There were many things Ella wanted to say at that moment, poignant and mocking, tense and dramatic,
but she chose the easiest one.
With gleaming eyes, she asked, “What about
your affairs? Are you also
going to leave them behind?”
The waitress arrived then with their orders. Ella and David sat back and watched her leave the plates
on the table and refill the glasses with exaggerated politeness.
When she finally left, David flicked his
eyes up toward Ella and asked, “So is this what this was about? Was it for revenge?”
“No,” Ella said, shaking her head in disappointment. “This is not about revenge. It never was.”
“Then what
is it about?”
Ella clasped her hands, feeling as if everything and everyone in the restaurant—the
customers, the
waiters, the cooks, and even the tropical fish in the fish tank—had stopped to hear what she was going to
say.
“It is about love,” she said at last. “I love Aziz.”
Ella expected her husband to roll with laughter. But when she finally found the courage to look him in
the eye, there was only horror on his face, quickly replaced by the expression of someone who was trying
to solve a problem with minimal damage. Suddenly she had a moment of knowing. “Love” was a serious
word, loaded and quite unusual, for her—a woman who had said so many negative things about love in
the past.
“We have three kids,” David said, his voice trailing off.
“Yes, and I love them very much,” Ella said with a slump in her shoulders. “But I also love Aziz—”
“Stop using that word,” David interjected. He took a big gulp from his glass before he spoke again. “I
made major mistakes, but I never stopped loving you, Ella. And I have never loved anyone else. We can
both learn from our mistakes. For my part I can promise you that the same thing won’t happen again. You
don’t need to go out and look for love anymore.”
“I didn’t go out and seek love,” Ella muttered, more to herself than to him. “Rumi says we don’t need to
hunt for love outside ourselves. All we need to do is to eliminate the barriers inside that keep us away
from love.”
“Oh, my God! What’s come over you? This isn’t you! Stop being so romantic, will you? Come back to
your old self,” David snapped, then added, “Please!”
Ella furrowed her brow and inspected her nails as if there were something about them troubling her. In
truth, she’d remembered another moment in time when she herself had said virtually the same words to
her daughter. She felt as if a circle had been completed. Nodding her head slowly, she put her napkin
aside.
“Can we please go now?” she said. “I’m not hungry.”
That night they slept in separate beds. And
early in the morning, the first thing Ella did was write a
letter to Aziz.