more sensible.
“The fifth element,” she muttered to herself several times during the day. “Just accept the void!”
It didn’t take long for her husband to notice there was something strange about her, something so not
Ella. Was this why all of a sudden he wanted to spend more time with her? He came home earlier these
days, and Ella suspected he had not been seeing other women for a while.
“Honey, are you all right?” David asked repeatedly.
“I
am right as rain,” she answered, smiling back each time. It was as if her withdrawal into a calm,
private space of her own stripped away the polite decorum behind which her marriage had slept
undisturbed for many years. Now that the pretenses between them were gone, she could see their defects
and mistakes in all their nakedness. She had stopped pretending. And she had a feeling David was about
to do the same.
Over breakfasts and dinners, they talked about the day’s events in composed, adult voices, as though
discussing the annual return on their stock investments.
Then they remained silent, acknowledging the
blunt fact that they didn’t have much else to talk about. Not anymore.
Sometimes she caught her husband looking at her intently, waiting for her to say something, almost
anything. Ella sensed if she asked him about his affairs, he would gladly have come clean. But she wasn’t
sure she wanted to know.
In the past she used to feign ignorance in order not to rock the boat of her marriage. Now, however, she
stopped acting as if she didn’t know what he’d been doing when he was away. She made it clear that she
did know and that she was uninterested. It was precisely this new aloofness that scared her husband. Ella
could understand him, because deep inside it scared her, too.
A month ago if David had taken even a tiny
step to improve their marriage, she would have felt
grateful. Any attempt on his part would have delighted her. Not anymore. Now she suspected that her life
wasn’t real enough. How had she arrived at this point? How had the fulfilled mother of three discovered
her own despondency? More important, if she
was unhappy, as she once told Jeannette she was, why was
she not doing the things unhappy people did all the time? No crying on the bathroom floor, no sobbing into
the kitchen sink, no melancholic long walks away from the house, no throwing things at the walls …
nothing.
A strange calm had descended upon Ella. She felt more stable than she’d ever been, even as she was
swiftly gliding away from the life she’d known. In the morning she looked into the mirror long and hard to
see if there was a visible change in her face. Did she look younger? Prettier?
Or perhaps more full of
life? She couldn’t see any difference. Nothing had changed, and yet nothing was the same anymore.