The First Time I Was Married
When we first met, he was wearing a
waistcoat printed with books, with a clutch of expensive pens in the
watch-pocket.
He was a terrible time-keeper, always
late, always sorry – even after I bought him a pocket-watch for our first
anniversary.
I suppose with hindsight these
things should have exploded in my head like warnings, but at the time they
seemed romantic.
True love, I thought…as if anyone can tell
these things at eighteen.
Even the ducks on the campus lake
thought it was a terrible idea.
Run away with me, he whispered sweetly in my ear.
Adventure, I thought, and ran gladly in his
wake, down holes and along hallways, through secret doors and cold palaces and
rose-scented gardens, believing he knew more than me and was wiser than me and
had the key to secrets I’d never imagined and was leading me onwards and
onwards and ever onwards into a world of beauty and wild excitement.
But in the end, it all comes down to a
small house in the country.
Bricks and mortar can distract you for
a time (especially when you’re the one doing all the housework) - but
eventually I outgrew him, him and his house filled with tasks and gratitude.
I escaped while he tinkered,
distracted, in the garden, something with glass and wood I think, although I
didn’t stop to look too closely.
Ten years he took from me - that slow journey from his beguiling waistcoat to a noisy courtroom, where the whole papery structure of our lives tumbled about our ears like frantic birds or dried leaves, or playing-cards, and I finally understood that, in the end, it takes more to build a marriage than mere words and wonder.
An acrostic flash fiction! I like the use of 'wonderland' images to express a (sadly) very commonplace life event.
ReplyDeleteAngi
Just wonderful! Engrossing.
ReplyDeleteLove it! Especially the, '...papery structure of our lives...' Beautifully done.
ReplyDelete