She told me over dinner one evening that I should switch to white wine— less tannins and calories, she claimed.
I smiled and shook my head, a vintage cabernet stubbornly clinging to my bleached white teeth.
The next day I found a couple bottles of chardonnay chilled in the fridge, a note tethered to one’s neck: Drink Me!
I did not. Four months later, we signed divorce papers; she packed her things and left.
I drank the chardonnay that last night, dizzied by the herringbone pattern of the old parquet floor, and wondered what would happen if I ate our frozen cake top.