Unkiss Me by Suzy Vitello
Author:Suzy Vitello [Vitello, Suzy]
Language: eng
Format: epub
Publisher: freisinger press
Published: 2013-02-10T00:00:00+00:00
Putting Asunder
Every morning I go two miles out of my way to drive by my husbandâs new house. I tell myself I do this because seeing his yellow Chevy truck calms me downânegates the morningâs tank of coffee. Truthfully, though, I drive by the house to check in with the meter that measures my degree of regret. To check the level of sap in my spine.
The safest days begin with a scan for the piles mounded in the driveway. I am at my most pragmatic when considering the physical evidence of our dissolution. There, next to the mouth of the carport, is the rotting worm bin. Next to that, four large hunks of basalt. Old-growth lumber, still studded with nails, stretches the length of the yard. My husband has an eye for the raw, worn, and semi-functional items of the previous century.
This reverence for treasure falls under the category, âthings one appreciates about oneâs spouse from a distance.â
But the days when my vision wonât take in the full picture out the broad curve of my minivan window, when I canât get past that old Chevyâor the lack of the Chevy there in the driveâthose are the days. The worrisome days. The days Iâm likely to come home and notice the one copper salmon on the wall, instead of the two that were given us as a wedding present.
This is a long-time-in-the-making separation. A crock-pot split up. We tried, a few years back, to do this: live cleaved lives. It didnât work. We werenât ready. But every day since, weâve forged incrementally into aloneness.
It is a dance weâre perfecting. We sidestep, dip, come apart, tango and bow to the partners that weâve never been able to be for one another. And in this dance, we fever. We sweat. We lay limp, and contained. Last night, for instance. Last night I craved coffee ice cream. The Safeway just steps from my husbandâs house. Call? Ring the doorbell? There was no bell, so I knocked. His roommate answered with the shock of seeing the person you were just talking about. Or maybe Iâm paranoid.
Ordinary separated spouses would be annoyed by the intrusion. My husband smiled with genuine happy surprise. He opened his arms to me. He wanted, I think, for me to sit on his lap. The roommate scuttled upstairs to his section of the house.
My husbandâs new bedroom is a replica of the one he had when we were dating: his Goodwill As Is lamp with the amethyst base teeters on his pile of Fine Homebuildings. The other lamp, the one with gilded cherry foliage snaking up to the light, that one sits on the desk he made in community college. I can tell you which drawer knobs are just screws sticking out, which drawer holds his bag of weed, which contains the love letter I wrote him after our first significant date.
The blanket on his bed is new. The new thing jumps around in my stomach. Good? Bad? Donât know. And thereâs that other salmon, propped above the window trim.
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