Categories


Authors

Dealing the Good Stuff

Dealing the Good Stuff

If you heard this one side of my cell phone conversation, what would you think?

"Hello, yeah, is he gone?"

(muffled reply)

"What? You said he'd be gone by 5:45. I'm not just going to keep driving around waiting for him to leave."

(second muffled reply)

"Okay, well, then I'll meet you down by Bishop's Supermarket. Hurry up."

You would probably assume I was in the middle of some illicit affair with a married woman. If you thought that, you'd be wrong.

It was arrangements to pick up dinner.

Let me explain.

My ex-wife, Arlene, and I have a very good relationship. It is a much better relationship than the one we had when we were married. I hope my kids can appreciate that fact. There are untold horror stories of divorced couples, who use their kids as weapons.

There are divorced couples who, even after 30 years, can't stand to be in the same room.

And then there's Arlene and me.

Even though we're divorced, she handled and drops off my taxes at the accountant, picked me up when my car was in the shop, and sat together (along with Dennis, her forever-fiancé) at all our kids' events.

When our children were younger, Arlene would buy me presents for Father's Day (from the kids) and I would buy her presents for Mother's Day (from the kids).

During Hurricane Irene several years ago, my townhouse lost power. I called Arlene, whose house still functioned in the storm. She told me Danny (our youngest) was stuck at his girlfriend's house, and couldn't get home because of all the downed wires.

Although, I'm sure Danny wouldn't have used the word "stuck”.

However, that being the case, there was an extra room, and Arlene asked if I wanted to stay there. I thanked her, packed a few things (scotch and medications) and headed over. What normally would have been a 20-minute ride ended up being a two-hour ordeal. Streets blocked by fallen trees, power lines draped across broken branches.

I maneuvered back roads that I didn't knew existed; I followed some innate primal urge to get safe and dry (and drunk), and eventually made it to Arlene's house.

After I unpacked (poured a drink) I gathered in the dining room with Arlene and Dennis, along with Amanda (daughter) and her boyfriend, Paul. To round out this menagerie was Arlene's late sister Andrea (before she died) who had come for a visit, but was now trapped (stuck?) unable to get back to her own town.

After spaghetti and meatballs for dinner, Arlene announced, "Let's watch a movie."

Dinner, drinks and a show.

Don't get me wrong, I am very happy with the relationship we have. I just couldn't help think how odd other people would view the arrangement.

One thing that has evolved over the years, between Arlene and myself, that even I find strange, is our relationship with food.

For some reason, and I don't know how it all started, Arlene feels compelled to feed me. I certainly don't have a problem with that: Arlene is an excellent cook. However, it's the manner how I get the food that is strange.

Like something out of a spy novel, we started to have food ‘drops’. Not sure why, I'm sure Dennis doesn't give a damn that Arlene gives me leftovers, but it was just something that evolved over time.

I would walk in to pick up the kids and Arlene would whisper, "There's a bag in the front seat of my car-baked ziti".

She might as well have said, "The frost is on the pumpkin" then stroked her index finger across the side of her nose like Paul Newman in The Sting.

The food might show up anywhere: in my son's room, the front porch, a hollowed out copy of War and Peace. It's come to the point that when I pull into the driveway I check the mailbox for a forgotten Veal Parmesan sandwich.

As for the one-sided phone conversation above, I pulled into Bishop's Supermarket’s parking lot next to Arlene's van. I got out of my car with a bag full of empty Tupperware containers from previous drops. Arlene got out of her car with a bag full of containers filled with ravioli, turkey, mashed potatoes and gravy.

We exchanged packages, then back into our cars we went, and drove away.

Another successful prisoner exchange.

There is a consequence, however, to having such a good relationship with my ex-wife.

I really need to drop a few pounds.



True Crime

True Crime

Coming Soon

Coming Soon

0