really wanted to do this. I hesitated and then accepted her generous offer, shamelessly pushing aside my dad-and, even worse, my mother-and filling my head with rationalizations of every kind. What he doesn't know won't hurt him. I won't have my mother at my wedding- at least I can have my dream dress. She'd want me to have this.

The next day, after much thought and angst, I came up with the perfect strategy to cover my tracks and keep my dad's pride intact. I went back to Bergdorf, selected a five-hundred-dollar veil, and told the clerk that my father wanted to buy it and would be calling with his credit card details. I also hinted rather directly that I wanted him to think the charge covered my dress, too. The clerk, a thin-lipped, fine-boned woman named Bonnie whose affected Upper East Side accent I will never forget, winked as if she understood, called me dear, and conspiratorially said she'd handle it, no problem whatsoever.

But of course ole Bonnie screwed everything up, sending my father the receipt and the veil. And although he never said a word about it, the look on his face when he handed me that veil in Atlanta said it all. I knew how much I had hurt his feelings, and we both knew why I had done it. It was the most ashamed I have been in my life.

I never told Andy the story-never told anyone the story-so great was my desire to forget it all. But I think those emotions resurfaced at Margot's dinner table tonight, and now again, in the middle of the night, as I am filled with shame all over again. Shame that makes me wish I could turn back time and wear a different dress on my wedding day. Wish I could take back that look on my father's face. Which obviously I can't do.

But I can stand up to the Ginnys of the world. And I can let her-and anyone else- know that I'm proud of where I come from, proud of who I am. And, by God, I can sleep on the couch in protest if my own husband doesn't get it.

twenty-five

The next morning I awaken to find Andy standing over me. He is already showered and dressed in a bright green polo, madras shorts, and a woven leather belt.

'Hi,' I say, clearing my throat and thinking that madras shorts look ridiculous on anyone over the age of five.

'Hey,' he says so curtly that I can tell sleep has not cured his problem. Our problem.

'Where are you off to?' I ask, noting his car keys in hand and his wallet bulging in his back pocket.

'Going to run some errands,' Andy says.

'Okay,' I say, feeling a resurgence of rage by his steadfast refusal to address last night, to ask what's wrong, ask why I'm sleeping on the couch, wonder or care if I am happy here in Atlanta.

He twirls his keys on his index finger-a habit that is starting to grate on my nerves-and says, 'So I'll see you later?'

'Yeah. Whatever,' I mutter.

I watch him take a few nonchalant steps toward the door before I snap. 'Hey!' I say, using the Northern definition of the word.

Andy turns, coolly gazing at me.

'What the hell's your problem?' I say, my voice rising.

'My problem?' Andy asks, an ironic smile tugging the corners of his mouth.

'Yeah. What's your problem,' I say, realizing that our arguing style is anything but sophisticated, probably because we don't do it enough. In fact, I can't recall a single fight of any consequence since we've been married. Something I used to wear as a badge of honor.

'You're the one sleeping on the couch,' Andy says, pacing in front of the fireplace, still playing with his keys. 'What's up with that?… We always said we would never do that…'

I whip the throw blanket off my legs, sit up, and finally come out with it. 'Why the hell didn't you defend me last night?'

Andy looks at me, as if carefully considering the question, and then says, 'Since when have you needed anyone to come to your rescue?… You seem to be perfectly self-contained these days.'

'What's that supposed to mean?' I snap back at him.

'You know what it means,' he says-which pisses me off even more.

Is he referring to the fact that I'm all alone here while he works and plays golf? Or that I have nothing in common with the women in my neighborhood? Or that we hardly ever make love anymore-and when we do, we barely talk afterward?

'I actually don't know what it means,' I sputter. 'But what I do know is that it would have been nice if my husband had something to say to that bitch and her dumbass, red-faced husband when she-'

'Give me a break. When she what?' Andy says. 'When she made a joke about wine?'

'Real funny joke,' I say.

'Oh, come on,' Andy says. 'She thought it was Margot's… Does that really make her a bitch?'

'She is a bitch. That just makes her a snob on top of it… A snob with absolutely nothing to back it up,' I say, thinking that this is the most offensive part of Ginny and Craig. Snobs are always offensive, but less so if they have some kind of game. But Ginny and Craig have no game-they are just insufferable bores whose self-identity is inextricably tied to things. To fancy cars and expensive wines, to staid pearls and seersucker shorts.

'So she's a snob,' Andy says, shrugging. 'You used to just laugh people like that off… And now… now you've got this huge fuck-you-Atlanta thing going on and you take everything so personally.'

'Last night was personal,' I say.

'Well, I'd argue that it wasn't,' he says, using his calm lawyerly tone. 'But let's say it was.'

'Yes. Let's,' I say, flashing a big, fake smile.

He ignores my sarcasm and continues, 'Was it really worth making my sister and Webb uncomfortable?'

My sister, I think. Andy never refers to Margot as his sister when he's talking to me, and I can't help thinking that this is very telling of his mindset. A mindset that is starting to mirror my own. You versus them, I can hear Suzanne saying. You do not belong with them.

'Well, apparently I thought it was,' I say, thinking that's the price of having such jackass friends.

'And apparently I thought it wasn't,' Andy says.

I look at him, feeling totally defeated and isolated, thinking that it's pretty impossible to argue with a controlled, holier-than-thou husband who has just told you, in so many words, that he prioritizes other people's feelings. Feelings other than mine, that is. So I say, 'Well, you're much better than I am. Clearly.'

'Oh, come on, Ellen. Get that chip off your shoulder, would you?'

It occurs to me that he's absolutely right-I do have a chip on my shoulder. A huge one. Yet this realization does nothing to soften my heart. If anything, it only makes me angrier-and more determined to stay that way.

'Just go run your errands,' I say, waving him toward the door. 'I'll just be here ironing all day.'

He rolls his eyes and sighs. 'Okay, Ellen. Be a martyr. Have it your way. I'll see ya later.' Then he turns and walks toward the door.

I make a face and hold up both middle fingers at his back, then listen to the garage door open and Andy's BMW start up and pull away, leaving me in deafening quiet. I sit for a few minutes, feeling sorry for myself, wondering how Andy and I got here, in both the state of Georgia and the strained emotional state of our marriage. A marriage that is not yet a year old. I think of how everyone says the first year is the hardest and wonder when-

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