You wash your delicates as if they were cottons. I don’t mean it figuratively: you’ve just completed
your load, made of gray t-shirts and brown chino trousers, with a wool-and-linen scarf you bought
in Ireland last year. Let me tell you, the scarf won’t survive the wash cycle. Well, truth is I’m not
telling you – I’m talking to myself as I watch you condemn that defenceless piece of clothing to a
hot bath. I pointed out to you before how careless you are with your laundry, but you don’t listen to
me. You, yes, you: my second half, as you like to describe yourself. The one who, yesterday, said
it’s stupid to fight over how to clean the French press or how often to mop the kitchen floor. We
were having breakfast, and as you brought to your mouth a spoonful of cereals swimming in milk I
asked: what’s stupid about these arguments? We’ve lived together for six months and we haven’t
yet found a common ground, a shared set of house rules. I don’t remember if I used the words
‘house rules’; that doesn’t matter now. You smiled and said you couldn’t care less if the flat was a
mess, the rubbish bins came close to bursting or the bathtub got clogged with hair. All that mattered
was to see my face every day as you woke up. I suppose you thought that was romantic. And I, to
not disappoint you, decided to let you live with this belief. I walked over to you and kissed you.
Today I ask myself why I lied to you. I should have told you the truth, the whole, unfiltered
truth. I care about my appliances, my clothes, my furniture. I am attached to the French press I need
to clean twice every time you make coffee. I despise people who mistreat objects; I am even less
willing to be forgiving if those happen to be my objects.
No, I don’t think our fights are stupid. That’s what I should have told you yesterday. I’ve
been playing the episode back in my mind, trying to figure out how you would have reacted to the
truth. You would have said, don’t you find it’s a bit sick to feel so viscerally about material
possessions? That doesn’t sound like you at all, now that I think of it, but I bet you would have been
surprised. A little shocked, even. I would have replied, I don’t care if it’s sick. Then you would
have added, don’t you see that these fights will break us apart? I would have shrugged my shoulders
and said, perhaps they will – I’ll keep the French press, though.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
2024 Wigleaf Longlisting
Huge congratulations to Lisa Alletson whose 2024 FlashFlood piece, ' Translucent ' made the Wigleaf Top 50 longlist! You can read th...
-
I know it is Sunday morning because the paper lands on the driveway with a louder thud, masala chai whispers underneath the door, and the so...
-
We are delighted to nominate the following 2023 FlashFlood stories to the Best Small Fictions Anthology: ' I Once Swallowed a Rollercoas...
-
We are delighted to nominate the following FlashFlood stories to the 2023 Pushcart Prize: ' The Doll House ' by Nathan Alling Long &...
No comments:
Post a Comment