night.â
âItâs a start,â she said. âYou might have a drinking problem. Your wife is cheating on you. How about you? Have you ever cheated on her?â
âNo, I havenât. I have . . . what was it Jimmy Carter said? . . . Iâve had lust in my heart, of course. Iâve already imagined having sex with you, for instance.â
âYou have?â Her eyebrows raised, and she looked a little shocked.
âAbsolute truth, remember?â I said. âDonât be surprised. Most men you meet are probably thinking disgusting things about you within five minutes.â
âIs that really true?â
âYep.â
âHow disgusting?â
âYou really donât want to know.â
âMaybe I do,â she said, and shifted toward me in her seat. I drank a little of my gin and tonic, the ice knocking against my teeth. âItâs interesting,â she said. âI just canât imagine what it would be like to meet someone and know right away that I want to have sex with them.â
âItâs not that, exactly,â I said. âItâs more like an ingrained response where you just picture it. Like when we were standing in line at the boarding gate, I looked at you and pictured you naked. It just happens. That never happens to women?â
âLike suddenly imagining sex with a man? No, not really. With women itâs different. What we wonder about is if the man we just met wants to have sex with us.â
I laughed. âWell, he does. Just assume it. Trust me, though, you donât want to know more than that.â
âSee, isnât this game fun? Now why donât you tell me more about how you want to kill your wife?â
âHa,â I said. âI donât know if I was really serious about that.â
âYou sure? The way you told that story I couldnât tell.â
âIâll admit that after seeing them together in our house, I think if I had a gun on me that I could easily have shot them both through the window.â
âSo you are thinking of killing her,â she said, the plane starting its pre-takeoff hum. We each buckled in, and I took a longish sip of my gin. I had always been a nervous flyer. âLook,â she continued. âIâm not trying to trap you into saying something you donât want to say. Iâm interested is all. This is just part of the game. Absolute truth.â
âThen you go first. All youâve told me is that you donât like gin.â
âOkay,â she said, and thought a moment. âTruthfully, I donât think murder is necessarily as bad as people make it out to be. Everyone dies. What difference does it make if a few bad apples get pushed along a little sooner than God intended? And your wife, for example, seems like the kind worth killing.â
The planeâs hum turned into a whine, and the captain told the flight attendants to take their seats. I was grateful for a moment when I didnât need to immediately respond to the woman next to me. Her words had echoed the persistent thoughts I had been plagued with for a week as I entertained fantasies of killing my wife. Iâd been telling myself that killing Miranda would do the world a favor, and along came this passenger who was suddenly giving me the moral authority to act on my desires. And while I was shocked by what she had said, I was also in that state of drunkennessâgin buzzing through my bodyâthat makes one wonder why anyone wants to ever be sober. I felt both clearheaded and uninhibited at the same time, and if weâd been anywhere semiprivate I think I would have taken Lily in my arms right then and tried to kiss her. Instead, after the plane took off, I kept talking.
âIâll admit that the thought of actually killing my wife is appealing to me. There was a prenup so Miranda doesnât get half of all I have but she gets a lot,
R. C. Farrington, Jason Farrington