I. Sorry Seems to Be Hardest Word
No one wanted to say that one word.
We said a lot of words to each other.
There was a lot of four letter word conjugation—so much one would assume Samuel Jackson would knock on the door and tell us to calm down.
Two vases were thrown. One hit the wall and the other hit me in face.
The one that struck the wall was made of metal.
The one for my head was ceramic or some form of stone.
Yes, it hurt like hell and yes, I fell to the floor.
I wasn’t knocked out so I could still hear his tirade as he stomped across the room to the apartment door. So much shouting and yelling, even after the door slammed and he was gone.
I felt at my face: nose, still there; eyes, present. Large gash in my forehead, that was new.
Maybe it would build character.
I got up from the floor, blinked a hell of a dozen times and looked at the knocked over chairs; the spilled bottle of wine, and the plates of skewered shrimp now swimming in more Zinfandel than I had used when I prepared it.
It was supposed to be a celebratory dinner.
I had received a promotion at work.
This promotion required me to move to Atlanta.
We had always wanted to visit Atlanta…so…I thought, this would all work: Dinner, tell him the news and maybe a heavy pampering before turning in for the night.
So I left work early.
I bought a few items.
I prepared shrimp with asparagus along with a glass of wine and when he arrived home I gave him a light kiss and sat him at the table, brought the dishes to the table and severed a wonderful dinner.
After a few bites of food, I clapped my hands together and told him the news.
He wasn’t happy, so maybe the pampering for the two of us would be delayed until moods mellowed down some.
He slammed his glass down which caused the stem to break.
I was shocked that he did that, as he knew the glasses were once my grandmother’s.
He berated me for taking the promotion and wanting to make a move two states over.
“It’s just Atlanta. Two states away,” I said.
“That’s a hell of a drive!” He replied.
“What do you mean?”
“I mean I’m staying here.”
“You want to stay in Little Rock?” I asked with shock.
“Yes!”
I usually thought his tempers were kind of cute, as he never raised his voice or hand at me unless we were role-playing.”
“This is a joke, right?”
“No,” I replied as I tried to assess if the stem could somewhere be repaired.
“Dammit, Jamie!”
“I thought you’d be happy. It’s more money and a better life in a larger city.”
“No, I’m not,” he replied, “and this shrimp takes like shit!”
I took offense at that. He could barely call out for Chinese food, much less make anything more than a peanut butter sandwich.
“I’m going out.”
“Why?” I asked.
And that’s when everything exploded and the vices and vases flew across our two-room apartment.
I stood alone in the kitchen and wondered if I could still consider myself the bigger man for not fighting back.
Everything Changes
I left the apartment that night with only a few items…one of them being the shattered vase. I had no other family and only a few friends that existed as jpgs and icons on my laptop. Since I had my own personal accounts and credits cards, I had nothing holding me back except the haunted loss of our relationship. Maybe if I was like the popular guys in high school who could shrug off their relationships like they were a speck on the wall and never thinking back.
I had a hard time doing that.
We had been together for almost two years and, yes, in the grand scheme of things that amount of time is like a snap of the fingers—down and over—but in my lesser stage of things those two years were 63,072,000 seconds that I devoted to one man.
When out at the clubs, others looked at me, I’m sure they did, but I didn’t notice.
The server at the restaurant once flirted with me—it took me a few months before I figured out that he didn’t give me the free appetizer because he knew I was a good tipper.
But no, as much as being bombarded by others around me, I was oblivious to any of their advances as they’re was only one person in my lifeL the person who came to my defense when someone shoved me down at a local bar. He didn’t raise his voice or throw one punch—but the other guy knew to stand down.
I guess I didn’t know when to do so either, but it took two years before I would identify his narcissistic and controlling behavior. What some would say as narcissistic, I dismissed as determination. Controlling? Taken as a comforter; a protector: two signs of a lover, as a potential life mate.
So, please excuse me if I was blinded by the rose-colored glasses of love, passion and lust.
But…here I was, driving away from Memphis and into northeastern Mississippi with no clear destination in heart.