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Sheila Nevins | 04/10/2008 12:00 am

Who Is She?

© Shutterstock

Fiction

After reading the story, click here to vote: If you were Bart’s wife, what would you do in the morning?
a) Confront him
b) Poison him
c) Let it pass
d) Tell him he needs therapy
e) Have your own liaison
f) Leave him

It was 12:30 a.m.

Bart was working late. Being a lawyer in a high-pressure firm and having just become a managing partner was taking its toll. His nights were not his own. Many weekends he had to take the L.I.R.R. back to the city because his workload was so heavy. These demanding clients kept him always on call. Financially, he was doing quite well for the first time in his twenty-year career. She understood; it wasn’t that she wasn’t busy or preoccupied herself. Their kids were quite grown – twenty, twenty-two, and twenty-six – and out of the house. She loved her job as a librarian at the local Jericho library. On this particular sultry summer night, she was engrossed in a book being read by her book club. She hadn’t read Anna Karenina since college and so she was quite engaged, as if reading it for the first time.

His car pulled up in the driveway.

Bart stopped at the fridge, grabbed some iced tea, and tiptoed up to the bedroom. He said, surprised, "You’re up?"

She smiled, "I’m deeply involved with Anna. How’s it going, Bart? Tough case?"

"The clients are impossible," he answered.

"You must be tired?" she said.

"Exhausted," Bart said.

She couldn’t explain it, but somehow something was different. Bart seemed off-tempo. What was it? His hair. It was neatly combed. "Get a haircut?" she said. "It looks great."

"No. Why, do I need one?" Bart asked.

"Just wondered," she said. "And, by the way, Lila got a raise. She asked for it and they gave it."

"How much?" he asked.

"Five percent," she said. "And I’m so glad. They were taking advantage of her."

"She’s one great kid," Bart replied. "We struck a home run with this one."

They both smiled. Lila was a prize.

Bart took off his jacket and opened his pajama drawer. His tie was carefully knotted. Odd, she thought. On these hot summer nights he almost always came home without a tie. She imagined that he probably took his tie off as soon as he left his air-conditioned Manhattan office. She noted this careful knot.

Bart then took off his pants and flung them over the chair. She lifted her eyes from her book. She felt him avoiding her gaze; well, not avoiding it, but not catching her eyes – if you know what I mean. Then she saw that his jockey shorts were on backwards. The fly part faced her as he bent over to untie his shoes. Had he spent this sticky day in arrears? Her heart raced. There was no lipstick on his collar, no perfume in the air like in the movies. As a matter of fact, it was the absence of aroma that she noticed – no sweat. After twenty-eight years of marriage, late August work nights meant damp shirts. She knew this because she had put them in the laundry for all those years. She knew the circle of perspiration around the armpits, the badge of honest late work. Her cheeks flushed, her heart pounded. Had he showered before coming home? She knew he had not been working.

"Good book?" Bart said.

"Yes, yes," she said. "Read it at Mount Holyoke years, years ago. It’s all new to me. Tolstoy is so now."

"How was the book club?" he asked casually.

"Fascinating," she said. Her fingers felt numb. "Bart … " she started.

"Yes?" He was pulling the covers over his head.

"Bart … you are working so hard."

"Yes, sweetie," he said. He rolled over and kissed her. She felt the kiss’s compulsory quality, the repetitive wet peck.

"Bart," she said, taking a deep breath and pausing. “Bart, I got them to fix the den’s air conditioner and honor the warranty two days after it expired." He was sinking under the covers.

"That’s my girl," he said. His voice was getting drowsy.

She felt scared. Alone. She whispered to herself, knowing he wouldn’t hear, "Who was she?" – the tears running down her face. She whispered again more quietly, "Who was she, Bart?" But when she looked over at Bart, he was fast asleep.

She turned out the light, first looking at their wedding picture near the telephone on her side of the bed. She turned the picture face down, wiped her tears away, listened to his breathing, and wondered what she would do in the morning.

Click here for wOw poll: What would you do in the morning?

Read more about: Anna Karenina, Fiction

112 Reader Comments (so far…) Sign In or Register to comment

Liz Seger
Hi I posted early on the tenth and my comment is there either, gremlins in the sytem I guess. I’d confront him because there could be the issue of stds or Aids and if I decided to stay with him, he’d being getting tested regularly. They’ve been married awhile and this is probably not the first time he’s cheated. It just may be the first time she’s found out about it. After I’d contacted a female family law lawyer who could advise me all my rights and what I am entitled to, I’d ask him to leave. Have a friend in this situation and she’s being taken advantage of because she doesn’t want to “hurt” her ex, even though he’s taken everything from her and her children he could possibly take. They’re not divorced, they’re in mediation but he’s giving her the shaft and she feels sorry for him . ARRRRRRGGGGGGGGHHHHH!!!!!
By Liz Seger on 04/13/2008 10:11 am
kathy hurt
Liz: Always making you feel BAD for HIM is a “narcissist” cut and dried!!!!! Learned that big word in 6 mos of therapy.Didn’t matter he had screwed someone we knew,lied to his kids,family and church(was a music minister) he could ALWAYS make you feel sorry for him.Still has that talent!Now no one pays attention.Tell your friend she will have to LEARN to BLOCK OUT the rhetoric and sad face.Help pull her through it LIz,yiu sound like a strong woman and good friend!!! Good Luck
By kathy hurt on 04/13/2008 12:33 pm
Mugsy Peabody
Oh, fer chrissakes, people, the guy just went to the gym on the way home. I can’t imagine being married to someone who goes off on a total and complete tizzy every time I’ve been working so hard I’m so losing it. Don’t straight people talk to each other? “So, how was the gym?”
By Mugsy Peabody on 04/14/2008 3:22 am
Michael Salling
Was my post deleted for using the “f” word? If so, are women permitted to use it? Or was my very early comment (posted in the early morning hours Honolulu lost in in the matrix along with many others. My advice was: F*** him, furiously. I’m a 60 year old lawyer who was divorced recently in a similar situation. I was not “caught”, initially, after confessing, not to an affair but to falling in love after beginning an affair mostly because of the near celibate relationship with my spouse for over a decade. When I couldn’t bear to “dump my mistress” and secretly renewed the relationship, my “secret” was uncovered, mostly because I left clues of all kinds, then eventually decided to bring things to a head after our teenager left the nest. OK wowowow — now you know, along with the rest of the world. … been there — done that. mike
By Michael Salling on 04/15/2008 5:27 pm
Michael Salling
Oops — messed up again. My initial response was: F*** him, furiously — then talk to a lawyer.
By Michael Salling on 04/16/2008 4:24 pm
S. B.
it’s hard to believe but of all the responses (i think) not one hillary in the crowd. too bad i would have liked to hear what a person like hillary would say to this situation.
By S. B. on 04/17/2008 2:29 pm
Michael Salling
S Bolz — how do you know that Hillary’s response to discovering the first of Bill’s decades long list of serial “lapses” was not precisely the response that I recommended in my clumsy post attempts to post on this page? Personally, I believe their marriage back in the 70s may have been what we called “open” back then, and that it was as likely to have been her decision as much as his. Bill’s silly miscalculation with Monica was not so much a betrayal of marital vows, as a shirking of the responsibility he owed to a presidency that was as much the result of her efforts as his. For those who think Hillary’s response to Monicagate should have been public outrage and revenge, consider this. Becoming New York’s senator and the first woman president would undoubtedly secure a place for her in history that would far eclipse his — doing well is the best revenge.
By Michael Salling on 04/18/2008 5:25 pm