Anymore Short Story
Anymore-A short story
-Written by Dr. Neena Anil
I began seeing the woman who would later become my second wife before my
first wife and I had broken up and separated. It was right at the time I was about
to turn thirty and felt the fleeting dreams of my youth dying, and quite frankly,
was having my first of many midlife crises. So, how did I deal with it? Well, I
admit, very poorly, to say the least. In other words, I handled the situation like a
heartless heel.
The “other woman” had been one of my guitar students for a brief period of time
in the summer of 1983. The reason her music lessons ended she was that she was
leaving New York City to spend the next six or seven months with relatives in
Germany. From the time she departed at the end of August until February of 1984
we airmailed many love letters back and forth across the Atlantic to one another.
That’s a rather important fact in the telling of this tawdry tale, so please
remember it for the paragraphs still to follow.
My first wife, whom from this point forth I shall refer to as “J”, and I had been
together for nearly a decade. The other woman, who in kind I shall now refer to as
“M”, and I, and as I have previously stated, had known each other for only several
months prior to the time she had jetted off to Germany. In each transatlantic
missive between M and I, we not only expressed, and often graphically, our
intimate feeling for each other, but I had also implored her to move in with me
when she returned to NYC in the upcoming year. Yes, even though J and I were
still living together throughout those written exchanges. When M had finally
capitulated and agreed to the suggested living arrangement with me I couldn’t
have been happier, or more at odds as to what to do when it came to J still sharing
the same home. So I plotted a deviously deceitful plan of action.
During the months before M was scheduled to return to NYC, J and I had been
arguing constantly. If it wasn’t one thing we bickered about—it was another. Now,
almost thirty-seven years later, I’m not sure if it was either the end of 1983 or if it
was the very beginning of 1984 that I wrote a song of which the lyrics, in as much
as for your convenience as for the purpose of plot progression of this saga, I’ve
shared here.
Anymore
So you found my love letters
Now you know her name
And that I can’t live without her
Anymore
At first, your words were angry
Then you cried
To think we won’t go on together
Anymore
We no longer sleep together
We don’t dine in the dark with each other
So why pretend we’re lovers
Anymore
I know the truth is often bitter
Because lovers are often untrue
You love me—I love her
Now it’s starting to blur
Into who hurt who first
Then who hurt who when
And who’s hurting who to get even again
But I just can’t write you love songs
Anymore
I know the truth if often bitter
Because lovers are often untrue
So why pretend we’re lovers
Anymore
We no longer sleep together
We don’t dine in the dark with each other
You love me—I love her
Now it’s starting to blur
Into who hurt who first
When who hurt who then
And who’s hurting who to get even again
But I just can’t write you love songs
Anymore
Now you found my love letters
So you know her name
And that we can’t go on pretending
Anymore
After composing it I know J heard me singing that little number in the tiny Upper
Eastside Manhattan apartment we still shared at the time. Deep down I was
hoping she’s figure out that I had met someone else and wanted to end our
marriage, but she didn’t. With each passing day, I’d sing it she barely paid it any
mind, except for one occasion when she commented, “That’s such a sad song.” The
time was drawing precariously near for M’s return to NYC and to take up
residence with me in the same place where J was still residing.
It must be obvious to you at this point; I had to come up, and come up quickly,
with a new plan. So, can you guess what I did? That’s right, instead of telling J in a
straightforward, decently honest manner that we were about to split up and were
without question heading for divorce, like the craven little coward I was, and as in
the biblical tale of the end of Judas’ relationship with Jesus, I set in motion and
initiated J’s final betrayal with a kiss.
I had kept every letter M had written hidden in one of my guitar cases. You see,
never once did I ever have an-y reason to open, much less search any of the many
musical instruments carrying cases that cluttered our cracker-box like living
space. The very next morning I collected those love letters and left them in a
place where I knew she’d discover and read them. Then, before leaving our place
to go teach a guitar lesson, I paused at the door to give J a quick last kiss goodbye.
Of course, J did find and read them. She also recalled that sad song I had written
and been singing the entire winter. So she put two and two together really fast to
get four. Next, she moved out and left me for good. This shameful episode still
haunts me to this very day. If I could go back in time I’d try to undo that cavalier
act of callous cruelty if possible, but I can’t, because it’s simply impossible to
relive the past.
There are some days and nights when I’m alone and unable to press the pause
button on rerunning that final scene of the end of my marriage to J. As much as I
try to forget how I brutally betrayed my first wife in that atrocious act with its
Judas kiss, over the years, I still play out in my mind the final acts of that pitiful
Passion play again and again. It’s still the heaviest cross I bear. Maybe someday
it’ll break me, finally driving me crazy, or sending me to an early grave. I really
don’t know for sure. But what I do know is how frequently I’ve felt I no longer can
live beneath the burden of its weight, ironically enough, anymore.