I wasn’t sure what to expect when I got married. My own parents’ marriage had been a noisy and frightening sort of enterprise. I knew I didn’t want that. I knew I would have to compromise and negotiate and make sure that Penny and I “communicated”. However, every now and then you want something that you do not feel you can propose with an entirely open-handed honesty.
In 1998 what I really wanted was to go to a football match. In particular, I wanted to go the European Cup Winners’ Cup final in Stockholm. Penny has always been very generous in the freedom she has allowed me to roam around Europe drinking strange beers in support of my beloved Chelsea FC. The only reason I had to suppose that she might not be entirely happy this time was because the game was going to take place in the middle of the second week of our three week “holiday of a lifetime” in the States.
Stated out loud,  the absurdity of the proposition was immediately apparent: “I want to fly from the US to Sweden and back again so that I watch a single game of football”. But I really really wanted to go. I decided that I needed to be cunning.
Penny came into the kitchen to find me gazing at a fixed point in the middle distance, apparently a broken man. My eyes were reddened by the tears I had been silently shedding. She was concerned and asked me what was wrong. I gave her a carefully constructed speech about how desolate I was that my team were on the verge of winning a European trophy and I would not be there. It might be the only chance in my lifetime. I conjured an image of my feeble dying frame convulsed with a last moment of regret as I slipped into the netherworld.
Penny is, as I’m sure you all know by now, a saint. She took my hand and told me that if I wanted to go I could. This is where the cunning plan kicked in. I looked balefully into her eyes and refused to go to the match. I couldn’t go. It would spoil the holiday. I would miss her too much. I would not hear another word about it.
A single giving of permission would never be enough. She might change her mind. I had to make sure that she had insisted I go sufficiently often and with sufficient vehemence that she could never later suggest that I had selfishly insisted on ruining the holiday. My evil scheme was ticking along like a swiss watch.
A week later I was overcome by grief once more. Once again she was quick to offer me the chance to go. Once again I declined. I had decided three times would be enough. Just another week to wait and then I could make my move. That Machievelli could learn a thing or two from me. I gave it 8 days just to be sure. P and I were in bed. I heaved a sigh which toppled books from the shelf on the other side of the room. Nothing. I sighed again, dislodging slates from the roof. Penny stirred. She asked me what was on my mind. I recounted once again my pain at not being able to go to the game.
“I know love, it’s a shame. Perhaps they will reach a final next year.”
What? That wasn’t right. I couldn’t pursue the matter there and then. I let 48 hours pass and tried again. Penny was just as sympathetic. She could see it was bothering me and she wanted to assure me that the holiday would be a memorable one. She advised me to just put it out of my mind.
By now I was in the grip of a panic. As Penny drove the car to a wedding that weekend, I all but poked myself in the eyes to encourage the sobbing. Penny was plainly beginning to worry that my mental health was failing.
“Is it the football again?”
“No NO … *sigh* yes yes love it is”
“You should go”.
My ears nearly popped with the release of the breath that I’d been holding. Just one more piece of feigned reluctance:
“If you are sure”
She reached out and laid a hand on mine and said with a considerable tenderness:Â “You should go”.
No time to waste. I immediately pulled from my pocket my mobile phone and hit the speed-dial button I had programmed for British Airways. Out came my passport; Chelsea season ticket and a printout of the flight details and within 2 minutes it was all fixed.
I sat back grinning with with satisfaction. I then became conscious that rather than focussing her attention on the road ahead as she should, Penny seemed to be staring at me. Staring at me very hard in fact. I could not help but notice that her face had entirely lost its sheen of indulgent affection.
But Penny is, as I have said, a saint. Rather than releasing my seatbelt and rolling me into a ditch from the speeding vehicle she made a mental note and moved on. So it was that as she disappeared down into the Grand Canyon on a mule I sped in a taxi to Flagstaff and boarded a plane that was trying to get airborne before a storm front engulfed the airport.
I learned two things:
(1) I have the best wife in the world; and
(2) Men are far too stupid to be trying to be cunning when their wives are around.
I think it was the same year that I remember watching in an earlier round (on TV) Vialli stomping through heavy snow in Tromso in pursuit of a luminous ball: hilarious and inspiring.
I’ve completely forgotten the final though. Did you win?
you little silly devil you…
In that instant when you were making all the arrangements with British Airways (VIA SPEED-DIAL!!!), it sounds like an un-spoken moment that you both knew you may have won that battle, but she won the war….
Menace, I actually went to the Tromso game – that’s a story in itself. We did win 1-0, Zola scored.
KC – You are very astute. The war is over. I make do with the occasional insurgency.
Damn right, man! You think we women wouldn’t figure out what had been going on? We’re not cows, you know! LOL…
Glad you got to make it to the match though! 😉
And? So… was it worth it? Did the plane get stuck in a storm? (And your wife is a saint AND you missed humping it down into the grand canyon on a MULE for Peter, Paul and Mary’s Sake!)
Well at least you learned something! That makes you quite a bit better than 98 percent of us.
Yeah, I’m no saint. That conversation would never’ve happened in our neck of the woods. My husband values his testicles too much!! Shame on you Moobie. tsk.
It’s alright, Penny knew you were going to match the first time you asked. Actually she probably knew before you asked. She is my new idol. Bruno beware.
Penny knew all at all times. Women are omniscient. I love when men try to be tricky … that is when you creatures are the most transparent of all.
Men!
I’ve been to Flagstaff. My Grandad lives there. I saw a horny toad there, as well as the Grand Canyon and other natural phenomena.
Amanda’s right. There’s nothing quite so hilarious as your bloke thinking he’s fooling you. It keeps us entertained, moobs.
We’ve all been there on one level or another – nicely illustrated 🙂
Ah! This sounds SO familiar but unlike your gentle Penny, I would have met your tears with the sympathy of an executioner. You might have gotten to your match but there would have been NO vacation sex, which you know, is the best kind of sex!
You’re definitely right: A saint, that woman.
That’s awesome. Yeah, she probably knew from the git-go, but wanted to torment you as long as possible… wonder how much it cost her not to laugh at your expression when she agreed that you shouldn’t go that first time?
😉
I just don’t get the passion about football. I understand the game, it just field hockey – sort of – without the sticks – but what is its magic hold?
Now a yoga retreat for the weekend? Meditation at dawn and chanting like a bee? Perfect!
Beautifully written, Moobz, and I am sure, at the time beautifully executed…. but not faultlessly. A woman who knows you well can spot these things very easily, no matter how well rehearsed you think you are. We are amazing.
I admire the lengths to which you went to achieve your goal, though, Moobz. Stabbing yourself in the eyes was a nice touch!
*giggle* I just wish I could here her side of this story where she’s laughing about how pathetic you were attempting to be….and how she let you sweat it out there at the end by not offering. And then how she made sure to give you “the look” so you KNEW that she was on to you…..even though she was on to you a week ago. lol