Issue 19: | 15 Aug. 2023 |
Flash Fiction: | 992 words |
+ Author’s Note: | 50 words |
A medium-sized spider climbed her husband’s pant leg, his obscenely expensive pant leg. The Brioni suit had cost $4,500. When Preston’s second wife grumbled about the charge on their credit card, he laughed. “Swimming with the big fish now. Got to dress for success.”
She and Preston sat close to each other at a table for six, the four other people being potential investors in her husband’s venture capital company, Sage Enterprise. She considered brushing away the spider with her linen napkin. The spider had paused mid-thigh. She easily could reach over but she couldn’t muster the energy. Instead, Preston’s second wife took in the vista before her. A tall glass window looked out on Sydney Harbor; blazing light from a setting sun glimmered off the water, bridge, and opera house. Despite her fatigue, she wished she was sitting in a kayak in the bay right now.She and Preston just had flown in from San Francisco. She felt woozy from jet lag, but Preston had insisted on scheduling the business dinner right after they landed. “It’s all about the early bird and the worm....” She understood what he meant but pictured him more as “the worm.”
He had booked a first-class seat for himself, where he’d managed a solid eight hours of sleep. Preston’s second wife had been wedged between two man-spreading word spewers in the economy section. After a while, she gave up on sleep and watched a Discovery documentary called Nature at Its Deadliest, a film she found grimly entertaining.
Her head throbbed. The server slid a beautifully plated appetizer of marinated raw bream in front of her. The smell of fish and vinegar nauseated her. She glanced toward the spider, watching its journey toward Preston’s black Cartier belt. The suspense made her feel slightly more awake.
From across the table, Avett Lynch, the least awful of the potential investors, asked her, “What do you think of your husband’s idea to fund this AI-driven healthcare startup?”
Preston interjected, “Ha-ha. That’s out of her wheelhouse.” He proceeded to drone on about the financial advantages of using AI.She gritted her teeth. She held an MBA from Michigan State, first in her class. Last year, Preston had hired her straight out of business school after meeting her at a conference. He promised her autonomy, but no opportunities materialized. Instead, he asked her advice, which she produced in the form of succinct, insightful analyses. Later, she discovered Preston used her work verbatim without crediting her.
Three months into the job, both her parents died in a car crash. Preston, older than she by a decade, arrived at her door, nurturing and attentive. “Let me take care of settling the estate.” Over time, Preston insinuated himself into every aspect of her life. She felt raw and vulnerable. His firm, guiding presence steadied her. When he proposed, she accepted, her muddled brain not processing any reservations she normally would have possessed.
Three months into the marriage, her mind started to clear. When she realized she’d married a malignant narcissist, Preston’s second wife called a divorce lawyer. The attorney pointed out that if she split up with Preston, the draconian pre-nuptial would leave her penniless.
The spider trudged onto Preston’s wrist, crossing directly over his David Yurman diamond cufflinks, a present he’d given himself last Christmas. He’d given her a gift, too. Awash in self-congratulation, he announced, “Babe, I bought us season tickets to the opera, a box seat where we can bring clients.”
Opera? Trapped in a small box, schmoozing with vapid clients while listening to screamy music sounded like hell to her. Later, when she tried to get out of attending “Ride of the Valkyries,” Preston said, “You’ve got to go. You’re eye candy. You make me look good.”Preston sensed the creature’s presence. With his left hand, he brushed his right wrist. His massive Princeton class ring startled the spider, who skittered straight up Preston’s jacket sleeve. She felt a ripple of disgust when she caught sight of the ring. Recently, her husband removed his wedding band and wore the class ring in its place. He’d attended University of Charleston as an undergraduate. Last fall, he’d taken part in a four-day seminar on risk assessment at Princeton. He came home sporting the ring. When she asked him why, he responded, “A Princeton class ring speaks volumes; it’s like wearing my resume on my hand.”
She didn’t say, “No, Preston, you pompous turd; it’s like wearing someone else’s resume on your hand.”
Maybe he was cheating on her. She didn’t much care, especially if it might make the divorce easier.
When the intrepid arachnid reached Preston’s shoulder, the creature lost footing; that is, four of its legs lost footing enough for it to tip. She glimpsed a red shape on its belly. The uninvited guest looked remarkably like the Sydney funnel-web spider, a troublemaker that been featured in the documentary she’d just watched. The beast possessed teeth that could puncture toenails and venom that was among the deadliest in the world.
She knew she should warn Preston. Instead, she watched the interloper circle the stiff collar of Preston’s Loro Piana Oxford cloth shirt. Why didn’t her husband feel the tickling presence of the spider? Perhaps, the three glasses of wine had dulled his senses.
Oh, hell.
Yes, she had grown to despise her husband, but not enough to watch him be bitten by the dread Sydney funnel-web spider. She touched his sleeve, “Pres, there’s—”
He elbowed her, a sharp jab. “Not now. I’m working.”
Her husband turned to Cherith Swift, a beautiful young woman who headed her family’s multi-million-dollar foundation. His voice dripped with smarm. “I hear you are formidable on the tennis court. I’d love the challenge. Free tomorrow?”
Preston’s second wife placed her napkin onto the table, tapped his arm, then mouthed the words, “Powder room.”
He glanced in her direction. “Take your time.”
“I will,” said Preston’s future widow.
“Spider” was inspired by my observation of a spider crawling on my husband’s arm while we sat in an ancient, dank, brick-walled bistro in France. Unlike the couple in “Spider,” my husband and I are happily married, and Bruce is still very much alive. (The French spider, not so much.)
short stories have appeared in many places including The Virginia Quarterly Review, Across the Margin, Streetlight Magazine, The Sweetbay Review, and The Virginia Writers Centennial Anthology. Her non-fiction has appeared in The Washington Post, Ladies Home Journal, Southern Living, Brevity, and The Huffington Post, as well as other outlets. Many of her essays have aired on NPR-member stations in the Southeast. Her articles on writing have appeared in The Writer, The Writer’s Handbook, and the Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators Bulletin, among other places. She teaches at WriterHouse in Charlottesville, Virginia.
You can find more of her writing at: https://www.deborahprum.com/my-writing.html
Copyright © 2019-2024 by MacQueen’s Quinterly and by those whose works appear here. | |
Logo and website designed and built by Clare MacQueen; copyrighted © 2019-2024. | |
Data collection, storage, assimilation, or interpretation of this publication, in whole or in part, for the purpose of AI training are expressly forbidden, no exceptions. |
At MacQ, we take your privacy seriously. We do not collect, sell, rent, or exchange your name and email address, or any other information about you, to third parties for marketing purposes. When you contact us, we will use your name and email address only in order to respond to your questions, comments, etc.