"Union Equestrian Team?" I read.
"Brings back memories," she said warmly.
"You never told me that," I exclaimed.
"It never came up."
You'd think after twenty years of marriage it would have surfaced just once. Maybe it could have come up years ago, on a date over dinner when I asked her what she liked to do.
"I was the president," she offered.
"President?" I asked.
"Yeah," she laughed.
"You never tell me anything," I issued.
"I forgot," she deflected.
If that was it, I wouldn't be so concerned, but the other day over dinner, we were talking about the small traveling circus that comes to our town when Christine said,
Now, there are some questions men don't ever want to ask their wives, and I was about to ask one of them.
"What did you do in the circus?"
"I don't know. Lots of things," she answered.
"Like what, the trapeze?" I asked, my voice cracking.
"Like what, the trapeze?" I asked, my voice cracking.
"No, not that," she responded.
Men are supposed to be stoic. Woman are supposed to be from Venus. I thought at any moment now, my wife was going to tell me she'd already been there.
"Well, what did you do," I resumed, "you know, in the circus?"
"I worked in the ticket booth," she explained.
"There isn't anything to tell," she offered, but I wasn't buying it. Later that day, Christine announced, "There is one thing."
What NASA astronaut? Oliver North aide? Hindenburg survivor? I braced myself for the reveal.
"I used to work in a prison," she declared.
"You were in prison! What did you do?" I asked concernedly.
"No, I worked there. I interned one summer. I did pressure drop calculations for the potable water supply to the sinks," she explained.
"Is there anything else you want to tell me, because now is the time? Caused a prison riot? Helped someone escape?" I asked.
"No, that's everything," she assured.
A woman's heart is as deep as the ocean. I learned that from watching Titanic. You can never know everything about them, but I think after over twenty years and two children, my wife finally feels secure in our relationship to reveal her deepest, darkest secrets.
"No, that's everything," she assured.
A woman's heart is as deep as the ocean. I learned that from watching Titanic. You can never know everything about them, but I think after over twenty years and two children, my wife finally feels secure in our relationship to reveal her deepest, darkest secrets.
And when she tells me what they are, I'll let you know.
Editor's Note: Originally posted on November 10, 2016.
Editor's Note: Originally posted on November 10, 2016.
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