More or Less: Chapter 7
| January 15, 2019“I’m really sorry,” I said as I put Ari’s plate in front of him.
He looked up at me blankly. “For what?”
“Supper.”
He looked bewildered. “You can’t burn a tuna sandwich, why are you sorry?”
“Because this is not real supper. It’s a tuna sandwich with tomatoes that I miraculously have in the apartment. I don’t even remember buying them.”
Ari opened up the sandwich and removed the tomato slices. “I don’t like tomatoes with tuna,” he said apologetically. “And I bought the tomatoes last week, but if you want it to be a miracle, I never said that.”
I plopped into the seat opposite to him. “Now it’s just a tuna sandwich. On rye bread.” Did I really just wail over a tuna sandwich?
“I can add some adjectives if that’ll make you feel better, like fresh, wholesome, or something. But really, I don’t get what the problem is.” Ari washed, then took a bite. “Scrumdidliumptious.”
I could feel a smile tugging at the corners of my mouth, but I couldn’t let him charm me into feeling better over this.
“The problem is that I didn’t make supper tonight, I gave you frozen pizza last night, and I’m just so busy, the idea of supper happening tomorrow night feels like a pipe dream.”
“Who cares, do you see me complaining? If I need supper I can cook or buy it, too. I’m a big boy.” He flashed a hyperbolic toothy grin.
I laughed. “You’re sweet,” I said, picking up my own sad sandwich. “But just because you’re okay with it, doesn’t mean that I should be okay with it.”
“Okay, beat yourself up if you want to.” Ari shrugged and took another bite of his sandwich.
I shook my head a bit, but told myself to be quiet, if Ari’s fine, I should run with it. Still feel like an epic failure on the wife front, though.
“How’s the last final days of work going?” Ari asked. I twitched a shoulder and turned my head to the side.
“It’s almost over, just gotta push through. I think I got a new client, though.”
“Really?”
“Yeah, last week DeeDee showed me the social media account of a new beauty cream company that announced they just got into Macy’s, so I figured they were new enough and small enough, but potentially lucrative enough for me to try, so I reached out, had a few lunch meetings, pitch, proposal, whatnot, and we’re working out details now.”
“Cool, really just cool, how you go and do things, make something from nothing.”
I blushed. I mean, I know I’m super competent, but it’s more a smug internal knowledge, people aren’t usually so generous in their compliments.
“Do you get freebies?” Ari asked.
“Are you suggesting I need them?” I asked, sounding more indignant than I intended.
“No, I was thinking of my own dewy epidermis,” Ari said, caressing his cheeks and fluttering his lashes.
I burst out laughing. “You’re nuts,” I said, picking up one tomato slice from Ari’s plate and eating it. I wiped my mouth with a napkin, wondering how to shift the conversation to the fact that I have to leave in five minutes.
(Excerpted from Family First, Issue 626)
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