Quoted By: >>66750092 >>66750313
>>66749777
>I roll the dice as the door swings open.
>50/50.
>I might be getting the sweet woman the makes all of this worth it, just a little bit so.
>Or I'm getting her again.
>The distinct...Nothingness-smell in the air is already beginning to make me lean in the direction of the latter.
>No cooking. No candles. No nothing. Just recycled air and the faint furniture-musk that you grow so used to that you don't even recognize it after so long.
>That's fine, I tell myself. She might just be having a hard day. It might not blow up in your face tonight.
>You chose to be okay with this, Anon.
>You chose to be okay with her.
>You can't get angry now.
>Walking into the kitchen confirms my suspicions. Nothing's prepared. What's worse, though, is that nothing's been done period. The sink's overflowing with dishes. It has been for a few days now.
>I rub my head in my hands for a moment.
>She needs you to be responsible right now, suck it up.
>Multitasking is a go. We have some frozen chicken in the freezer, I can probably scratch together some rice to serve with it. Not great, not terrible.
>Turning on the oven to preheat, I turn around and begin to deal with the mound of crusty silverware I've foolishly allowed to collect.
>I'm not sure why I got my hopes up.
>She's only been getting worse.
>Don't think like that.
>I'm not pleased to immediately be doing chores after coming off a shift, but sometimes it can't be helped.
>As I take to task the grime upon a plate with a steel-wool brush, I can hear footsteps beginning to trail from our bedroom.
>What's more though, I can hear Wendy's breathing.
>And I already know from that tic alone that it's going to be another one of those nights.
>THOSE nights.
cont
>I roll the dice as the door swings open.
>50/50.
>I might be getting the sweet woman the makes all of this worth it, just a little bit so.
>Or I'm getting her again.
>The distinct...Nothingness-smell in the air is already beginning to make me lean in the direction of the latter.
>No cooking. No candles. No nothing. Just recycled air and the faint furniture-musk that you grow so used to that you don't even recognize it after so long.
>That's fine, I tell myself. She might just be having a hard day. It might not blow up in your face tonight.
>You chose to be okay with this, Anon.
>You chose to be okay with her.
>You can't get angry now.
>Walking into the kitchen confirms my suspicions. Nothing's prepared. What's worse, though, is that nothing's been done period. The sink's overflowing with dishes. It has been for a few days now.
>I rub my head in my hands for a moment.
>She needs you to be responsible right now, suck it up.
>Multitasking is a go. We have some frozen chicken in the freezer, I can probably scratch together some rice to serve with it. Not great, not terrible.
>Turning on the oven to preheat, I turn around and begin to deal with the mound of crusty silverware I've foolishly allowed to collect.
>I'm not sure why I got my hopes up.
>She's only been getting worse.
>Don't think like that.
>I'm not pleased to immediately be doing chores after coming off a shift, but sometimes it can't be helped.
>As I take to task the grime upon a plate with a steel-wool brush, I can hear footsteps beginning to trail from our bedroom.
>What's more though, I can hear Wendy's breathing.
>And I already know from that tic alone that it's going to be another one of those nights.
>THOSE nights.
cont