After a long day of flights and cabs, we settled into the hotel to get ready for the wedding. It was the best hotel in Detroit. But in a recurring theme to our marriage, we were soon fighting again. Actually, my wife was pissed at me again because of something I said. After storming out of our hotel room, she gave me the cold shoulder while we rode the crowded elevator down to the first floor. Once outside, we silently stood on the sidewalk while the doorman flagged down a cab.
Once inside the cab, she moved to the far side. With her back turned towards me, we didn't speak to each other for the entire ride to the wedding. Not a single word.
She just stared out the window at the dark streets of Detroit. Every once in awhile, I could see the Middle Eastern cabbie look into his rear view mirror at us and wisely stayed quiet. By the end of the ride, I was weakening so I considered saying I was sorry, but I couldn't force myself say the words. I didn't want to admit I was wrong when I was right.
When the cab pulled up in front of the old brick Masonic Lodge, my wife didn't wait for the cab to stop before she opened the door. The door slammed behind her as I paid the driver. Without looking back, she rushed up the stairs towards the front door. Quietly, the cab driver glanced at my wife, then at me and then back at my wife. His laughing eyes said it all. I could tell what he was thinking because men have a certain disdain for other men who cannot control their women.
When I looked up, I saw her jade green dress disappearing inside. Not waiting for my change, I followed her into the reception, but she had already vanished into the crowd. At first, I thought it would be easy to find a tall blonde woman in a sea of dark haired guests. I was wrong. I looked and looked.
When I couldn't find her, I regretted not apologizing earlier when I had a chance. Now, I wanted to take back what I said to her earlier but, first, I wanted a chance to explain that I couldn't help myself.
Earlier, when she had stepped out of the bathroom in the hotel, she smiled, spun around once and posed for me in her new outfit. Excitement and joy were written all over her face. I should have said something nice.
Instead of giving her a compliment, I stated, "You're not wearing that to my nephew's wedding, are you? That dress is too revealing. It's inappropriate and you're going to embarrass me."
I was right. Her dress had thin shoulder straps and a plunging V-neckline in both the front and back. The upper bodice was tight and left little to the imagination while the pleated skirt flared out around her while she twirled. While she looked beautiful in the dress, there was a lot wrong with it.
Her neckline plunged too far and displayed too much cleavage. Her perky breasts threatened to fall out of dress with one wrong move. Also, I could tell she wasn't wearing a bra because the back of her dress plunged down even further than in the front. Everyone at the reception would know she wasn't wearing a bra. To make it worse, her flirty skirt showed more thigh than it covered.
In spite of everything wrong, she looked fantastic. Actually, in that dress, she was every man's fantasy: a tall, sexy blonde wearing almost nothing. Even though she looked great, I knew her outfit invited nothing but trouble. I didn't want trouble.
I don't know why she couldn't see that I was right, but the look on her face said I was wrong. Dead wrong. I had seen that look on her face a million times. She was pissed. Now, with her lost in a crowd, I really wished I'd had apologized to her earlier or, better yet, kept my mouth shut.
I didn't like the idea of my scantily clad wife being alone at the party so I searched and searched. The crowd was packed with people I didn't know. I saw dancers, drinkers, the bride, the groom, and my drunk, older brother but I couldn't find my wife. Finally, after scouring the reception hall numerous times, I felt relieved when I finally found her.
She was seated at our assigned table but she didn't notice me as I walked up behind her. With an almost empty glass of wine, she was seated between a large, plump woman with lots of pearls and a stranger. My curiosity was stirred as I noticed my wife was talking to with the stranger. My relief turned to fear when I noticed the stranger had his hand on her thigh.
My jaw clenched at the sight of him caressing her. My mind raced with questions. Why was his hand on my wife's thigh? Why was she letting him touch her? How do they know each other? How did they meet?
Instead of answers, dread filled the void in my soul as I watched. All I knew was, he shouldn't be touching my wife and, more importantly, my wife shouldn't be letting him touch her.
To let them know I had caught them, I wanted to say something but couldn't find the words so, instead, I coughed a loud, obnoxious cough. Everyone at the table looked up at me but them. Still locked in a conversation, they didn't turn around. I stood there waiting for them to acknowledge me but it didn't happen.
I wanted the stranger to move so I could sit next to my wife but they ignored me. I tried to think of the perfect retort to being ignored but I couldn't utter the words. Instead, I just watched his hand gently knead her bare thigh. All I could think of was how dangerously close his hand was to her hemline.
Everyone was staring at me and I felt embarrassed. I wanted to scream at the stranger, "Move, you're in my seat and get your hands off my wife." And at my wife, I wanted to scream, "See, you should have listened to me. This trouble started because of the indecent way you're dressed."
Maybe it was decorum that stopped me from yelling at them or maybe it was just fear of being embarrassed but I couldn't think of what else to say. As the other people at the table continue to look up at me, I was tongued-tied. As my mind spiraled, I decided to sit down.
Out of the nine spots at the round table, the only open chair was directly across from my wife on the far side of the table. Instead of standing there looking like a fool for any longer, I walked around the table and sat down between two old men. When I sat down, they turned their backs to me to talk to their guest.
As I sat down, my wife didn't even look at me. As much as I tried to catch her attention, she kept talking to the stranger sitting next to her. With their heads leaning close to each other, she was engrossed in their conversation. For the first time, I looked at the stranger.
He had short, dark hair with intense black eyes. Although the stranger was dressed in a nice suit and tie, he had a menacing presence like a bouncer at the front door of a seedy bar. His gold Rolex had diamonds and his arms were big from long hours at the gym.
Trim with wide shoulders, he looked like he had won a few barroom brawls. As a medal for winning, he had an ugly scar above his right eye.
He was younger than my wife but he probably didn't know it. I knew her true age but my wife had always taken good care of herself with yoga and looked half her age. I was the one who hadn't aged well.
Oddly, he wasn't just a brute. He seemed to have the gift of gab and created his own gravity around him. Everyone at the table laughed at his jokes and was quiet when he spoke. He was charming to everyone but me. Even guests walking by the table would stop by and say hello to him.
Always, the stranger introduced my wife to them. The guests must have thought she was his date because his hand remained on her thigh. Neither one of them was self-conscience about such a blatant show of intimacy. I tried to imagine an innocent reason for such familiarity, but I couldn't. Afterwards, the guests would walk away while whispering to each about the stranger. Usually, a smirk was followed with a nod.