Читать книгу Diary of a Married Call Girl - Tracy Quan - Страница 15
SATURDAY, 3/24/01
ОглавлениеMatt told Elspeth how uptight I’m getting? Paranoia “makes you less attractive” to your husband?
It’s all starting to get to me!
Last night, sitting across the table from Matt, while he gazed at my candle-lit presence, I felt betrayed.
How dare he discuss his lurking disenchantment with his sister?
Did he discuss disenchantment with his sister? Or did he merely hint at it, in the way men sometimes do—before they’re even aware of their own feelings? In which case, the betrayal is unconscious, as so many masculine betrayals are. For some reason, that doesn’t make the loss of face any easier to digest.
“These tomatoes are great!” he enthused. “What’s in this dressing?”
I threw him a flirtatious, secretive smile. If you admit to a loss of face, then you’ve really lost it.
“I think you’re a better cook than…” he paused. “Don’t tell Elspeth I said this, honey, but you’re a better cook than my mother.”
I tried to look pleased, but this wasn’t what I needed to hear.
A good marinade is no replacement for that mysterious allure which pulled him toward me when we first met. I was smart enough, while dating, to save something for marriage. Matt didn’t know I could cook until we moved in together.
Okay, so I know how to date, which is no mean accomplishment. Too many hookers are good at their job yet abysmal at the dating game. But am I smart enough for marriage? It’s a lot to keep track of. Provocative single girlfriends. Keeping my career a secret while keeping it afloat. An extra six pounds. And now, this stain upon my self-image that I’m too proud to discuss with him. Being cast as an insecure member of the Couples Brigade makes me feel officially overweight.
As Matt cleared the table, I made a decision. After he disappeared from the kitchen, I gathered up every bread stick and new potato, and all the crackers, then threw them into a bag. I started to remove a sliced loaf of Eli’s sourdough from the freezer. But Matt will freak if I do that! He’s so impressed with our constant supply of distinctive, ready-for-toasting bread. I spared the sourdough and trashed the frozen wholewheat waffles.
After I disposed of the starch-filled bag, I discovered a box of hazelnut biscotti in a cupboard.
“What are you doing?”
Matt’s voice startled me as I approached the apartment door.
“Throwing these out!” I said petulantly. “I thought you were online! Why are you spying on me?”
“Why are you throwing out the biscotti?”
“They’re stale! Can’t I clean up my own kitchen without being questioned about it?”
He gave me a puzzled look and disappeared again. Perhaps I should have said something else, but I refuse to admit to a man that I’m thinking about my weight. I learned many years ago that if you don’t mention the first five pounds, most men don’t see them. This means I am only one pound overweight in the context of our relationship—even if I’m six pounds heavier in real time. Math is more like a language than people realize. With many dialects.
Later, as I tried to sleep, Matt placed an affectionate hand under my camisole. The memory of his curious compliment came back to me. Cooking. Mother. Maybe the six pounds is taking its toll after all.
“I am not the one who confides in your sister about the details of this relationship!”
His hand stopped moving.
“What are you talking about?”
“What do you think I’m talking about?”
Sitting up, he put his hand on my hair and stroked it gently.
“Something’s bothering you,” he said. “I knew it when you threw out the biscotti.”
Why doesn’t he remember comparing my cooking with his mother’s less than three hours ago? Or what he said about not telling Elspeth? If I don’t remind him, I run the risk of being seen as an irrational harpy, possessed by mental demons! And if I do remind him? He just might decide that I am his mother.
God.
What’s happening to me?