Aftermirth
I STOPPED BEING FUNNY the day my wife was electrocuted by her underwire bra.
You must have seen it on the news, some Ken-and-Barbie anchor team struggling not to let a hint of morbid amusement crack the thinly applied veneer of sympathy on their faces as they listened to the fulminologist (âThatâs science speak for someone who studies lightning,â Barbie said, with a those wacky scientists waggle of her eyebrows) from Stanford University explain how it had happened. Contrary to popular belief, he said, metal worn on the body does not attract lightning. âWell, Iâm sure a whole lot of women will be relieved to hear that!â Ken exclaimed, with a sidelong glance at busty Barbie. âYes, and anyone who wears a wristwatch,â the fulminologist said, obviously annoyed at being interrupted. He went on to explain that since my wife (âthe victimâ) was found directly beneath a tree that had been struck by lightning and had not been hit directly herself, one could assume that the current had jumped from the tree to her in a âside splash,â a phenomenon that accounts for 30 percent of all lightning injuries but is rarely fatal. It was in my wifeâs case, because of the two curved pieces of nickel titanium supporting her breasts, which conducted the current and stopped her heart. âFreakish,â said Ken and Barbie, with crinkled foreheads and mournful shakes of their heads. âTragic. What a thing.â
You probably saw the headlines in some of the trashier papers too: BOLT SLAYS BUXOM BROOKLYNITE and FOR COMEDIANâS WIFE, DD PROVES DOUBLE DEADLY . The worst was LIGHTNING STRIKES TWIN TOWERS , hardy har har. I would have loved to have gotten my hands on the clever son of a bitch who wrote that one, and the other piece of garbage who dug up the photo some paparazzi took of Jess in a bikini on our honeymoon in Costa Rica. Her headâs thrown back and sheâs laughing at something I said, but the way they cropped the shot I bet her smile wasnât what you noticed.
Not that I could blame anyone for noticing. My wife had magnificent breasts. They were smooth and luminous and almost perfectly round; two soft, heavy moons capped by nipples like rose quartz marbles. Atomic nipples, I used to call them, because they were so irrepressible. The slightest touch or breeze would stiffen them. Jess actually had to wear padded bras to hide them, an irony whose hilarity was lost on her. She hated being large-breasted, hated the catcalls and lascivious stares, the sly insinuations of other women that sheâd had implants, the difficulty in finding clothes that fit without drawing even more attention to her amplitude. She wanted to have reduction surgery, but I talked her out of it. Thatâs the real knee-slapper: if I hadnât loved my wifeâs breasts so muchâtheir softness, the sweet heft of them in my handsâshe might still be alive.
You know that spot between a womanâs breasts where the scent of her settles, distilled to its most intoxicating form? That was my favorite place on earth. I could lie for hours in exquisite near-suffocation, my nose pressed against Jessâs breastbone, my face harbored by the pliant orbs of her flesh. I knew I wasnât the first man to have berthed there, but I consoled myself with the knowledge that unlike all those other poor schmucks, I had been granted a permanent mooring, a lifelong lease to wallow in Jessness.
But permanent is a lie we tell ourselves and each other. And lifelong turned out to be less than four years.
I HEARD J ESS before I ever saw her. It was the spring of 2006, and I was living in LA. Iâd been out there for six months, licking my wounds after having failed to make the cut at SNL . My agent had gotten me a gig at the Ice House in Pasadena, which was a big deal for me then. I was up fourth and the two comics before me were lame, so by the time I took the stage the
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