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Fiction Funny

Bill awoke to the familiar brass ensemble of chirping birds outside his bedroom window, their orchestrated clamor a stark contrast to the silence that occupied the other side of the bed. Linda had already slipped away to immerse herself in her morning preparations, no doubt perfecting each aspect of her appearance, from her meticulously coiffed hair down to her unblemished outfit selected with the precision of a fashion general going to war.

As Bill ambled into the kitchen, the scent of brewing coffee permeated the air, mingling with the scent of sizzling eggs—the culinary metronome that marked the commencement of another day in his clockwork life. His hand reached instinctively for the frying pan, flipping the eggs just in time to dodge any breakfast-crisis alarms.

“Bill,” came Linda’s voice, smooth as silk but carrying the cutting precision of a scalpel. She appeared in the kitchen, her keen eyes immediately honing in on his lackluster efforts to disguise a yawn. She maneuvered around him like a cat circling a mouse, the aroma of her perfume mingling with the breakfast smells—a force field of suspicion.

“Late night again?” she probed, raising one eyebrow to Olympian heights, brandishing a folder filled with what she considered damning evidence—receipts, call logs, and the haunting shadow of a perfume-smeared shirt collar that had found itself the main suspect in her private investigation.

Bill rubbed the back of his neck, feeling the burden of the morning morph into an all too familiar urban legend of accusations. “It’s not what you think, Linda,” he defended, although his voice betrayed him with the enthusiasm of an old balloon.

And so it continued—his protestations and her pointed inquiries, forming a cyclical pattern as repetitive and unfaltering as the rotation of the Earth itself. Each denial grew sturdier in its insistence, but even so, the specter of guilt loomed large, waving its spectral fingers at the times he’d snuck forbidden chocolates or delayed chores.

But oh, Linda was unyielding, and today she wielded her ultimatum like an ancient judge deciding on a gladiator’s fate: “It’s the lie detector test or the lawyer’s office, Bill.”

Bill’s defenses crumbled under the weight of her words, collapsing like a cursed souffle. As Linda’s ultimatum echoed ominously in his mind, he felt the walls of his comfortable existence begin to tilt inward, threatening to crush him beneath the weight of truths unspoken.

With Linda watching him like a hawk, each sip of coffee he took felt like an admission of sins both profound and trivial. The tendrils of unease persisted into his morning commute, enveloping his thoughts like a thick, unyielding fog—a mist that not even a thousand sunlight beams could hope to penetrate. As he engaged in an argumentative chorus with the radio talk show, impatiently switching stations as if seeking a frequency void of judgment, his eyes caught sight of salvation’s bizarre banner: “Lie Detector Test Coaching!”

It was there, in gaudy lettering on a billboard that stood imperiously over rush-hour traffic, a message that offered improbable rescue as Bill furiously scribbled down the contact information onto a coffee-stained napkin—the proclaimed lifeline that lay one desperate phone call away from salvation or further entrapment.

The day drifted on, time divided into segments of work routine and the sharper edges of an ultimatum lodged into his psyche. While his coworkers droned on about weekend leagues and spreadsheets, Bill’s mind wandered off, calculating probabilities of personal and marital survival amidst Linda’s storm of demands.

In a lunch break that felt more like an existential musing than respite, he thumbed the keypad of his phone, making that fateful call with the trepidation of a sheep sidling up to the wolf’s den. On the other line, a voice responded with spirited eccentricity; Max was as animated as a bareknuckle brawl at the Circus of Hope, promising relief at the end of his surreal methods.

A rendezvous was set for the following day, and for the first time in weeks, a breath of optimism—however dubious—filtered into Bill’s lungs. Here was a chance, odd yet tangible, to sway the scales of judgment back to an even keel, blending both hope and trepidation into the kaleidoscope of life.

The following afternoon found Bill standing at the threshold of Max’s studio, a place less like a professional establishment and more akin to a psychedelic carnival ride halted half-way through a hairpin loop. Max’s headquarters sat sandwiched between a grinning pizza parlor and an ironically austere accounting firm, its façade flamboyantly adorned with banners promising unconventional enlightenment.

Inside, the studio was a whirligig of colors and objects—organic and distinctly organized chaos. Walls adorned with posters proclaiming the virtues of introspection, sharing space with kitschy curiosities that seemed to watch Bill’s every move—an owl-shaped lamp, a collection of antique clocks, and what might have been a mannequin dressed as a yogi in repose.

Max himself emerged from this cacophony of eccentricity, his appearance akin to a tie-dye sunflower plucked from a kaleidoscope. His hair defied gravity in several jaunty directions, matching his socks, which were of two different lengths.

“Ah, Bill!” Max boomed, his voice a musical parade marching through the studio space. “Step into serenity’s embrace! We’re about to embark on a journey where the truth flows as freely as a mountain spring… or as staunchly as the board game night at the senior center.”

Bill stifled a confused chuckle, watching as Max twirled a meditation bowl between nimble fingers, as if gauging Confucius’s approval. His skepticism lingered, though he couldn’t deny the bright energy that Max exuded, an energy that promised at least a departure from cognitive self-flagellation.

Max led Bill across the floor to a clearing, an island of yoga mats and suspended dreamcatchers. “Our first step,” declared the coach, motioning for Bill to join him. “Truth yoga.”

“What—truth—yoga?” Bill echoed, stumbling over the phrase as much as the implied awkwardness it promised.

“Indeed!” Max replied. “A fusion that combines the balance of tree poses with the sincerity of an unfiltered diary. Picture this: honesty, as limber as a stork and as brave as a lion in clown shoes.” With a flourish, he adopted a precarious one-legged stance, motioning for Bill to follow suit.

Tentatively, Bill lifted one leg, hoping his unwillingness to topple over could indeed manifest as a genuine character flaw improvement tool.

Bill strained to maintain both balance and a whisper of self-dignity. As he wobbled through responses to Max’s practice queries—ranging from preferred ice cream flavors to incidents from yesteryear involving misfiled tax returns—snippets of truth mingled carelessly with threats of collapse, both physical and metaphorical.

“Remember, Bill,” Max instructed with the gravitas of a sage unwrapping a caramel, “honesty meditation follows!”

The transition was swift. Bill was soon seated cross-legged, eyes closed in an approximation of inner peace. Lazy curls of thyme-scented smoke meandered through the air, though Bill couldn’t quite shake how brutally yesterday’s accusations clung around his mind like indigestion pined for after a jest gone too far.

Max’s guiding voice steered him through mindfulness exercises, the trick being less in the meditation itself and more in learning to silence inner monologues about snatched chocolates and processed cheese dips told to the bin reporter.

Each session ended with Max’s encouragement ringing in Bill’s head: whimsical nudges that were difficult to ignore, like the amused glance of a clown fish encouraging its doubtful friend to leap.

Days blurred into sessions, and soon improvisation was replaced by the semblance of fluency. Every bout of clumsiness was accompanied by a minor confession plucked from his subconscious, exposing truths as small—and significant—as unwatered plants or unsent birthday cards.

As hours turned into days, Bill discovered little flecks of truth under the layers of himself he’d amassed over a lifetime of routine and repression. Perhaps Max’s kaleidoscopic influence wasn’t as improbable as it first appeared—perhaps within this peculiar pilgrimage there lurked the answer to the enigma of love’s lost truth.

***

As the weeks rolled by, Bill found himself evolving—not quite into a sage of truth and integrity, but managing to keep his right leg suspended in nearly all upright activities, a rather unexpected feat. His evenings with Max had made mindfulness routine; his brain learnt to meander onto calming cerulean seas, even as silence yawned from televisions and creaking pipes late at night. Yet, for all of Max’s flighty training, Bill understood that his marriage teetered under far more than the weight of chocolates confessed or forgotten vows spoken half-heartedly.

The day of reckoning arrived, painted in the grim hues of anticipation. Bill found himself at the doorstep of the polygraph testing facility, a building so nondescript it seemed deliberately designed to cloak broken truths. Its shadow spread across the street like an admonishing finger, pointing Bill directly into the maw of matrimonial justice.

The air was markedly thin as he entered, and he felt immediate perturbation as Linda sat, ice-bound, in the waiting area. Her eyes met his for a fleeting moment—a moment armed with the complexities of half-spoken words and dreams tautened to their breaking point.

The Polygraph Examiner awaited them, an avatar of impartiality, quartile-shaped in perm-pressed diligence. She offered a clipboard with the severity of a judge delivering a sentence, determined to adhere to professional distance within this realm of exposed intimacies.

Bill was seated in a plain chair, wires extending from unseen anchors toward his extremities—a network assisting in uncovering undiscovered truths. He closed his eyes, taking an inhalation as deep as any that had threaded through Max’s freewheeling forums of inner illumination.

The examiner’s questions began, dribbling forth like marbles on linoleum floors, each one rolling casually into baseline normalities. Was his name Bill? Yes. His occupation? Yes. A loan on his house? Yes, indeed. These questions formed the foundation for what lay underneath: the allegation of an affair, an unspoken chord constantly threatening discord.

Beneath the steady thrum of the machine, Bill maneuvered through the queries about fidelity, his voice flattening into calm acceptance. With each answer, coached steadiness abandoned the tight-rope tautness in his own heart, replacing it with something unpronounceable yet tangible.

If Max’s techniques were winning here, they blossomed in striking contrast to Linda’s crescendo of perturbation, her care etched into furrows around her eyes.

Then came the simple question, an overlookable pebble tossed into the proceedings: “Do you love your wife?”

Suddenly, Bill found himself scrambling over this sand dune, his mind a thresher refusing to plant unfounded seeds into soil half-clouded by time. A brief pause—ephemeral as frost—and he answered, “Yes.”

The machine paused, a brief fluttered response transforming everything known to Bill about past, present, and possible futures. The needle spiked improperly, a puppeteer revealing its strings; this was no simple indictment of bad judgment. This was a foxtrot of accident and truth—an exposé stripped bare.

The silence bore a contrast to the events unfolding in his mind, setting Linda’s world shifting once more on an already-tottering axis.

An air of palpable tension enveloped the room, swirling into every corner as the import of the polygraph’s readout sank into the moment like an unwelcome guest crashing a reunion. Linda’s expression shifted from stoic curiosity to a cocktail of disbelief and bewilderment—a reflection of the tidal wave of implications brought about by a mere flicker of a needle.

Her voice broke the silence at last, wrapped tightly around a question laden with all the vulnerability she had so deliberately masked. “Explain, Bill. Explain why the test said what it did. Was that a lie, too?”

Bill swallowed hard, searching for footing in the landslide that was his emotional lexicon. He fumbled tentatively forward, attempting to untangle the strands of truth wound too tightly within himself. “Linda, it’s not that I don’t care about you,” he began, each word hesitant as if creeping past a dozing dragon. “But… maybe I haven’t been able to love you the way you need. Or the way I should.”

There it was, plain and unadorned—a long shadow cast over both of them by the stark illumination of unexpected honesty. The admission hung in the air, taut between echoed breaths and the pensive, lofted brow of the Polygraph Examiner.

Linda’s eyes rimmed themselves with burgeoning understanding, shimmering like the onset of summer rain. Her gaze was neither soft nor yielding but assessed the new paradigm with the clarity of someone who had opted for acceptance instead of submission.

“So… we’ve been going through the motions?” Her voice held no accusation, only a wistful acceptance of the narratives now exposed.

Bill nodded, feeling the weight of silence slide down his shoulders like an unspooled reel. “I think… I think that’s what has happened, Linda.”

For a moment, they shared the quiet communion that strained suspended between shared unhappiness and reluctant admiration for the truth that had found them both. An understanding, distant yet intrinsically significant.

Linda rose, the shifting light catching her face and casting uncertain shadows on the walls—the outward expression of her internal deliberations. She turned to gather belongings, the finality of each action underlined by the absence of recriminations.

“We can’t continue this way, Bill. Not if it isn’t built on love,” she set forth, each word released with gentle deliberation. Her choice to leave was not underlined with scorn or regret but rather a desire to reclaim authenticity, unshackled from pretense.

Bill watched her, an odd mix of sadness and relief washing over him like the tide retreating from shore. This was an ending, yes, but also an unvoiced promise—an understanding of the complexities and missteps that punctuate human connection.

After Linda stepped out, the room’s silence crystallized, leaving Bill anchored to the moment—the reflectivity of irony shining sharply. He had feared dishonesty regarding infidelity, yet the polygraph uncovered a deeper lie—a lie to himself about the resilience of a love faded by time and neglect.

His solitude was interrupted by a vibration; his phone displayed Max’s number, as if the cosmos had scripted an improbable intervention. Max’s voice delivered what could be easily mistaken for the epilogue of an insightful documentary. “Bill, remember, transitions are like bridges. Sometimes rickety, but they get you from where you are to where you’re meant to go.”

Bill absorbed Max’s words, letting them settle into his bones with the depth of Max’s description—a verbal quilt to shelter his reconstructed path.

With Linda moving forward and Max’s words fastening threads of solace, Bill took a few measured steps outside. He peered at the neighborhood from a fresh perspective, visualizing a transformation made possible by confronting complexity and embracing chaos—no longer cosmetic truth, but truths welded by understanding.

Sunlight curved its way through dappling trees, casting transformative shadows on the path before him. A new journey called silently at the edges of his awareness, more earnest than meditation and more significant than reflection.

And thus, Bill chose to embrace this change, committed to a pursuit not bound by routine but by an awakened sincerity. He moved forward with an open heart towards unknown potentialities—to live authentically, accepting both flaws and fortitude with humor and perseverance.

September 16, 2024 12:47

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7 comments

23:02 Sep 21, 2024

What a twist. You see, many men can love other women in a carnal way while still loving their wives. Once he determined to hold onto his wife, he was exposed to a lie detector test that knew better. I hadn't suspected what happened. It is important to be our authentic selves while not hurting others. He thought he'd done so well. Linda finally accepted the truth without blaming and accusing him. Sad in a way, but funny in others. So well told. Interesting way to interpret the prompt.

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Renate Buchner
10:50 Sep 21, 2024

A unique way of describing men's and women's challenges to function together in a relation when the full truth is not told. Great work, Jim

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Mary Bendickson
18:53 Sep 17, 2024

Deep truths unveiled in humorous details. Thanks for liking 'Too-Cute Family'.

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Chris Sage
18:35 Sep 17, 2024

Feels odd that this story should leave me with a smile - I think it's the way the metaphors weave in a thread of humour throughout. Very enjoyable!

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Alexis Araneta
16:26 Sep 17, 2024

Jim, the way you build your details in your stories is always impeccable. Stunning work !

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Trudy Jas
13:06 Sep 17, 2024

Very interesting, Jim. It was clear from the beginning that neither were happy, nor trying to connect any more. Enjoyed the whole meditation journey. You use of description, colors and moods - as usual- made the story both funny and sad. Well done.

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Jim LaFleur
13:32 Sep 17, 2024

Thank you, Trudy!

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