I didnāt get any work done that day, nor did I sleep well that night. The following day was better, but by Saturday evening, I realized that Iād had no visitors, and I began to worry. Iād expected someone to come and try to talk me out of exposing Ellaās secret and, in turn, the communityās role in keeping it. That didnāt happen. No one came to talk to me about this or anything else.
I thought about reaching out to someone, but instead decided to keep my own counsel for once. The longer I sat with my decision alone, the more certain I became that it was the right one. It had taken me longer to get there than it should have, but Iād gotten there. That had to count for something, right? Months before, Bob had asked me to make the right choice, and I felt like I finally had. I understood why they hadnāt, why their fear steered them in the wrong direction, but I wasnāt going to let fear guide me anymore. I never should have in the first place.
Sunday evening, as I made my way toward Ella and Lanceās front door, I was Marshal Will Kane in High Noon, about to face down the evil no one else in town would. Maybe theyād thank me for it, and maybe they wouldnāt. Either way, Iād do what needed to be done.
Lance answered the door when I knocked, and I felt relief. Ella might have made a scene while keeping me from getting to him. Instead, we could talk man to man. āLanceāā
I didnāt see the first punch coming, and it left me too dazed to stop the second. āYou son of a bitch!ā A third followed, grazing my head as I staggered off the step. āYou come around here after what you said to my wife? After what you tried to do?ā
āWhat?ā My ears rang. I hadnāt been in a fight since third grade, and Iād lost that one. Lance was chubby and already winded, but he still had several inches on me and a righteous rage fueling his fists.
I slipped the next punch, as he huffed, āYou were our friend, asshole! She came to you for a shoulder to cry on, and you tried to seduce her? The fuck is wrong with you?ā He tried for a haymaker, but it quickly became clear that he hadnāt been in a fight in a long time either, and I dodged backwards out of the arc of his wild swing.
āThatās not whatāā
āDoug.ā Bobās low, stentorian tone caught my attention. I looked past Lance and saw him, Kathy, and Ella standing on the stoop. Ella was reaching out for her husband, trying to stop him, but Bob and Kathy simply looked on with disappointed faces. āGo on home, son. You arenāt welcome here.ā
āYou arenāt welcome here.ā In that moment, I knew āhereā didnāt mean in the Jenkinsā house, or on their stoop, or in their yard. āHereā meant the neighborhood. It meant the community.Ā
I looked to my left and right and saw the silhouettes of our neighbors in their windows, watching the clumsy brawl. Glancing back, more were visible in the houses across the street, townsfolk waiting to see the outcome of the showdown, even as they knew Iād been outgunned from the beginning.Ā
Once upon a time, Iād been their project, but now Iād become their problem. Bob and Kathyās presence at the Jenkinsā, backing up whatever Ella said, meant this wasnāt High Noon. It was High Plains Drifter, and I was Jim Duncan being beaten as the citizens watched, a sacrifice to hide their sins.
Lanceās next punch landed squarely on my temple, this one catching me unawares as I came to understand my role. I fell to the ground, head spinning; Ella reached Lance and grabbed his arm before he could take a stride forward to kick or stomp me, trying to calm his rage before he did something that might land him in prison.
I felt like throwing up, both from the pain in my head and the betrayal that tore at my heart. I almost laughed at the thought, as if I hadnāt betrayed Lance this entire time. Instead, though, I shoved at the ground, trying to bring myself to standing. My stomach lurched, but I managed it. Barely.
āIām not your goddamned son, Bob.ā
Lance turned back towards me, ready to go again, but he stopped when he saw me holding something out towards him in one hand. In the dusk, before the streetlights came on, he would have had trouble discerning it by its outline, clutched tightly as it was.Ā
Ella recognized the object that would doom her before anyone else. Horror spread across her face as she comprehended what its presence meant, gasping, āDonātā!ā just as her voice from days before sounded from the deviceās speaker.
āI know you want me, Doug. I want you, too, and I have for a long time. Even before you knew⦠before you knew what Iād done, I thought about approaching you for this help. I wanted to be with someone I actually liked, that I actually wanted in more than a sexual way. Someone who could be an actual friend with benefits instead of just a guy I fucked.ā
Lanceās adulterous wife screamed, lunging forward, trying to grab my phone. I was taller than her, though, and kept it out of her grasp, holding her at bay with my other arm as she flailed ineffectually.
āI know itās a lot to ask, another secret to keep, but I promise you that Iāll make it up to you. When I need to get fucked, Iāll⦠God, Iāll do just about anything you ask. You can make me feel like a dirty little whore, or you can treat me like a lover, or just bang me like one of those sluts you brought home from the clubs. However you want me, as long as you can help me take the edge off.ā
Smartphones had been around for a while, but most folks didnāt think about their ubiquity back then and what that ubiquity meant for their privacy, especially if they were over thirty. Ella hadnāt realized that when Iād gone to get drinks, Iād turned the recorder on, then put it on the table alongside my beer once I returned from the kitchen.
Ella screamed, trying to drown out her recorded voice, but the damage had already been done. Lanceās voice quailed, āElla?ā with all the pain one would expect of a loving husband so profoundly betrayed by his spouse. She kept clawing at my arm, though, Pandora vainly trying to close the box after her misfortunes had fled into the world.
Tears fell from Lanceās eyes as the modern miracle in my hands detailed his wifeās lies and infidelities, both real and attempted. Kathy eventually approached Ella, whose words had long since transformed into unintelligible, dolorous cries. Glaring at me, Mrs. Grayson pulled her younger counterpart away and hugged her, trying to tell her everything was going to be alright.Ā
It wasnāt. Iād make sure of that. The Drifter wanted revenge for the harm inflicted on Marshall Duncan by the iniquitous townsfolk. My thumb slid along the touchscreen to seek the segment that would damn at least one of them.
āYou said that you talked to some of the others? Our neighbors? Who?ā
āOh, Julia, Mary, a few others. They know⦠Well, everyone knows what a good friend youāve been to me, and they all appreciate that you kept my secret. Our secret, all of ours. They trust you to keep this one, too. chuckle. Like you said, if youāve got me on tapā¦ā
āYeah. But what about the others? The ones you didnāt talk to?ā
āTheyāll come around. Iāve talked to Kathy, and, well, Bobās going to be pissed, but sheās sure she can get him to see my- our point of view.ā
Kathy Grayson went stiff. Bob Graysonās face twisted into a mask of rage; Iād never seen that before. āYou knew? You knew she was going to do this?ā
His wife tried to placate him. āBob, pleaseāā
The elderās mouth opened for a moment as if to bellow, then slammed shut. He shouldered his way past Lance and past the two women who now both sobbed. He glared at me for a moment before his face softened, but said nothing. What could he say? What mea culpa could make any of this right? The tears in his eyes spoke volumes, though, as he stepped around me and left the Jenkinsā yard.
I took a step closer to Lance, still wary of the fury heād displayed earlier. Whatever spirit animated the man before had deserted him, though, leaving only a husk.Ā
āLanceāā He shook his head, and I didnāt continue. No apology existed that would make my role in this right, either, even if I had ultimately clued him in. I wasnāt a hero, not a marshal nor wild west gunslinger, nor vengeful spirit. I was just a man who had valued what was easy over what was right, no different from the rest of the townsfolk, even if I told myself otherwise. Doing the right thing after the fact only meant that Iād done the wrong thing for too long.Ā
After texting the recording to him, I left without saying another word. The lights in the houses to either side of us had gone out, and as I walked back towards my home, I saw the silhouettes in the windows across the way had gone, too. The showdown was over; no one had won.
Change came, as it often did, in measures both fast and slow in the following weeks. Most immediately, my neighbors ceased to be my neighbors, instead becoming simply people who lived in houses near mine.Ā
Eventually, they ceased to be even that. Within days of the showdown, the Kingās Forest HOA began issuing citation after citation to me for minor infractions that had never been enforced on anyone in my entire time there. I thought about fighting them, but then wondered, āWhy bother?ā Iād gone from project to problem to pariah. Why fight to live in a place where I had no friends and a history Iād like to forget?
My business dwindled, too. A large portion had come from my neighbors, and that was gone. Some of it came from referrals that they gave; most of those stayed, but I lost one or two there as well. Iād bought my house as an investment as much as a home, and I decided that Iād rather put my money towards growing the business again.
Lance and Ella didnāt make it; no surprise there. He moved out within a few days, leaving behind two crying children who didnāt understand why Daddy wasnāt going to come home, and a basketcase for a Mommy. The neighborhood womenāminus Kathy Graysonācame to her aid, organizing the usual meal trains and helping out with the children as she tried to find her footing once more. Zoe sometimes saw me on the street before I left and called out, āUnca Doug!ā Knowing how much she and Hunter hurt and not being able to help them grieved me worse than almost anything else.
I did see Lance one more time. Heād parked a rented U-Haul van in front of his house, not unlike the one Iād come to the neighborhood in. It was midday, and the kids were at school or with Mrs. Alvarez, while Ella was out, I presume, sweating and grunting with someone for money as opposed to pleasure. I approached him as he rested between trips back and forth to his house, wanting to offer a helping hand. I didnāt even get that far.
āGo the fuck away.ā
āLanceāā
He got in my face, and I flinched, remembering the last time heād lunged at me. His bloodshot eyes burned. āGo. The. Fuck. Away. You ruined my life, Doug. I was happy. I was stupid, but I was happy. All you had to do was keep your fucking mouth shut. You didnāt have to fuck Ella, but you didnāt have to tell me what sheād done, either. You could have told her to go to counseling or- orā¦āĀ
Lance ran out of steam with that, his next few words mournful rather than angry. āSheās going to get the kids, and the house, and half my business. Iām going to see my son and daughter maybe once every couple weeks if Iām lucky, and thatās only if I can find someplace to live thatās big enough for them to visit.ā He sighed. āJust⦠Just go away, Doug. Leave me the fuck alone.ā With an unhappy nod, I did, heading back down the block with my tail between my legs.Ā
In the years following my time in Kingās Forest, I threw myself into my work. I moved a couple of towns away and grew my business through marketing and advertising, no longer relying on friend-of-a-friend referrals. I didnāt turn those down, of course, but I swore to never put myself in a position where falling out with a group of people could put me in the place Iād been early in my career.Ā
I didnāt shy away from making new friends, but I chose to make them based on shared interests rather than shared geography. When I did eventually move into my own place again, I held the neighbors at armās length, never being unfriendly, but also not putting too much effort into the relationships I had with them unless I would have done so even if we hadnāt lived within walking distance of each other.Ā
After a few false starts, I got back into the dating scene, too, even falling in love twice. The first relationship ended when she had to leave because of her career; the second ended in our divorce.Ā
I donāt know if I dated and then married a career woman because of everything that happened with Ella and Lance, although it certainly wasnāt an intentional choice. Maybe subconsciously I feared a similar downfall if I wed a woman who hoped to be a stay-at-home mom while I ran my own business. Iād thought about that a lot since I filed.
Caitlyn worked in advertising, and our jobs brought us into contact several times before we started dating, usually when her firm needed an app or website developed. We clicked almost immediately, but it took a little while to make the time to see each other outside of work. Once we did, though? We got on like a house on fire.
It took us a couple years to get to the altar, but when I married Caitlyn, I meant every single word of my vows. It turned out she didnāt, or at least she eventually came to change her mind about certain finer details. I thought Iād made clear to her my beliefs on fidelity, but I guess she didnāt believe me.Ā
Or maybe she just thought Iād never find out. That turned out to almost be the case, at least until one of her co-workers clued me in. The affair hadnāt gone on longāonly two monthsābut it was still enough to end our marriage and upend the lives of our two kids, especially once I confronted her and she tried to trickle truth me.Ā
Cheating would have been enough; lying about it, too, even after someone else had given me pics of her sucking face with some dude she met at a conference while they fumbled with both a hotel room door and their clothes? No. Fuck no.
The divorce could have gotten pretty ugly, and it did in certain ways, but Iād made certain other choices that absolutely were intentional after what happened with Lance and Ella. Iād had an ironclad prenup drafted, so my business was safe. Her alimony would have been minimal, since she made only a little less than I did, but the prenup, with its infidelity clause, took care of that, too.
What it couldnāt take care of was our kids and our house. Since we split the childrearing duties before the divorce, custody ultimately came down to the judgeās decision, and the one we drew had a very old-fashioned approach to custody: mom gets it unless sheās currently serving time for a felony, and dad gets visitation as long as heās never had a speeding ticket. Well, it seemed that way to me, at least.Ā
The house went with the kids. Iād get the vast majority of the proceeds once we sold it when they were eighteen, because that still technically honored the pre-nup, but until then, they got to keep living in it, so she got to keep living in it.Ā
I tried to remind myself, over and over, that Iād come out way ahead of where most fathers do in the divorce. I wasnāt living in a shoebox, and Iād kept my business. Being away from my kids hurt like hell, though. In the time before we reached the settlement, Caitlyn had been very careful to not prevent me from seeing them; she said she wanted to be a good co-parent, even if sheād been a shitty wife, which I thought surprisingly enlightened.
Once the divorce came through, though, my now ex-wife made it very clear that she planned to enforce the visitation schedule rigidly, āfor the kidsā own good.ā Not because she was pissed that sheād lost most of what sheād hoped to claim in the divorce! No, of course not! Because it was important for them to have āstability,ā according to whatever handbook sheād been reading. Right.
The first week where I didnāt get to see them was torture. Yeah, I hadnāt actually gotten to tuck them in for a while, and I had acclimatedāintellectually, at leastāto the notion that this was our new normal. But after a couple of days, it really started to sink in: my kids were going to grow up without me. Iād be, at best, a Disney Dad and, at worst, āDaddy Dougā once Caitlyn remarried, and the kids were almost 24/7 around their new stepfather. The thought of that made me feel sick.
That sick feeling is what led me back to the town where Iād bought my first house, waiting for the ex-husband of the woman whoād first visited me there. The one whose life I had ruined. I thought I had understood the kind of pain I was about to put him through back then, but I did it anyway, so sure of the rightness of my cause. Now, having felt even a sliver of what Iād subjected him to, I couldnāt shake the idea that I needed to try again to apologize for what Iād done.
After that first hour in front of his building, I wondered if Iād made a mistake in not going inside. However, I didnāt want him to have security bounce me from the building, so I thought instead to wait until lunch and approach him then. He might still tell me to get lost, but at least I could get a glimpse at him and see how well heād recovered from what Iād inflicted on him when I decided to blow up his life.
When Lance came out of the building, I almost didnāt recognize him. He wore a nicely fitted suit, and while heād agedāGod knows I had, tooāhe wore the years well. Heād grown a neatly trimmed beard, and it, like his full head of hair, had shifted towards salt-and-pepper. Most notably, he looked trim, unlike the entire time Iād known him. That threw me more than anything.
In fact, if he hadnāt recognized me first, I donāt know that Iād have spotted him. Lance saw me standing there like a process server waiting for his prey, and I watched his face as he went through seeing me, trying to place my face, recognition, and, finally, uncertainty as he approached me. āDoug? Doug Richards?ā
āHey, Lance.ā Idiot. I hadnāt thought about what I was going to say next.
He broke into a big, goofy grin and thrust his arm forward for a handshake. āOh, my God! Itās great to see you, man!ā
I took his hand, bewildered. āI, uhāā
āWait! Wait.ā He closed his eyes, took a deep breath, opened them once more and earnestly said, āDoug, I am so, so sorry for the way I treated you the last time I saw you. The last couple of times, actually. I should have come looking for you, but I just couldnāt. I was too ashamed. Will you accept my apology?ā
ā... What?ā
Lance peered at me. āFor yelling at you? Cursing at you? Hell, hitting you? Iām so sorry. I shouldnāt have done any of that. Well, maybe a couple of punches for not telling me sooner, but as for the restā¦ā He sighed. āI have no excuse. It was wrong, and Iām sorryā
āI- I⦠Um, sure, Lance. I accept your apology.ā
His face lit up. āThank you! God, thank you, man. This has been weighing on my conscience for years. You were the only person in that whole goddamned neighborhood that did the right thing andāā
Finally, I blurted out, āI ruined your life!ā
āWhat? No, you didnāt. I know I said that, butāā
āI did! I⦠God.ā My shoulders slumped. āI came here to apologize to you, Lance. For⦠for everything. For telling you, and for not telling you, too. For taking you away from your kids and your happy life. Iā¦ā The enormity of my own situation seemed to leap up and land on me with both feet as I thought about my children. āI didnāt understand back then what that really meant. Lance⦠Lance, Iām so sorry. Whatever you said or did to me thenāā
He put his hand on my shoulder. āāWas an angry man lashing out at the wrong person, because he needed someone to blame. Doug, I was shooting the messenger. Man, you saved my life. You didnāt ruin it.ā He took a second look at me and began to understand. āLook, I know we were never all that close, but it seems like youāre⦠maybe going through some shit of your own?ā
I nodded. āYeah. Yeah, I am.ā
āAh.ā He pulled out his phone and looked at it for a moment. āWhat are you doing for lunch? Hell, what are you doing for the rest of the day?ā
The man whose life I apparently had not ruined brought me to a nice Italian place where everyone seemed to know him and got us a quiet table in the corner. Over the next hour, as we ate, I told him everything that had happened to me since our last encounter, up to the previous night when Iād looked up his business address after deciding to come make amends. Throughout my accounting, he listened patiently, occasionally asking questions to clarify, and only a couple of times asking me to pause while he sent or answered a text on his phone.
When I finished, Lance exhaled slowly. āYeah, I can see why that would make you feel likeā¦ā He shook his head. āI know right now that it seems like nothingās ever going to be okay again. That youāre going to be dealing with this bitch of an ex-wife whoās going to keep you away from your kids and try to replace you with another man. And⦠Iāll be honest, maybe that will happen. But it doesnāt have to. It doesnāt.ā
He leaned back in his chair and took a sip of his iced tea. āLook, Iām not trying to get into a dick-measuring contest here, but when things ended with Noraāā My brows furrowed. āāSorry, Ella. Iāll explain in a bit.Ā
āAnyways, when things ended with her, everything you just said to me was true, but worse. She tried to keep me in the marriage by threatening my business. We didnāt have a prenup. She didnāt try to keep the kids from me, not exactly, but she also didnāt make it easy for me to see them, either. I had no friends; I was living out of a suitcase, and I was trying to support two households on a salary that barely supported one; it was a mess.
āBut hereās the thing: I made my way back from that. You will, too. It only seems like your life is ruined, man. It isnāt, and I will do whatever I can to help you, just like you helped me back then. Just like you helped me, and my kids, and Nora, too.ā
āYou keep saying āNora.ā Whatā?ā
He chuckled. āYeah, that took me a while to get used to. I suppose you told me yours, so now Iāll tell you mine.
āWhen all this went down⦠God, has it really been twelve years? Man. Anyway, everything went to shit for a while. Iāll admit that. All the stuff I said before and worse. Nora and I pointed fingers at each other, and the kids got caught in the middle. Thatās what actually ended up pulling us out of the nosedive: we both loved our kids more than we hated each other. That gave us a place to start from.
āI had rejected any idea of going through marital counseling out of hand. There was no way Iād ever get back with her after what sheād done. An old college friend, though, suggested we go to family counseling sessions instead. Theyāre sort of similar, but the focus is less on the marriage than it is the family as a whole. Itās about making sure that we could get past our shit well enough to do what was right for them. However, that still meant that we had to own up to both of our failures.ā
I snorted. āThe fuck? She cheated on you forāā
He raised a hand to stave off my objection. āHey, I hear you. Trust me, I do. The blame in our divorce fell way, way on her side of the ledger. Sheād agree with me on that if she were here, too. Butā¦ā
Lanceās expression turned pensive. āI thinkāno, I knowāthat we both kind of got caught up in the whole ākeeping up with the Jonesesā thing. For me, it was trying to prove that I could meet the financial obligations that weād foolishly taken on. I was the one that pushed for us to move into that house instead of a smaller one, because I thought the gravy train was never going to end.Ā
āThen, when it did⦠well, I saw all these other folksāall these other menāmanaging to make their way through the recession while making it look easy. It stung my pride that Nora needed to reach out to our neighbors for tips on how to make ends meet, and it made me feel⦠inadequate, I guess, that she seemed to get through this all with such aplomb.Ā
āThis was before she cheated, mind. They turned her into⦠what did she call it? Superwife? And I was just getting fatter and more tired and more desperate. When she started doing the personal trainer thing, it got worse; I knew that⦠I mean, yeah, sheās great at that, but I also knew her clients were mostly a bunch of horndogs that wanted to ogle her as much as they wanted to work out. Maybe more. So I felt like I was⦠almost pimping her out.ā
Lance chuckled. āI didnāt say any of this at the time, though. I should have talked to her, but I didnāt. Maybe if weād been listening to the right people, we would have, butā¦āĀ
His face went grim. āThat fucking neighborhood. I canāt blame them for everything that happened. Nora tried to for a while, just like she tried to blame you, and she tried to blame me. I can blame them for a lot of it, though, and for the things that came before. Moving there was the worst decision we ever made. Everyone was so goddamned helpful, and pretty much always in the worst ways they could have been.ā
He nodded at me. āYou didnāt see much of that until the end, I donāt think. Most of their advice for you turned out well. If youād stuck around until you had a long-term girlfriend, though, or, God forbid, a wife, I think you might have ended up like us. We were supposed to be a team, but their advice, and our willingness to listen to itā¦ā

He was right. Their advice to me had mostly seemed good up until the end. āHow do you mean?ā
Lance leaned forward once more, slightly over the table, head inclined towards me. āLet me ask you a question: outside of the barbecues or the parties, how often did you see the men and women of Kingās Forest mixing together? The Alvarezesā canasta night, the bowling team that Bill Redmond started⦠anything else?ā
I thought about it for a moment. āNnno, I donāt think so.ā
āRight. The husbands and wives were almost never in the same room together, and even when they were⦠Think back to the barbecues. Thereād be the sort of meet and greet as everyone came in where the couples would go around together, the same when they left, and then in between, the guys stayed with the guys and the gals stayed with the gals. They thought it was weird that I wanted to be around Nora so much, and I heard a couple jokes about how much you helped out in the kitchen and the like. Or did you not notice that?ā
āI did, but I didnāt think much of it. I mean, my folks⦠Well, they could be like that, too. I was kinda used to it. It just seemed silly to me, and no one said much about it directly to me, soā¦ā
He nodded. āTrust me: if youād gotten married? Theyād have started being a lot more forceful about it. I think since you were the youngest, they still thought of you as a kid, and kids are allowed to help with the āwomenās work.āā
After mulling that over for a moment, I agreed. āYeah, I can see that being true. I remember, at poker nights or whatever, how much⦠Man, some of them really did not seem to like their wives. Or respect them, for that matter. I tried to think of it as just jokes back then, like maybe I was being too sensitive, butā¦ā
āI hear you. And according to Nora? The women were even worse. They all talked about how men needed to be treated like children and tricked into going along with their wivesā wishes or bribed with sexual favors. That the wife should never directly ask for what they wanted, instead doing what āneededā to be done and then smoothing things over later if needed.āĀ
He snorted. āGod, that Julia fucking Alvarez took that attitude to an extreme. Did you know she actually encouraged Nora to cheat on me after she walked in on her and that shithead? āHe doesnāt need to know, as long as heās happy.ā What a pile of shit.
āI get Bobās reasoning for trying to cover it all up, given that sob story of his. Maryās, too. Even the ones like Sam Henderson, where they fucked their own lives up and didnāt want to see that kind of fallout for us. I donāt agree with a single one of them, but I get it. But do you have any idea how many of the women either said, āGet what you need toā or looked the other way before it came to a head? Not that some of the guys were much better; they were just quieter about their own affairs.ā
He sat for a moment, collecting his thoughts, then said, āYou know whatās really fucked up, though?ā
āWhat?ā
āI think, for the most part, they meant well. Itās what they were taught; itās what kept their marriages togetherāno matter how much they bitched about their spousesāand itās what they thought would be best for us. I think some of it was generational, and some of it was just fucked up interpersonal dynamics, but almost none of them were, like, intentionally evil. None of them were playing with our lives to play with our lives.
āLook at Bob Grayson, for example; I know he carried a ton of angst over all of this. He sought me out a few years after it all went down and almost fell down on his knees, begging me to forgive him for what heād done. Iād had just enough therapy by then to be able to accept his apology, and when I did, it was like the Pope had blessed him. He really did mean well. Most of them did; some were just covering their own asses, but the others really thought this was the best way to help us. How fucked up is that?ā
āPretty fucked up,ā I acknowledged.
Lance laughed, āYeah. Yeah.ā His smile turned sad. āI really loved her, you know? God, if I could change any one thing, it would be for us to have never moved there. But we did, and we tried to keep up with the Jonesesāher by being Superwife and me by turning into Captain Workaholic even after things got better with my companyāand we stopped being a team. We were even, in some kind of fucked up way, competing with each other. All we had to do was talk, really talk, and maybeā¦āĀ
He shook his head. āAh, well. It is what it is. If we hadnāt moved there, then we probably never would have gotten divorced, and I never would have met Kylie.ā Lance held up his left hand and wiggled the ring on its fourth finger. āAnd then I wouldnāt have Alex or Samantha. Might-have-beens arenāt ever going to make you happy, you know? My wife does, though, and my kids do. Hell, even Nora does now, once we got our shit straightened out in family counseling. Sheās been a completely fantastic co-parent, and she and Kylie get along great.ā
I sat there shocked for a moment, then stammered out, āReally? Thatās⦠Wow, thatās amazing.ā
He laughed at my reaction. āI know. It sounds nuts, but itās true. It took her some time to come around to really accepting her role in all this, but once she did⦠Well, thatās where the name change came from. āNoraā is so disgusted by what āEllaā did that she canāt stand the name anymore. Sheās not, like, dissociative or anything; she owns what she did. But she needed a way to leave the past in the past, and that was a good place to start.
āEven before that, though, she really did her best to make amends. Once she got it through her head that the advice sheād followed had brought her to this, she stopped listening to the women who told her the way to get me back was to threaten my business. Itās such a dumb idea anyway; itās not like I owned a factory or a mechanic shop or anything. The only assets she could have sold were⦠what? My contact list? A couple of laptops? Just another example of the silly notions they put in her head.
āWe came up with an equitable split. It hurt me financially, but Nora didnāt want to put the screws to me. She never hated me, you know? She was just hurt that⦠Well, Iām sure youāve probably heard some variation of it in the recent past.ā
I mimicked Caitlyn in a singsong voice, āāWhy canāt we move past this? It was just sex. I only loved you.āā
Snorting, Lance admitted, āYeah, that sounds pretty familiar. Anyways, once she did get past that stage, we worked together for a while to make her more self-sufficient, to take her personal trainer gig and turn it into something more professional, more full-time. In turn, she started being more flexible on things like visitation and alimony. Give and take, you know?Ā
āNowadays, our lives⦠Well, theyāre not separated, and they never will be. Iām still paying child support, but I would never have shirked that anyway. Sometimes we have a difference of opinion about this or that for one of the kids, but even then, eh. Hunterās eighteen now, and Zoeās just turned sixteen. They kind of have their own opinions, too, and we try to listen. Thatās made things easier. But, honestly, I think we probably get along better now than we did for most of our marriage.ā
āWhat about having to deal with a stepdad? Did she ever remarry?ā
A familiar voice answered from behind me. āNo, I never did. Lance set the bar pretty high.ā Two women brushed past, one leaning over to kiss Lance on the top of the head and the other taking the seat next to mine. āHey, Doug. Long time no see.āĀ
If Lance had worn the additional years well, Ellaāno, Noraāmight as well not be wearing them at all. She looked amazing. If I had just met her for the first time, I could have easily believed she was thirty-five, tops, instead of her actual early forties. She still had that firm fitness instructor body, too, although today, she wore a sundress rather than the yoga mom gear.
āUh, yeah. Itās⦠good to see you?ā
Nora laughed at the statement Iād unintentionally phrased as a question, a gently mocking smile on her face as she retorted, āItās good to see you, too?ā Then her expression and her tone shifted to one of gratitude mixed with relief. āGod, it really is good to see you, Doug. I have⦠just, God, so much I want to say to you. When Lance texted us that you two were here, Kylie andĀ I rushed right over.ā
Lance interjected, āDoug, this is my wife, Kylie.ā
A slender, pretty woman about his age with dark brown hair smiled and waved as she sat next to him. āIāve heard a lot about you, Doug. Lance has always spoken so highly about you and what you did for himāā She nodded at Nora. āāFor them.ā
āItās nice to meet you, too.ā Her words suddenly sunk in. āWait, really?ā I turned to look at Lanceās ex-wife. I understood his thanks, but hers?
Nora chimed in, āYes, Doug, really. I knowā¦ā She bit her lip, a penitent expression on her face. āGod, I know I was so shitty to you back then, even before⦠before that night at our house. Putting you in that position was just so wrong. I canāt thank you enough for standing up and doing what was right when no one else would.āĀ
She chuckled, then said, āI mean, I wanted to kill you that night, and for quite a while after, too, but now? I canāt begin to tell you how grateful I am. I think about what might have happened if youād agreed to what I suggested, or even if you just kept my secret, andā¦ā She shuddered. āThank you. Really, from the bottom of my heart, thank you.ā
I breathed out, too stunned to speak and beyond choked up. For over a decade, I considered that night to be one of the greatest failures of my life, and now, here sat the people whose lives I thought Iād irrevocably damaged, thanking me profusely. Finally, I managed, āThank you for saying that.ā Tears started to form in my eyes, and I angrily swiped them away. With the divorce, missing my kids, and everything else going on in my life, this sudden change in fortune was more than I could handle. āI- I, uh⦠I really needed a win right now.ā
A chorus of āHey, itās going to be okay,ā and āReally, I mean it,ā and all sorts of other affirmations from the three of them didnāt exactly help with my attempt at a stoic demeanor, but I kept it together. It was a narrow thing.
The women had just finished their shopping and wanted lunch, so we all occupied that table for another hour. It seemed so unreal, sitting with these two people I was sure would want to kill me and probably each other, talking and laughing and trading tips about how to survive my newly divorced status.Ā
Trading gossip, too. Apparently, once the scales fell away from Noraās eyes, she went scorched earth on the Kingās Forest power couples. At the last barbecue before she moved away, a place she knew theyād all be, she came loaded for bear with every single dark secret, piece of gossip, nasty accusation, and vague rumor that sheād heard in her time there.Ā
More than a few rounds in that parting volley landed. Within a year, a half-dozen more For Sale signs appeared around the sleepy little neighborhood, most of them due to the community property laws in our stateās divorce statutes.
Maybe I should have felt better about that. Vindicated. Instead, it made me a little sad. Iād had years to nurse a grudge after how theyād treated me, and I did. But I also remembered everything they did for me, too, before things went bad. I remembered the poker nights and the fishing trips, the barbecues, and the Christmas party at the Graysonsā.Ā
What they did, to Lance and Ella and to me, was wrong; I felt more sure of that than ever. But so much of what they did was right, too. They welcomed me into their community and made me a better person in many respects. Their ways had worked for them; why wouldnāt they want to impart them to a younger generation?Ā
But they didnāt work, did they? They seemed to work, but only if the world never changed. Only if Dorothy didnāt look behind the curtain and find the Wizard to be just an old man making things up as he went along. Only if the Drifter didnāt come to town and hold them accountable for the sins they were willing to overlook in order to pretend that the faƧade was real.
The ladies finished their lunch, and we all headed out, promising to keep in touch. Lance gave me the number for the family counselor that had helped him and Nora navigate their post-divorce lives. Nora gave me a kiss on the cheek before we parted and a wistful smile as she got in her car.
The day after our meeting, she texted me. Nothing big, just a How are you doing? To check on me. That text led to more, then to a phone conversation a few days later, which led to more. We danced around the topic of our time at Kingās Forest at first, with her instead focusing on helping me get through my new normal.Ā
She came by a few weeks later and invited me to an impromptu dinner. Why was she ājust in the neighborhood,ā as she put it, when she lived two towns and forty-five minutes away? āTo have dinner with an old friend.ā
We didnāt try to rebuild our old friendship, though. That would have been impossible. Twelve years later, we were both different people, especially Nora. She wanted almost nothing to do with the person sheād been back then, holding onto most of her memories from that time only as cautionary tales about losing sight of what mattered.Ā
Instead, we tore the whole thing down and started over, like razing a building to the foundation in order to make something better. Long conversations, some that ended in tears, tore us down. Nora had embraced radical honesty to distance herself from Ella, telling the truth even when it hurt her to do so in order to avoid causing more pain later. She encouraged me to do the same, and I found it surprisingly freeing.Ā
Time spent together, getting to know the new us, built a sturdy framework. Sometimes, something ugly came out of it, leaving us too angry to speak to each other for days, but when we cooled down, it always left us with a more honest understanding of who we were and what we wanted out of our friendship. And, as was often the case with this kind of teardown-and-rebuild, picking through the rubble of the old structure turned up bits and pieces that we wanted to keep, ones that held a special beauty or sentiment to us.Ā
The years since weād last seen each other had made us into a pair that fit together like a lock and a key. Nora had parlayed her personal training business into a small gym of her own, so we could talk about all the kinds of things that only small business owners have to deal with. We both had kids, hers almost grown and mine still barely school-aged.Ā
And, of course, we were both divorced. She helped me navigate post-divorce life, giving me insights into what Caitlyn was thinking and why she acted how she did. My ex-wife did ultimately go to counseling with me, and Nora helped me cope with some of the revelations that came out there: how the agency Caitlyn worked for had always been rife with adultery, but sheād hidden it from me; the way her admiration for striking out on my own eventually turned to resentment at feeling stuck in a job she didnāt enjoy; her anger at me for taking such a black-and-white stance on infidelity, since she was certain sheād have been more āmatureā if Iād strayed.
It took a while, but Caitlyn eventually took responsibility for her actions. Some, anyway. She budged more on visitation, eventually admitting that she could use the help. I wouldnāt say that I became a fixture in my old home, but I also wasnāt banned from it, either.Ā
Iād chosen a condo nearby, so Caitlyn agreed to let the kids stay on a weeknight once in a while, then a few more, and then a few more, which eventually turned our arrangement into something closer to a fifty-fifty split than the ātwo weekends a month, two months during the summerā plan the judge originally assigned us.
Through all this, my friendship deepened with Nora, but we didnāt try to be more than friends for quite some time; didnāt try, but ended up there anyways. A little too much wine, a slow dance that outlasted the music, a kiss that started in the living room but ended in the bedroom. Incredible sex that night, the best Iād probably ever had. Regrets the next morning. Distance the following week. A repeat not too long after.Ā
It was great. It was terrible. It was everything we wanted and everything we were afraid of, all bundled into one. I worried that deep down Nora was still Ella; she did, too. Nora was afraid Iād never really trust her; I was too.
During the intermission of the third go-round of the āDoug and Nora Fuck and Ghost Show,ā we laid in bed together without speaking. She broke the silence first. āI donāt want to do this.ā
āThis?ā
āUs. Like this.ā Nora pushed herself up on one elbow. āI⦠I love you. I think you love me, too. I want to be with you. But, hon, we have too much baggage. More than we seem capable of handling. Where do we go from here? Dating? Married? What happens when we fight one morning and I come home too late that day? Are you going to wonder ifā¦ā She shook her head.Ā
āI havenāt been with anyone in a long, long time, and Iām so glad that Iāve had this⦠thing with you, whatever it is. Iām glad that⦠Well, that Iāve gotten to be with you. But if thereās no future in us, I canāt keep doing it. I just canāt. It breaks my heart every time, and itās no good for you, either. We should stop before we wreck what we do have.ā
A pause that lasted just a little too long said everything that needed to be said.Ā
ā
Iām lying awake in the dark now, too jetlagged to sleep. The noises of an unfamiliar city wokeĀ me an hour ago, and my own internal clock has kept me from slumber. Two days after I got off the plane, I still havenāt quite settled; home is literally half a world away, and I should be having lunch, not staring at the ceiling.Ā
The darkness brought all these memories back, the darkness and the future that lies before me. Six years since that late-night post-coitus conversation with Nora, and I can still hear the anguish in her words, the wish for a different way forward.
The memories of that conversation brought me back to the memories of the way we met that second time, at lunch with her ex-husband. Those led me to the first time I met Ella, my second day in my first house, and everything that had gone into making us 'us,' all the lies and fear and the good and bad through those years and beyond. Of cowboy movies and showdowns and heroes that ride off into the sunset alone.
ā
She was right. In another time, another place, another world, a different us might have existed. This wasnāt that world, though, and as much as I trusted her and, yes, loved her, the doubts would always exist. Maybe that wasnāt fair; people change. I had. I believed she had, too. I truly did.
Thereās belief, though, and thereās acceptance.
People are pattern recognition machines. We excel at it. The birth of twins causes too much strain on a tribeās meager resources, so twins must be a curse. An allergy to a certain food causes anaphylactic shock in the child of a king, so that food must be unclean. A swelling population of cats in a medieval town coincides with a plague; they must be the cause, not the rats that they feast on.Ā
A young man is tutored by his elders in the ways of their tribe, leading to great success in his life; he accepts their wisdom when asked to go along with something he knows is wrong.Ā
A young husband sees the success of his fellows and strives to be like them, not understanding the hollowness of that success, how much more it takes than it gives.Ā
A young wife pushes herself to perfection for her familyās happiness, unable to see that the wise women gave her advice that only barely worked even in their time and their context; when she breaks, as many of them did beforehand, they encourage her to follow them in their selfishness and dishonesty, insisting sheās doing it for her family.
An old man, terrified that a tragedy from years ago might repeat itself, encourages a community to hide a young wifeās lie, not knowing how many other lies heās papering over with his decision.
Two people that had come through hell, first as friends, then enemies, then friends again, then lovers. Two people who danced around infidelities that sheād committed against another man, almost a decade and a half before, and around belief versus acceptance. Two people in a pattern that could destroy their friendship if they didnāt stop.
All of us, stuck in toxic patterns we didnāt see in time to change them.
I didnāt have an answer for her that night. She wasnāt wrong about any of it, but that didnāt mean she was right, either. I just couldnāt find a way to make it right, to make us right. We were perfect for each other, even if it had taken us a lot of mileage, a ton of therapy, and almost a decade and a half to get there.
It wasnāt until the night after she left my bed that third time that the answer finally came to me. A minute after that, I was out the door to tell her.
āFriendship.ā
Sheād been crying before Iād banged on the door, and her voice croaked, āWhat?ā
āFriendship. Thatās the answer.ā
Nora snorted, tired, eyes rolling with indignation. āYeah, no shit. Thatās what weāre going to be now, I guess. Just friends.ā
āNo! No.ā I shook my head. āNot ājustā friends. Not just āfriends with benefits,ā either. I want more, too, but⦠I donāt want to get married again. Iāve had my kids, I donāt want to deal with any of the legal bullshit, and I donāt need a piece of paper to tell me who I belong with.ā
With a deep sigh, she asked, āOkay, and?ā
āWhatās a marriage?ā She opened her mouth, but I answered my own question. āBesides the piece of paper, besides the ceremony and the flowers and the joint tax returns and all the other stuff? Itās a friendship. Itās a friendship that lasts your whole life, if you do it right.
āItās not dating. Itās not⦠trying things out and kicking the tires. Itās a commitment to keeping this friendship going, for working at it as hard as you need to, for as long as you can. For a lifetime, if you can be honest enough and love each other enough.
āThatās the question, then: Is this a friendship that you want for the rest of your life? Not dating. Not kicking the tires without committing one way or the other. I donāt need the words on the paper or the ceremony. I donāt want it. I donāt want to define who we are by⦠by what didnāt work for us before. By the things we thought we should do because the people that came before told us we should.
āI want to be your friend for the rest of our lives. I want that friendship to come with certain benefits that you only provide to meāā She grinned through new tears. āāand once weāve committed to that, I want you to be as honest with me as youāve been since we started getting to know each other again.Ā
āI donāt want to rely on good intentions and oaths and guessing games to keep us happy and together. I donāt want to get stuck in a pattern that canāt work for us, one that weāre supposed to just because everyone else we know has. Can youāā
āYes!ā Noraās joyous shout could have been heard a block away as she threw herself into my arms. āYes. I want to be your friend, your only friend with benefits, for the rest of our lives. I want to be the drinking buddy you come to when work sucks, and I want to be the bitch that tells you when youāve fucked up. I want to, I want to.ā My best friend-with-benefits kissed me deeply, molding herself to my body. āI want to take you inside right now and show you how good of a friend Iāll always be. Can we do that?ā
ā
We could. We did. We still do.Ā
No piece of paper legally binds us. No rings signify our commitment. No label defines us. We could walk away from each other today without needing to do more than break the lease on a condo and divvy up our book collection. Because of that, because the only things that bind us are love and honesty, we donāt. We found a new pattern, one that works for us.
When she has an unpleasant truth she needs to tell me, she does, albeit with kindness. I do the same. Whether itās āYes, your butt looks big in that,ā or āI got kinda turned on when that guy at the gym checked me out,ā truths that might create cracks in other peoplesā relationships strengthen ours. We talk about problems before they happen instead of after, and without pretending that making vows is the same thing as honoring, loving, and cherishing each other.
āBabe?ā Noraās sleepy voice shakes me from my reverie. āYou okay?ā
āYeah. Just thinking about things.ā
She curls up to me, stroking my chest. āGo back to sleep, babe. Busy day tomorrow.ā
āYeah, I know. Canāt, though.ā
Yawning, she asks, āJetlag still?ā
āMostly. Get some rest. We can talk tomorrow.ā
āI know we can, but I want to talk now.ā
āCāmon, babe. Zoeās going to be pissed if the mother of the bride looks like a zombie.ā Neither of us are thrilled with the destination wedding thing, but Lance had been willing to pay for it, so who were we to say no?
āIf you want me to sleep, then tell me what you were thinking about.ā
Snorting, I say, āFine. Cowboy movies.ā
āOoh.ā She knows the whole story from my side of things. That had been part of building our new friendship, talking about everything that had led up to each of us leaving Kingās Forest. āCowboy moviesā is our shorthand phrase for the whole mess. āYou okay?ā
āI am. Love you. Get some sleep.ā
āLove you, too.ā She drowsily grins. āYou tired me out earlier, you know? Did I not do the same for you?ā
āOf course you did, but you know how I get when I canāt sleep.ā Sheās had six years to learn, after all.
āI do.ā Her hand slides under the sheet as she runs it across my chest and down to my stomach. āMmm, I know how to help you sleep, too.ā
āThought I tired you out.ā
Nora kisses the side of my neck and rubs my hardening cock. āYou did, but Iām jetlagged, too. Cāmon, marshal.ā She casts the sheet with a chuckle, slaps her thigh, and invites me into her embrace. āMount up.ā
Grinning, I eagerly take my leading lady into my arms. āYes, maāam.ā Together, weāll ride off into the sunset.Ā
Hey, there has to be a sunset somewhere, right?