I stopped speaking to my husband after his behaviour at my birthday, and for the first time, I saw real fear in his eyes.
Right then, everyone, lets raise a glass to the birthday girl! Forty-fiveisnt she just like a fine vintage, although in our case perhaps a bit more like dried fruit, but still good for the digestion! Richards voice boomed across the function room of the small bistro, drowning out even the background music.
The guests seated around the long table froze mid-bite. Someone gave a nervous laugh, trying to defuse the awkwardness; others dropped their eyes to their prawn cocktails, poking through lettuce as though searching for treasure. I was sat at the head of the table, in the deep blue dress Id painstakingly chosen over the past fortnight, and I felt the blood drain from my face. The smile Id worn all evening had twisted into something forced and painful.
Richard, delighted with his own wit, knocked back his gin and tonic, and flopped down beside me, throwing a heavy, clammy arm around my shoulders.
Whats the matter with you lot? Annies got a sense of humourshe gets it, dont you, love? he said, thumping me on the back as if we were old mates at a pub. And shes thrifty too! That dress… how many years old is it now? Three? Looks brand new!
It was a lie, of course. The dress was brand new, paid for with the money Id saved up from freelance proofreading jobs. But to argue now, amongst friends, colleagues, and family, would only turn the night into a farce. I slowly moved Richards hand off my shoulder, and took a sip of water. Inside, somewhere beneath my ribs, a cold weight began to settle. Before, Id have brushed it off with a jokesomething like, Lets just hope you dont start mouldering, darlingbut tonight, something inside me had finally snapped.
The evening continued on autopilot. Richard drank more, became increasingly boisterous, tried to drag a couple of my younger work colleagues onto the dance floor, and loudly rambled about Brexit and how all this countrys woes are down to women these days. I took presents, thanked people for their toasts, and checked that everyone had enough roast and potatoes, but I was barely therejust an automaton going through motions. In my head, there was ringing silence, swallowing my husbands drunken shouts whole.
When we eventually returned home, Richard barely managed to kick off his shoes before heading to the bedroom.
Well, that was a night, he muttered, unbuttoning his shirt. Your bossMatt, innit? Strange bloke. Kept glaring at me. Jealous, probably, Ive got a wife as… tolerant as you. Annie! Bring us some sparkling, will you? Im parched.
I stood in the hallway, looking at my reflection. My eyes were tired, mascara smudged. Quietly, I took off my shoes and placed them neatly in the cupboard. Then I went to the kitchenbut not for his water. I poured a glass for myself and drank it slowly, staring out at the dark street beyond the double-glazing. After, I headed to the lounge, took out the spare duvet and pillow, and made up the sofa.
Annie! Whereve you got to? I need water! he called from the bedroom.
I switched off the hallway lights, got under the blanket, and buried my head. The night crept in, but sleep wouldnt come. I didnt plot revenge or imagine a row. There was only pure, crystalline certainty: this was the last time. I was done. My reserves were empty.
Morning didnt begin with the familiar whirring of the coffee grinder. Normally, Id be up half an hour before Richardmake his breakfast, iron his shirt, box up his lunch for work. Today, he woke to the alarm and silence. No scent of eggs and bacon or fresh coffee drifted from the kitchen.
He wandered in, scratching his stomach. I was already dressed, at the table, reading something on my tablet. My tea had gone cold.
Wheres breakfast? Richard yawned, opening the fridge. Thought there were pancakes left, there was batter still.
I didnt look up. I turned the page onscreen, took a sip of lukewarm tea, kept reading.
Annie! Are you deaf now, after last night? he huffed, holding a stick of salami.
I stood up, calmly took my handbag, checked my keys, and made for the door.
Hey! Where are you going? My shirt isnt ironed yet! The blue ones all creased!
The front door slammed shut behind me, leaving Richard standing in the kitchen, in his pants, holding the salami with a baffled look.
Bloody hell, he muttered, hacking off a chunk. Must be the time of the month, or shes still sulking over a joke. Be all right by tonight, women love the drama.
That evening, when he came home, the house was dark. No sign of me. Odd, toousually Id be back first. He rang my phoneno answer, just endless rings. He warmed up leftover spaghetti, watched some telly, and went to bed, planning to give me an earful when I turned up.
I only slipped back in when he was already out cold. He didnt hear me settle onto the sofa in the lounge. The next morning, same thingno breakfast, no good morning, no packed lunch. I got ready and left, wordlessly.
By the third day, his patience snapped.
Look, stop this bloody silent treatment! Richard barked, catching me at the door as I put on my shoes. So I said too much, it happens! Had a drink, let off steam. What are you now, the Queen herself? Im sorry, all right? Now, where are my black socks? Theres not one left clean!
I looked at him. My eyes were calm, detachedeyeing him as I might a patch of damp on the wall. Annoying, but hardly fatal. I didnt say a word, just grabbed my umbrella and left.
By the weeks end, there were visible changes. Richards clothes, always miraculously washed, ironed, and put away, now piled up on the chair. The fridge still had eggs, butter, milk, vegbut no shepherds pie, no homemade soup, none of his favourite stews. The plates left in the sink simply accumulated, dried food crusting over.
He decided to play chicken. Shell give in before I do, just wait, he thought. But I simply washed my own plate and fork after every meal, put them away, and left his mountain growing.
On Saturday, he changed tack. Brought home a cake and a bouquet of chrysanthemums.
Come on, Annie, enoughs enough, he put the cake on the table beside my laptop. Lets have a cuppa. I know youre in.
I finally looked up. My eyes were empty. Carefully, I pushed my laptop aside, stood, and left the room. The bathroom door clicked shut, water ran.
Richard, fuming, dumped the flowers straight in the bin.
Fine, suit yourself! Think I cant cope without you? I lived alone before you even finished uni! Bloody manipulator!
He ordered pizza, cracked a lager, and turned the football up to max. I walked out of the bathroom in pyjamas, brushed past as though he were made of air, popped in earplugs, and lay on the sofa with my back to him.
A month went by like this. Richard cycled through tempersfury, baiting me for an argument, attempted bribery, countering silence with more silence. But its impossible to ignore someone whos already erased you from their world. Its like playing tennis against a wallevery ball bounces right back, only the wall couldnt care less.
Life started to fall to pieces in the practical sense for him. He had to iron shirts himselfthey came out creased. Takeaway hurt his wallet as much as his gut. The flat slowly filled with dust; I cleaned only my own spaces, he refused on principle to pick up a duster.
But the worst came on Tuesday. Richard got home early, sour after a telling-off at work. He wanted to shout, but yelling into the vacuum was just ridiculous. He logged into his bank app to pay the loan on the carhis pride, a nearly-new SUV hed bought on finance two years ago.
On the screen: Insufficient funds.
He stared, gobsmacked. How could there not be enough? His salary had gone in yesterday. He checked the account history, feeling the chill creep under his collar. Normally, hed send his share into the joint account, where all the bills and food came out, and then spend the rest on petrol and treats for himself. Id always top up what was needed for food, cleaning, and the car loan.
This time, there was only the sum hed transferred. Not a penny more. And it wasnt enoughhed splurged on getting the bumper fixed (after his own scrape) and treated his mates, assuming Annie will cover the difference.
He stormed into the lounge. I was reading.
What the hell is this?! he yelled, waving his phone. Whys there no money? The loan comes out tomorrow!
I gently laid my book down.
Wheres your money, Annie? Why didnt you top up the account?
I said nothing.
For Gods sake, say something! Theyll fine me! Well get penalties!
I sighed, picked up a sheet of paper from my notebook on the coffee table, and handed it to him.
It was a divorce petition.
Richard gazed at the words. His eyes ran over the text, jumping aroundwords like, …joint household not maintained…, …marital relationship ended….
Youre… youre serious? his voice wobbled into a childish squeak. Over a silly joke? Over a speech? Annie, youve lost your mind. Twenty years down the drain for nothing?
I picked up a pen and wrote fast, then turned the pad so he could read:
This isnt about a joke. Its about not being respected. For years now. The flat is mine, inherited from my nan. The car, bought together, but the credit is in your name. Im filing for asset separation. Keep the car, but youll have to return half of whats already paid. Im going to Mums for the duration. You have a week to find somewhere else.
He read the words and went pale. The flat. Id inherited it from my nan before we married. Hed grown used to thinking of it as his. He was on the lease, but not the deeds.
What am I supposed to do? Where will I go? My wagestheres the car, and Johns maintenance from my first marriage for another year… I cant afford rent!
I just looked at him. No malice. Just tiredness. I wrote:
Youre a grown man. Youll manage. You said at the party Im an old wreck. Why live with one? Find a younger, livelier woman. I want peace.
It was just banter! he howled. Just a joke! Everyone jokes like that! Please, Annie, dont throw me out. Ill do anything. Ill stop drinking. Want me to see a therapist? Ill go tomorrow!
I zipped my suitcase. That sound ricocheted through the flat.
Annie, not now, not in the middle of the nightstay until morning, well talk it over. Youre family!
For the first time in a month, something flickered in my lookpity. Calm, resigned pity, like for a wounded pigeon beyond help. I typed on my phone, then showed him:
Family dont humiliate each other in public. And they dont use those who care for them as doormats. I put up with your rudeness for ten years, thinking it was just your way. But it isnt. Its neglect. You thought Id never leave. You were wrong. Please step aside.
Steadily, I rolled the case to the hall.
Im not giving up the car! he shouted after me, desperate to hurt, to defend.
I paused just outside, put on my raincoat, looked back and for the first time in a month, spoke with my real voicedeep, slightly hoarse, the one that made Richards skin crawl just a bit.
You will, Richard. By order of the court you will. And youll pay my solicitors fees too. I used that Christmas bonusremember? The one you wanted for a new fishing rod. Drop the keys through the letterbox when youre gone. Youve got till Sunday.
The door shut behind me. The lock clicked into place.
Richard stood in the hallway, now pitch black. The silence pressed in, thick and absolute. The fridge hummed in the kitchen; the tap drippedhed promised to mend that months ago.
He went and sat at the kitchen table, at my usual spot. The divorce petition was sitting there. He picked it up. Everything was realseal, signature, todays date.
His phone beepeda bank message. Reminder: car loan payment due tomorrow.
He buried his face in his hands. For the first time in fifty years, he wept. Not out of heartbreak or lost love, but out of pure, wretched self-pity and the knowledge that he alone had ruined everything with his own foolishness.
The following three days passed in a blur. Richard tried calling me, but Id blocked him. He rang my mum, always soft with him, but she replied coldly: Youve made your bed, Richard. Dont bother Annieshes had enough.
On Thursday, he began packing. He owned surprisingly little. Clothes, fishing gear, tools, laptop. Everything that had made the flat warmcurtains, vases, artwork, cosy throws, proper crockeryhad been chosen by me. Without me, the place became just an empty concrete shell.
Amongst his socks, he found an old photo album. He opened it. Ten years ago, at the seaside. I was laughing, arms around him; he looked proud, content. Back then, I adored him. But then hed stopped seeing me as a woman, only as a function. Fetch, iron, wash, be quiet.
Fool, he said aloud into the emptiness. Stupid old fool.
On Sunday, he took the last bag out. Dropped the keys through the letterbox as instructed. As he left the block, he glanced back at the flatnow mine alone. The lights were off.
He got in the car and started the engine. Petrol was nearly gone; the bank balance, almost empty. He had nowhere to go but his mothers. He could see it: the smoky kitchen, her voice sharp as knives, Told you shed never stick it, I warned you, didnt I…
He thumped the steering wheel in frustration. For a second, it anchored him. He opened his contacts list on his phonethere was not a single person whod listen without scorn or mockery.
He slipped the car into gear and drove out into the damp London dusk. Ahead lay a long, lonely road: learning to make soup, to iron shirts, to watch his tongue. But the worst bit of all was knowing hed destroyed, with his own hands, the one place where hed been loved unconditionally.
Meanwhile, I was on the veranda of Mums cottage in Kent, bundled up in a warm throw, sipping mint tea. There was emptiness in my chest, but finally, a sense of peace. My phone was off. There would be uncertaintylawyers, division of propertybut I was sure of one thing: Id survive. The hardest partliving with someone who made me feel invisiblewas behind me. Somewhere in the garden, a blackbird sang and the air smelt of lilac and freedom. For the first time in years, there was no stale whiskies or shouting to drown out the possibility of happiness. I breathed in deeply and, for the first time in a month, smiled without effort.












