you had answered my text," he shot back, anger already rearing its ugly head. He'd always had a hair trigger. I'd always been gun shy. But time had given me armor against his words that used to riddle me with holes, leaving me leaking my self-esteem.
"You could have waited for me to answer the text after work."
"When did you start being such a bitch?" he snapped as I flipped on my tea kettle.
To that, I sighed. "I guess when I realized that your anger has nothing to do with me," I told him, shrugging even though he couldn't see me.
"I'm angry because you don't have the decency to respond to me. I just needed five minutes."
"I don't owe you five minutes, Blake," I told him. I added silently That's the beauty of divorce. "But since we're both here now, what did you want?"
"I was thinking, since I let you have the car," he started, making me take a deep breath, releasing it slowly, feeling the anger bubble up.
"It was my car to start with," I reminded him. I'd worked my ass off to buy that car, to keep making the payments. I'd been completely in charge of taking it into the shop when we were married even though Blake knew that the mechanic gave me extra anxiety since I always felt like I was being suckered into fixes that weren't necessary, but wasn't strong enough or in-the-know enough to object to it.
"Nothing is just yours when you're married," he said, tone condescending, making anger start to burn in my chest. "Anyway, since I let you keep that without a fight. Which was nice of me," he went on, making my jaw tighten, "that you should send me a couple thousand."
"What?" I snapped, tone a mix of the emotions I was feeling. Namely surprise and disbelief. "You can't be serious. The divorce has been final for years. There is no more negotiating." I couldn't even believe he'd ask. Except, of course, I could.
After the divorce, my mother had sat me down and told me how relieved she was, that she always feared that Blake had been mooching off of me, taking advantage of my better-paying job.
He would complain about it when I bought books, but would spend hundreds of the money I earned on video games and accessories, on beer and energy drinks, on takeout when he didn't even bother to ask me if I wanted anything.
During our marriage, and directly after the divorce, I hadn't been able to think about any other failings to see the blinking neon warning signs.
But after some time passed, after we talked it through in therapy, I did eventually come to accept that I had been financially used by someone who only had a very part-time job that barely paid enough to cover the cable bill that only he used.
"You owe me."
"Owe you?" I repeated.
"Yeah, for putting up with your shit."
"My shit," I repeated. "What shit?"
"All your shit. Hanging with your mom more than me. Reading instead of talking to me. The anxiety bullshit. Being a cold fish in bed."
Something swirled and built in my system, growing until it overtook me completely. It wasn't familiar, this mix of righteous anger and confidence, but I welcomed it with open arms, finding my voice strong when I opened my mouth to speak again.
"You know what?" I said, voice tense. "I don't have to deal with this anymore," I told him, hanging up, immediately swiping to block his number.
Did he have some points?
Maybe.
Yes, I was close with my mom. But maybe a big part of that was because she provided the loving support and safe space that he never had our whole marriage.
And, yeah, I read a lot. Because he played his video games a lot. What was I supposed to do? Sit there and look at him adoringly while he spent time with his online friends instead of his wife?
It was also true that I struggled with anxiety. But it wasn't like he hadn't known that going in. And it wasn't like I didn't actively try to work on it. I had the therapy bills to prove it.
As for the final thing, well, that was a low, low blow. And, unfortunately, I didn't have a good rebuttal prepared, even inside my own head, for my own comfort.
It was my deepest, darkest insecurity. More than my weight. More than my social awkwardness. It was something I couldn't talk about with anyone because, well, what could anyone say?
Don't be