After Edna finishes her tea and smiles like she’s just won a 55-year chess match, the porch goes quiet. The swing creaks gently. Bert stares straight ahead, processing decades of sabotage, pennies, spatulas, and Hallmark movies he never meant to watch.
Finally, he clears his throat.
“You’ve got a confession?” Edna asks, raising an eyebrow.
Bert nods slowly. “Yes, I do.”
Edna leans in, suddenly very alert. “Well? Out with it.”
Bert sighs. “You know how for the last ten years, every time you ask me to take out the trash, I say, ‘I already did’?”
Edna narrows her eyes. “Yes…?”
Bert smiles. “I didn’t forget. I just waited until you got up to check. The exercise was good for your hips.”
Edna gasps. “You liar!”
“And,” Bert continues, warming up now, “remember how your phone mysteriously autocorrects ‘love you’ to ‘leave you’ when you text your sister?”
Edna’s mouth falls open. “That was YOU?!”
Bert nods proudly. “Set it up myself. You two didn’t speak for three weeks. Most peaceful spring of my life.”
Edna sits back, stunned. “Bert… you devious old man.”
“Oh, I’m not done,” he says. “Every time your book club came over and the cookies tasted a little… off?”
Edna whispers, “You didn’t.”
“I did,” Bert says calmly. “Swapped the sugar for salt. They blamed your eyesight.”
There’s a long silence.
Then Edna starts laughing. Hard. She laughs so much the swing starts rocking. “All these years,” she says between breaths, “I thought I was the evil one.”
Bert grins. “Marriage, Edna. It’s not about honesty. It’s about balance.”
Edna reaches over, squeezes his hand, and says, “Promise me one thing.”
“What’s that?”
“If we ever do skydiving… you jump first.”