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Sheila Nevins | 04/24/2008 7:36 am

Who Is She? Part Three

© Shutterstock

Interactive Fiction

After reading the third installment of Who Is She? please respond to the following question: What should Bart’s wife do after arranging a liaison with an old beau?

a) Tell her husband Bart that she ran into Jonathan.
b) Buy a new outfit for their dinner.
c) Confide in her book club friends and get advice.
d) Keep the secret.
e) Other (please write your suggested game below)


The alarm clock rang at six o’clock AM. She asked Bart if he’d mind having breakfast alone. "Sure," he said. She told him she had had a rough night and trouble sleeping. "Feeling sick?" he asked. "No," she said, "just wiped." She turned over in bed and pulled the light blanket over her head to block the sun streaming through the wooden blinds. Had she dreamed all this? Her robe was on the floor. She peeked from under the cover, shielding her eyes, and put her hand in the robe pocket. She touched it. It was true. The rubber condom reared its ugly head.

To read Who Is She? Part One, click here.

To read Who Is She? Part Two, click here.

Bart pulled out of the driveway. She heard the car leave. Every day for as long as she could remember, two honks as he backed out making sure Godzilla was not in his path. She felt light-headed. Oddly perverse. She opened the drawer of her bedside table. She pulled Bart’s condom over her lipstick vibrator with Bart’s condom and held it against her. It was fast. It was easy. She came quickly — for herself and by herself. She moaned, so loudly that Godzilla started to bark, bounded up the stairs and jumped into the bed. Bart didn’t allow the dog in bed, but she welcomed Godzilla’s arrival. She petted her best friend. He licked his mistress’s face. A forbidden bedmate. How wicked. She was happy to have this dog in her life.

Relaxed, she wondered about this masturbatory-secret-self-of-herself. With all her good friends, and all the confidences they had shared all these years, vibrators were the one small appliance they never discussed. Electric knives, toaster ovens, mixers, can openers, all safe territory, but never this life affirming gizmo. Why? she wondered. She had read in a science journal that the clitoris was the only human organ that existed solely for pleasure. Maybe self-pleasure was deemed verboten for her group of women. Or possibly all women? She’d bring it up at the next book club meeting. She’d slip it in somewhere between the talk of Anna and Vronsky’s fatal attraction. She’d dare it. But what was most important was that she had done it with Bart’s condom. She was proud of herself, a kind of quid pro quo, and she was ready to move on.

Faithful wife, unfaithful husband — so what else was new? In truth, she and Bart were strangers joined by body parts, for a short time paired in passion, or so she thought, and now performing a perfunctory, occasional, marital obligation. Like the family dinner at Thanksgiving. Rx: Ordinary Sex; i.e., turkey, cranberry, sweet potato.

For no reason that she could fathom, she suddenly remembered her mother’s dying. Her father had died four years before. When she visited Charlotte in the hospital, they had held hands, her mother’s so cold. Her mother saying softly, as if thinking aloud, "You know I never really loved your father." As she lay dying, she confided to her only daughter that her father had not been the love of her life. "Charlie was a good man, a good husband, but my heart belonged to Mikey."

"But, Ma," she said, "Mikey married your sister, Aunt Helen. He was Uncle Mikey."

"I know," Charlotte said.

"Did Aunt Helen know?"

Her mother answered, "No, no."

"Did Mikey know, Ma?"

Her mother seemed to doze off, but answered with her eyes closed. "Mikey knew he made my heart skip a beat. Yes, he knew. But he married my sister and I was married to your father. Sometimes life doesn’t work out."

Then her mother drifted off to sleep — the sleep of preparedness, the sleep of the almost dying. Her mom, mother, ma, Charlotte died three days after her deathbed confession. Basta memories.

She got out of bed, fluffed up her pillows and began her day: Leave money for Esmeralda, call a new lawn-mowing service, bring in the car for the 10,000-mile checkup, get new knobs for the worn out ones on the kitchen cabinets, call and change her library shift so she could take her daughter, Lila, to lunch on her birthday, etc., etc., etc., call Jonathan Marston. Yes, call Jonathan Marston.

Bart rings up and says he’ll be home about nine o’clock PM. He’ll be in the air-conditioned conference room and she has the number. Bart’s telling the truth, she thinks. Call Jonathan Marston. She checks in with the kids, all in order — short conversations. It’s good that they’re always busy, too busy to talk. Call Jonathan Marston. She has until nine o’clock PM. Tempus Fugit. It’s 7:30 PM.

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

Beth Cavalli
Sheila’s story is stimulating, as the main character named “bart’s wife or anyother name” really is in a conflict and has opted not to discuss it with her husband. Ok, that is Sheila’s choice as the writer…..My humble opinion is that she is testing the waters to see if she is still desireable after all these years. Women need that. The dinner may lead her down a path that she might not like. Jonathan does sound like a player…at this point and gets why she is calling from the tone of the chapter. In reality, I find that I am saying “no, no, no!” to the computer screen”! Without her talking or discussing this with her husband, I see that no good can come of this…What if she is truly wrong even with all the evidence…She will only blame herself if it goes bad. What should she do now? Cancel the dinner, talk to her husband. That is a real world answer. In the land of fiction…..It is what Sheila decides…not me…
By Beth Cavalli on 04/24/2008 10:06 pm
Bree W.
Jonathon didn’t bump into Bart at the 35th reunion because Bart wasn’t there. He told his wife he was going, but he spent the long weekend in Bermuda with the other woman. Bart’s wife hasn’t seen Jonathon in over 30 years…EVERYONE changes in that amount of time. Jonathon isn’t what she hopes him to be. He’s 32 years older, he’s paying spousal support to two ex-wives, and he likes his single life. Secrets, duplicity, lack of openness…this marriage has been on the downslide for some time. She’d be smarter to be planning her financial strategy (I doubt she can live on a librarian’s salary) instead of revenge.
By Bree W. on 04/24/2008 10:57 pm
No GOP
Every marriage can hit a rough patch with the thought that this too shall pass. Something will wash through and everything will be renewed. Perhaps that is the danger of benign neglect, but the world is moving fast around us and reality can be altered overnight. Suddenly everything you’ve imagined about how your life would proceed is thrown into relief by this new big, amorphous shaped-shifting thing. Do you ignore it, confront it, hope it arrived by error and wil go away. It can be a seismic shift in your entire consciousness and about everything that you thought was your true solid rock. In Susan Minot’s “Evening,” the protagonist has led a cushy, upscale existence that from the outside looks glossy but the truth is rather empty on, and is now young and dying pn her bead. Throughout her entire three marriages she’s thought of one man she had a weekend fling with right out of college. As this woman is in bed dying too young she recalls her life and the centerpiece for her at the moment was this weekend fling and the attraction for her to that place and man and moment that was some kind of touchstone for life. I think SHE is nameless perhaps because then we can consciously or subconsciously project our own feelings, wishes and intentions on this protagonist. Bart had in effect rejected her on some level, at least she feels this. She needs to feel pleasure, comfort, and perhaps Jonathan was the man that haunted her. He would be a mirror, perhaps the best mirror she could find right now. In one glance he will confirm—is she still attractive and desirable—or has she let it go more than she knows. Either way it’s more information, and more time to decide. Having dinner is not a crime. She doesn’t know yet what if anything will happen. There are no small children at home. Change needs a catalyst. This dinner will set her down a new road: some kind of raprroachement with Bart, leaving him, or some kind of fling or relationship with Jonathan.
By No GOP on 04/25/2008 4:55 am
S. B.
p. g. thanks for the insight. i agree that if we as commentors, identified with SHE we would be able to have an easier time helping SHE progress thru this crisis. i have been on both sides of being cheated by my husband and being the cheater. so i see a natural progression to her next move. for me it was well he did it and i can do it too. the old get your self respect back and forget about your fears of loss. and for me it did help some but this is not a positive way to deal with this upset. i believe all experience is useful even the things we do to hurt ourselves. what can SHE learn from this? even the possible recognition of loss could be accepted so SHE is beginning to understand what bart is all about. SHE has to experience this for herself. but we as commentors are objectifying her making her a thing but i see her as a person who has difficult decisions to make. and she is willing to take risks to discover something about herself first and her husband needs to be the afterthought, the other self who is something of a mystery to HER.
By S. B. on 04/25/2008 11:41 am
Michael Salling
Wow — what a compelling argument. I think I’ve made up my mind on this finally, Princess. Ironically, it was my gut reaction that Meg (I like the name) should go thru with the dinner, but I wasn’t willing to trust it till I read your analysis, P. If nothing else, she can confide in him and get his opinion. Why not? She definitely has some decisions to make in the near future.
By Michael Salling on 04/26/2008 12:28 am
Sheila Nevins
Please look for revelations in #3 that reveal something about Bart’s other life.
By Sheila Nevins on 04/25/2008 6:17 am
Muri B
Cheers to her for taking control of her situation and her sexuality. Why do women always have to be portrayed as the victims of their husbands or boyfriends’ infidelity? Women can have as many secrets as their husbands and I think her response, both in her own bed and in her desire to experience her own romance or “quick fix” is not only healthy, but very common.
By Muri B on 04/25/2008 10:29 am
No GOP
Well, Muri B, this woman certainly isn’t any husband/boyfriends infidelity…..it someone makes that choice they made the choice….no recriminations just out the door. I think Bart might be fooling around with a man.
By No GOP on 04/27/2008 2:12 am
Elizabeth Bennett
I think Bart might be fooling around with Jonathan!
By Elizabeth Bennett on 04/27/2008 3:58 pm
iris odonata
she and he, she and he, he and he. Bart’s shorts on backwards. Hmmmm? Could the presumed she be a he? Meetings with old flames, relationships not pursued can lead to disaster, healing or the release massage gives to tightened muscles. Miss Nevins, your story is temptation itself.
By iris odonata on 04/25/2008 11:17 am
Jennifer Daley
She should definately bang that guy - oh, and she prolly needs a bigger vibrator as well.
By Jennifer Daley on 04/25/2008 5:39 pm
Michael Salling
I’m getting confused. When did we learn about the dinner date with Jonathan?
By Michael Salling on 04/26/2008 12:42 am
Sheila Nevins
The confusion is that the story continues on the next page, you have read only page one.
By Sheila Nevins on 04/26/2008 7:12 am
Reasonable Rita
Well, I think that the condom was a big sign of course and after reading your last installment I can only tell you that my imagination has found out just who Bart is shaggin’..Jonathan Marston. Well, wouldn’t that just be the cat’s pajamas? Truly at a crossroads this gal needs to more talking and less guessing at what is going on in her life…it is a delicious story though and thank you for it~~~
By Reasonable Rita on 04/26/2008 1:28 pm
jacqueline smith
I like that she is called *she* because she can be anyone
By jacqueline smith on 04/26/2008 5:48 pm