudden and so grandiose, it
feels like … it feels like he must want something. Or he’s
already done something and he is being preemptively
sweet for when I find out. I worry.
I caught him last week
shuffling through my thick file box marked
THE DUNNES!
(written in my best cursive in happier days), a box filled with
all the strange paperwork that makes up a marriage, a
combined life. I worry that he is going to ask me for a
second mortgage on The Bar, or to borrow against our life
insurance, or to sell off some not-to-be-touched-for-thirty-
years stock. He said he just wanted to make sure
everything was in order, but he said it in a fluster. My heart
would break, it really would, if,
midbite of bubblegum ice
cream, he turned to me and said:
You know, the interesting
thing about a second mortgage is
…
I had to write that, I had to let that out. And just seeing
it, I know it sounds crazy. Neurotic and insecure and
suspicious.
I will not let my worst self ruin my marriage. My
husband loves me. He loves me and he has come back to
me and that is why the only reason.
Just like that:
Here is my life. It’s finally returned
.