Homoioteleuton (ho-mee-o-te-loot’-on): Similarity of endings of adjacent or parallel words.
“Q: What waddled and made weird sounds? A: My wife.“ I couldn’t make this up. What had attracted me to her in the place? Her face? Her grace? Forebrace? She was a sailing woman. It seemed like she loved her sails more than me. The ocean was her home. Sometimes she fished, but most of the time she was fiddling with ropes to make sails go up and down.
I suspected she was having an affair with Bilge Jackson the President of the Yacht club where my “Ducky” hung out and had a part-time time job selling nautical-themed items in the club’s gift shop. The big seller was Sperry Top Siders, non-slip deck shoes. The number two seller was a black hoodie with a drowning man imprinted on the front with the caption “Lose Him At Sea.” It was suggestive of murder. I noticed most of the club members were women and many of their husbands had been lost at sea. I thought nothing of it. I had been married to Ducky for 10 years and we never had any problems.
However, I had started teasing her about her short legs and her waddle. Sometimes, I would quack at her in the morning and ask her when her bill would be arriving. I thought I was being funny—engaging in good-natured humor.
Then one day I went sailing with her. She picked up a gaff hook and told me she was going to tear my guts out if I didn’t promise to stop teasing her. Suddenly, Bilge Jackson popped out of the cabin holding a saber and wearing an eye patch and big rubber boots. Ducky called him over to her and yelled “You’re a plague on my life you crazy fu*k!” and pushed him overboard, raised the sails, and left him in the water yelling for help.
I didn’t understand what had happened, but I was ok with it. Bilge was a total pain in the ass who constantly tried to make a move on my precious Ducky.
After the murder, our lives came together. I kept my promise to Ducky. I never teased her again. I was afraid to.
Definitions courtesy of “Silva Rhetoricae” (rhetoric.byu.edu).
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