Love Marriage
She giggled, then moaned, then hissed out laughter through her tightly clenched teeth. So many things were so, so urgently funny that day. Oh, everything was. Everything? She snorted deeply and flung her arms over her head. Seemingly everything, yes. The surface of things, for sure. The depths, who knew; but the surfaces were hysterical.
The top-most funny thing being, of course, her husband´s nostril. Can you believe? She had noticed it this morning while he mixed his rice with the lentils she had burned—again. His left one was narrower than the right one, swear to God! And it wasn´t a distortion of the angle at which he was sitting, turned slightly away at the new dining table. No. She had circled him to serve more eggplant, some water, a cup of tea, and she had confirmed the odd, lopsided truth of the matter. She had been this close to burs ting out in glee when her eyes had landed upon the lack of definition to the bridge of his nose.