When I Ran Away Ilona Bannister (best free ebook reader .txt) š
- Author: Ilona Bannister
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I say, over my shoulder, āSorry, thereās nothing ready. I didnāt have a chance. I didnāt know you were coming back today, I mean, I guess I forgot. I havenāt eaten either. You want to order something?ā Weāll just figure out dinner and I can tell him, tell him aboutā¦that Iāmā¦
āWhat are these?ā He holds up some frozen dinners. Ready meals, thatās the English word for them. āCan I have one of these?ā Heās sharp, testy.
āSure,ā I say. He chooses spaghetti carbonara for himself and puts the other boxes back in the freezer. He doesnāt offer to heat one up for me. I didnāt even realize I had bought thatāfrozen pasta. Iāve betrayed every Italian grandmother on Staten Island.
āHow do I do this? Microwave or oven?ā Harry asks me, annoyed, tired.
āI donāt know, read the instructions. Those are oven ones, I guess.ā
āWhat temperature?ā he shoots back at me.
āI donāt know, Harry. Read the box.ā I canāt tell him anything.
āItās been a long day.ā
āOK, so now you canāt read?ā Why is he doing this?
āNot now, Gigi.ā It comes out sterner than he meant it to. Or not.
Another long silence while he tries to figure out how to feed himself. Sliding off the cardboard sleeve, poking holes in the plastic film, saying without words that heās annoyed that, once again, nothing was prepared for his arrival. That heās worked all day and traveled and what is it that I do all day? I can hear him thinking it, What does she do all day? as he flips over the cardboard sleeve to check the temperatures again.
I pretend not to notice. Change the subject. I need therapy, Iām struggling, the doctor gave me a prescription for drugs weeks ago and maybe I should take them but I say, āI have to pay for Johnnyās cricket membership.ā
āFine.ā Harry holds the cardboard sleeve close to his face to decode the instructions.
āAlso the bill for the dentist,ā I say, finding it hard to stay composed. I canāt stand this. Heās a fucking grown man and he has to make a show of how heās āmaking dinner.ā
āOK, Iāll transfer some money to the house account.ā
āThereās the card for your aunt on the table to sign.ā
āOK.ā Because I do that too now. Remember his fucking shit for his fucking family. Even though that aunt calls me Georgina because Gigi isnāt a āproper name.ā
He flounders around the kitchen looking for a, āBaking tray? Whatās a baking tray? Do we have one? It says put on a baking tray.ā
He wants me to do it. Find the baking tray, make the food, be the wife. Let him focus on his one very important task, his one thing, his work. Heās too important to heat up this ready meal because he works. Heās forgotten I have a job, that I know what it means to work. That when I did my work I came home and did all the home stuff too. I didnāt make anywhere near the same money as him but dammit if I didnāt work as hard at both my jobs.
āThereās a baking tray in the bottom drawer. Johnny has a game, I mean a cricket match, on Saturday. Can you take him?ā Because I canāt. Can you take the baby too? Can someone take the baby because maybe if you took the baby for a dayā
āOK, where is it?ā Heās half shouting.
āSurbiton.ā
āNo, the baking tray.ā
āThe bottom drawer.ā Please, just for that one day, because if I can get to Saturday and he just takes theā
āIām in the bottom drawer, I canāt find it.ā
āItās there.ā
āWhere?ā
āWell, ordinarily, if somethingās not right on top you might find that using your hands to move other things out of the way may help you to find it. Thatās called ālooking for something.ā You live here, you should find out where we keep shit.ā
It goes on and I let it. The fruitless search for the hidden pot holders, the camouflaged serving spoon, the missing condiments that are visible only to women. Thereās an implicit meaning in every clang of a pan, pans that should not even be clanging because heās making a fucking frozen dinner.
Twenty minutes of silence while I sort the laundry mindlessly and he checks the window of the oven compulsively so he doesnāt burn his food. He finally sits down to eat. Alone. He opens his laptop to read the news. Then, āIām out tomorrow night and the night after.ā
āBut you just got home.ā
āItās part of my job, you know that.ā
āLucky you.ā I leave him to his pasta and load the washer and try to figure out how this went wrong. How I went from needing him to hating him so fast. How I went from wanting to tell him everything to saying nothing.
āIām going to bed. Iāll be in the guestroom.ā
āI just got home, as you said, but of course you will,ā he says to his screen, winding spaghetti absent-mindedly on the fork.
I stop in my tracks and say, with my back to him, my head bowed, āWhy should I go up and down stairs all night when I can just sleep near them?ā
āItās fine, I understand, you just havenāt slept in our room for I donāt know how long.ā
āAnd you havenāt gotten up in the night for I donāt know how long either.ā
āI have a deal on. I have work. Itād be nice if you would acknowledge me and what I do for this family. It would be nice to have some support sometimes.ā Itād be nice, Gigi, if you could just have sex with me when I want it and make fucking dinner and not be mentally ill or make me dread coming home every night to listen to you complain about the life Iāve made for us. Thereās a silence and then he says it again, āIt would be nice.ā
āYeah, it would.ā Yeah, it would.
āIām under a lot of stress.ā
āOf course you are. I canāt imagine.ā
āThatās not what Iām saying. You know thatās not what Iām
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