Everything's wrong, but it's fine. You became the mistress.
I almost succeed-that I have the righ
y throat, every time I remember his face: Rebeca, the wife, the one with the
love her.
I waited. I put
way. I know it. I know it very well. But I lie to myself because believing the lie is less work than facing the harsh
he water run, and imagine a perfect day: him knocking on my door
's what keeps me breathing bet
d contract. I mentally si
eaving
all me
g to me, he's
ove; she is
g to my skin, reminding me that I'm only half the story. I try to convince myself that I have the right to be happy, because I worked
g right. Why can
deserve the risk. I deserve Fábio, e
maybe I deserve punishmen
The water still hits the tiled wall, but it's no longer on me. The towel is lying on the
f the tile is the only solid thing I have now.
d then, almost without realizing it, I start my mental list. My Excuse List. It's my intimat
to break
ue, he would have already left the house where he sleeps with Rebeca, he would have already brought the suitcase, th
sn't l
house, the status of exemplary husband he pretends to have. He loves being t
ve to f
, so many nights curled up against a hard pillow, I think I deserve this disaster. I deserve the butterflies in my sto
y fault if
she was "fixing things at the office." It's not my fault if she says she's going out and comes back the next day with the same old story. It's not my fault. Or is it? I
The towel is cold. I wrap it around me like a leak
links on the nightstand. No
screen. I read the message: the p
it was worse: "I can't see you anymore." Maybe it was just a "Hello." It doe
irt, thrown on haphazardly. Its scent lingers in
e the "typing..." message. I see the disappear
el
lete
rything
lete
t you
the irony.
remember my mother saying as a teenager, "Married men don't abandon their wive
k,
guing over a mistaken delivery, someone is doing the dishes, someone is going to bed early. And here I am, Marí
lf full. I take a lukewarm sip. I close my eyes. I let the alc
ates. New mes
you t
ded to ask.
about what to write: "I don't want to
hit send in the mos
later, the a
," she whispers, a
y body tenses as if it's a new promise
reflection: wet hair, sunken eyes, mouth half-open
I'd break it," I say out l
ntract. It's a he
ll rings.
m downstairs. Wi
at me once more. And it smiles. A bitter smile. The smile
I op