Elliot said.
Helen turned to Elliot and looked at him squarely, taking on the stance of a lawyer. âSo you need a wife,â she said, driving the point home.
âI got a call from my sister today, telling me Iâd better produce a wife or else.â
âOr else what?â I asked.
âI donât want to piss my mother off on her deathbed,â Elliot said. âSheâd haunt me the rest of my life.â It was meant to be a joke, but his voice held a somberness that couldnât be ignored.
âSo you do want something,â Peter said. âA wifeâat least temporarily.â
âNo, no,â Elliot said, shaking his head, laughing it off. âI donât know what Iâll do really. But I donât need a wife.â
âBut,â Peter said, âwe asked you what you wanted and that is what you said.â
âThatâs not how it happened,â Elliot said. He turned to me. âIs it?â And then he answered the question himself. âNo, no, thatâs not how it went.â
âAre you going to propose?â Peter asked, then he reached out and held Helen by her shoulders. âHelen, heâs going to propose to you!â
âNo, no,â Elliot said, flustered and embarrassed.
âAlways a bridesmaid, but nowâs your chance,â Peter said.
âOh, shove it up your ass,â Helen said, shaking him off.
âCome on!â Peter said, not letting it drop. âYou two would make a delightful couple! Mr. and Mrs. Hull!â
I wanted to tell Peter to leave Elliot alone, to let it go, but I kept quiet. I liked seeing Elliot in this precarious position, and I found myself willing to put up with Peter for the moment. He goaded people when he was drunk. He could be a bit of a bully.
âNo extreme measures necessary,â Elliot said.
But then Helen spoke up kind of slyly. âYou need a pretend wife,â she said, âfor your motherâs sake. It would be very gallant.â She turned to me. âGwen, you should be Elliotâs pretend wife.â
And this is where everything turned on itself. Elliot glanced at me. His face looked stricken. I imagine now, looking back, that he was terrified. I was. I felt exposed even though no one could have known that a part of me wanted to know what my life would have been like with Elliot; and no one could have accused me of that because I was actively trying to defuse things. And maybe he was also terrified because this was what he wanted too, where heâd been hoping the conversation would go all along.
âWhy me?â I asked.
âBecause Iâm tired of pretending with men,â Helen said, and this was true. It wasnât the first time sheâd said it. Pretending was a term she used in place of dating. âPlus, he saved your life, after all, not mine. Right, Peter?â
âThatâs right!â Peter said, not backing off of the whole idea at all. In fact, he looked lit up. âThis makes perfect sense. Itâs so, I donât know, European. â He had this whole spiel on how Europeans were so advanced in their definitions of marriageâespecially the French. I glared at him whenever he went on this jag in publicâusually aftersome cocktailsâbut he always mistook my glare for something elseâa sexy leer?
âWe could also just buy him a nice bottle of Cristal and call it even,â I said.
âWhat?â Helen said, turning on me with a frenetic pitch that bordered on a stylized version of anger. âDonât you have confidence in your marriage? I mean, if Peter were against it, that would be one thing. But you? Do you really think Elliot here is a threat to the institution?â
âHey,â Elliot said. âBe nice.â He turned to me. âI thought she liked me.â
I was keeping a wary eye on Peter. âI have confidence in my marriage,â I said.
âWell, then,â
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