A Good Marriage Here

In a good marriage, there is a library of silences. There is the silence of two people reading in the same room, their legs tangled under a quilt, the only sound the turning of pages and the rain against the glass. There is the silence after a small, stupid fight about a misplaced key—a silence that is not an empty void, but a paused breath, waiting for the apology that arrives not in words, but in a hand reaching for the other’s in the dark.

It is not fifty-fifty. Some days, it is ninety-ten. Some years, it is a seesaw with a broken spring. But the contract is this: I will be the witness to your life. I will watch your hair thin and your hands roughen. I will hear you tell the same story for the fortieth time at a dinner party, and I will not correct you. I will look across the table and see the ghost of the person you were at twenty-two, and I will love that ghost, but I will also love the crease beside your mouth. A Good Marriage

And in the final accounting, it is not the grand gestures that tip the scale. It is the geography of the body at 3 AM—how even in sleep, his hand finds her back. How she shifts an inch closer to his warmth without waking. In a good marriage, there is a library of silences