This afternoon,
I learnt
a scoop of ice cream
can be an unbearably long stretch of time.
This was supposed to be our treat —
to us,
from us,
for being us.
And yet,
here we were,
divided
by three scoops of Belgian chocolate.
She has never settled for one.
I have always found
two of the same
too lingering,
and two different,
too distracting.
We have rituals like that.
Like never having a meal
at the dining table,
always on the bed,
while trying to figure out
what should accompany us
from dinner
to dreamland.
She's never managed
to finish a movie,
let alone
a television series,
unbothered by sleep,
unhinged in determination.
She's a woman
of iron will,
make no mistake.
But the moment
food reaches
her stomach,
iron
remembers
how to melt.
I, on the other hand,
am compulsive,
in my need to see beginnings end.
We have rituals like that.
Like how,
when she says
she wants coffee,
what she really wants
is coffee-flavoured milk.
She calls that abomination
coffee,
and calls coffee
an abomination
of humanity.
She has never quite understood
how anyone
could willingly savour bitterness,
and yet
she chose
to go to bed
every night
with a man
who drinks
his coffee black,
as though
there were no other way.
She calls me
a psychopath
for that.
I call her
a psychopath
for sleeping
with her mouth
open wide enough
that an entire civilisation
of mosquitoes
could walk right in,
and walk right out,
their stomachs full,
fat with gratitude.
Today,
for the first time,
I met
a lazy Friday.
Even an empty one.
I never knew
Friday afternoons
could contain
so much silence.
And even though,
following ritual,
she spilled
ice cream
on her dress,
today
wasn't the day
I could laugh about it.
How could I,
having fought
with her
seventeen minutes earlier?
This is one
of our rituals too.
Our conversations
and confrontations
have always
been married
to each other,
the way
we are,
on the days
we aren't fighting.
Conversations,
if left unattended
for more than
twenty-one minutes,
have a peculiar habit
of becoming
confrontations.
Then
I blame her.
Then
she blames me.
Then
we both take turns
blaming ourselves,
while quietly insisting
the other
started it.
Then come
the apologies,
still pointing fingers,
only softer
than before.
Neither of us
ever remembers
the precise moment
the accusations
stop making sense,
and affection
quietly resumes
its ordinary duties.
Every time
we fight,
I discover
newer truths
about ice cream.