One Less Problem Without You (2 page)

BOOK: One Less Problem Without You
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But while I was still in emergency mode, I glanced over at his phone, just long enough to see that “Eastern Shore Plumbing and Air” was writing “I want you now” to him.

I want you now
.

The phone had gone black again, protected by its password shroud of privacy. There was no way to see what else had been said between Leif and Eastern Shore Plumbing and Air.

I leaned back against my pillow, my heart pounding so hard I thought it was probably shifting the fabric of the old Mickey Mouse T-shirt I slept in.

What now
?

And, seriously, what now? I couldn't question this and get an honest answer. Obviously he had entered some girl in his phone under a false and seemingly uninteresting contact name. Clever. If only because he could count on me never questioning it. Even if I could, or
would,
have searched his phone, that contact would never have raised my interest.

What an idiot I was.

I put a hand on my chest and tried to calm my breathing in the dark. Meanwhile Leif was sleeping as peacefully as a puppy, his breath slow and even. In fact, those slow, even breaths increased my anxiety by the moment. Every relaxed sound he made ramped up my heartbeat and the heat coursing through my veins.

But I don't know anything,
I told myself.
Maybe it was a wrong number.

That wasn't impossible. I'd gotten nonsense texts in my life. Well, once. And it had been my friend trying to text a work colleague. But still, I hadn't understood it, as it had clearly gone to the wrong person; it didn't make sense within the context. Who was to say that wasn't what was happening now?

Slightly
reassured, I turned on my side, facing away from Leif, and tried to close my eyes and go to sleep, vowing to think about it in the morning but to allow myself the grace to just go ahead and sleep tonight. Nothing good ever came from a lot of exhausted late-night emotion. Ever. Did it make a difference if I sweated this now or later?

My heart pounded about twenty-five times in the darkness.

Screw this.

Yes, it made a difference. I'd been here before with him. A hundred times. I knew what was going on, and this business of trying to fool myself into believing the unbelievable was ridiculous. How many times was I going to do that to myself? Or allow
him
to do it to me?

And at what cost?

This was damn close to gaslighting.

That's when I got the idea. Yes, it was risky; I could get caught, and a huge fight would ensue. And there was no doubt who was stronger in an argument: Leif was relentless, seemingly capable of believing his own lies to the death. I could never win. I could only give up. And I had—many, many times.

Not this time.

It was hard to say what made the difference. A different alignment of stars? That single straw that, added to the rest, could crack bone? Or maybe it was just a long-overdue desire to know and deal with the whole truth and its effect on me.

Whatever it was, it propelled me stealthily out of bed and around to Leif's bedside table, where I took his phone in hand, cold and hard as a stolen gun. He shifted, and I froze, ready to drop it back on the table and make a mad and dangerous dash to the bathroom, as if I hadn't been next to him at all.

But his breathing resumed, and I carefully made my way back to my side of the queen-sized bed. There were squeaky floorboards, but I'd never memorized which, so every time I stepped on one I froze and listened for the telltale evenness of his breath.

It seemed like forever, but when I finally got back to my side of the bed, I hesitated and decided to get in without an abundance of care. Had I gotten up in the middle of the night to pee, I wouldn't have come back like a thief, and maybe on some subconscious level my stealth would register with him as “something amiss,” not just me simply returning to the bed.

I took the chance and got back in, rolling over on my side to face him. As predicted, he didn't stir. I moved my foot to his and twined my lower leg between his, as I had done so many times before, and he reached out and put a hand on me.

Perfect.

Holding my breath, I hit the
ON
button, and the screen flared to life so brightly it was as if someone had shouted. I took the blanket and covered the screen, exposing only the
START
button, then reached for his hand, put the button under his index finger, and held my breath.

The phone dinged to life.

Leif did not.

Thank God, thank God, thank God.

I rolled over, keeping the screen down, and stayed still, occasionally tapping the touch pad to keep it alive, until I was sure he wasn't waking up and catching me red-handed.

Then I got up again and took it into the bathroom, closing the door quietly behind me.

Now I was committed. If I was caught, I was screwed, so there was no reason for me not to see as much as the good Lord was willing to show me.

I sat down on the edge of the tub and went to messaging. Eastern Shore Plumbing and Air was at the top of the list, and when I opened it up, I could have cried. There were so many texts. So very many. I scrolled through, and they rolled on and on.

I'd like to meet you
, he said.
I'll be going to visit my mom in Connecticut in a couple of months, maybe I could stop by your place in Jersey along the way
.

My stomach rolled. Gross. This was someone he'd “met” online, and he was willing, and ready, to turn a family visit into an adulterous tryst? That easily? What if I had said I wanted to join him on that trip? What if I'd insisted I wanted to see my mother-in-law? Would he have discouraged me, or snuck onto his phone when I wasn't looking and told the Plumber they'd have to hook up another time?

Your dad lives in Michigan
? the Plumber asked.
Did I tell you
my
dad is from Michigan too? It's like this is meant to be!

I paused over that.
It's like this is meant to be!
Such a bold statement to make to a man who was married. Though the poor girl probably didn't know he was married. There certainly weren't any references—loving or otherwise—to his devoted wife.

Instead there was
I loved hearing from you last night, but next time dial *67 if you remember. This is a work phone and I don't want my boss getting any concerns about how I'm using my professional tools … Speaking of which, I'd like to put my tool right in that tight little snatch of yours. You made me so hot, I was dying!

I didn't remember Leif being hot and bothered at any recent point. Was he lying, or did he take care of it in the shower and then manage to join me for dinner and compliment my pan-seared lemon shrimp and the good job I'd done on painting the foyer, as if he didn't have another interest in the world beyond day-to-day domesticity?

I continued to scroll through the messages and didn't find anything remarkable beyond the fact that now and then he called the girl “Red” and she referred to him as “Buck,” which … was that some sort of joke they'd agreed upon, or was that a name he'd actually given himself?

I tapped the screen and went to the e-mail app. There appeared to be two names: his own, at Gmail, which was the one she used if she ever had to forward something or give it out; and another one,
Buckthesistem
at a weird domain I'd never heard of.

Sistem? Was that some sort of gender-specific play on the word “system”?

The phone trembled in my hand as I clicked his in-box. I was in it now; there was no turning back. Whatever I wanted to know was at the touch of my fingertips. And I
needed
to know it, no matter what. That I was clear on. I'd been living in nervous apprehension for too long, never quite trusting anything he said, whether it was that he loved me or that we were running low on toilet paper. I'd heard lies that mattered and that didn't, and that sent me into a tailspin of doubt.

I
certainly
never believed him when he said he was working late.

For perhaps ten minutes I scrolled through his e-mail, and apart from a few seemingly innocuous messages to his friends, there was nothing. I actually began to feel a little bit better. Not
okay,
by any means—the texts with “Red” remained inexcusable—but something inside of me just hoped to God I
hadn't
been duped time and again.

That hope died fast when suddenly I got to a date, about two months prior, with a collection of Craigslist answers. He'd been on a business trip to Las Vegas. A long one that included weekends, which struck me as odd at the time. But still, he
did
have business out of town a lot, did a lot of consulting on legal cases and whatnot, and I never wanted to be the kind of wife that did inordinate investigating of something presented as truth.

In other words, I never wanted to be the kind of wife I was being at this moment.

But I was in for a penny, so I might as well go in for the whole pound. Even while I clicked, during that fraction of a second between clicking and opening, I hoped he'd been trying to sell or buy some car part or something. But it wasn't the case.

Come play with me? 100 gifts an hour, you come to me. 200 gifts an hour I go to you.
The link was too old for me to see anything beyond that which was in the e-mail, but there was plenty in there. Leif described his physique, in painful (and possibly inaccurate; to my memory we never
measured)
detail, and asked where she—assuming it was a
she—
could be found. What room?

There had to be missing e-mails—though I couldn't tell why he would have deleted some but not all, or why they weren't all in the history of the one I was looking at. Still, even though there were enough gaps for Old Me to have slipped through the cracks, this me was seriously disgusted.

I mean, what were “gifts”? That could only mean payment, right? My husband, who declared every small new thing I timidly suggested we try in bed for freshness to be “weird,” was willing to go to Vegas—where, by the way, clean, tested prostitution was
legal
—and
pay
some Craigslist person for anonymous sex?

I cut-and-pasted her ad headline into the current Las Vegas search bar and came up with a new ad with the same wording. This time there were pictures. A woman, her face obscured by long dark hair but revealing enough to show she wasn't … conventionally attractive, was posing with her foot up on a dirty avocado-colored bathtub, bending over, with a soap scum–covered shower stall behind her.

This
? This he was willing to
pay
for?

It's hard to describe just what this did to my heart. And I don't even mean my metaphorical “broken heart” (which surely existed and was damned to get worse) but just literally my heart. It clenched, felt so tight I could barely breathe. I thought I was going to throw up.

There was no forgetting this. There was no ignoring it.

There were more Craigslist correspondences there, but I couldn't even bear to look at them. None would say, “Just kidding, can't believe you fell for that, Di!,” so all they could possibly do was exponentially increase the horror and betrayal I was feeling now.

I had to stop. For my own good, I had to stop.

But before I did, I clicked each one to forward it to myself—then noticed the faint arrow indicating that the e-mail had been forwarded.

Shit!

I fiddled around, trying to find a way to undo the indicator, and finally ended up just deleting the e-mails from his list completely, and then emptying the trash.

He'd probably never miss them. Surely he hadn't kept them for any purposeful reason. He'd probably just forgotten to delete them—raising the disturbing question of how many other e-mails there had been that he
had
deleted.

It was too much to comprehend.

In fact, really, all of it was too much to take. And it all just reminded me that I'd been taking too much for too long.

After returning his phone to the nightstand, I went down to the kitchen, no longer giving a damn if I disturbed his precious sleep or not. I needed to relax. To him that would have meant that I should take one of the sedatives prescribed for me and just shut up, but after months of ever-increasing numbness on the pills, I'd realized that I was becoming Rip Van Winkle, which felt awfully close to becoming Judy Garland. I didn't want that.

That's when I started making herbal teas. I'd gotten a book on them from the Internet, an introduction to growing, drying, and infusing herbs. It was pretty elementary, but I found that my own chamomile tea was far better, and stronger, than the stuff I bought from the grocery store aisle under the General Foods International Coffees.

So I'd gotten pretty good at making my own infusions, if I do say so myself. Kava, vervain, and chamomile to relax. I know most people like to put a hint of lavender in, too, but that was too perfumy for me, so I kept it mild.

Was it as quick as the pills? No. But that was good, because if it worked as quickly as the pills did, it probably would have been just as problematic. I didn't have room for more problems in my life.

So I heated the water on the stove and put the dried leaves into the silk tea bag. I added extra kava, as that was the most relaxing of the ingredients; then, in a moment that might have been ill advised, I got out the Corsair vanilla bean vodka.

I was inventing an elixir, I told myself. Vodka Kavas. The perfect nightcap.

As soon as the water started to boil, I poured it over the tea leaves, then let it steep for three minutes, taking a shot of vodka straight as I waited. Why not? It had been a bad night. No one could tell me I wasn't entitled to a quick shot of help.

As soon as the tea was ready, I removed the bag, dropped a few pieces of rock sugar in, and added a generous dollop of the vodka.

BOOK: One Less Problem Without You
9.44Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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