Im embarrassed to bring you to the dinner, you know, David mutters, barely glancing up from his phone. Therell be people there. Decent people.
Alice stands by the fridge, milk carton in hand. Twelve years of marriage, two kids. Now thishes embarrassed.
Ill wear my black dress. The one you picked out for me.
Its not the dress, he finally looks up. Its you. Youve let yourself go. Your hair, your face… you just look… not right. Vadim will be there with his wifeshes a stylist. And you… well, you know.
Then I wont come.
Theres a good girl. Ill say youre feeling unwell. No one will mind.
He heads off for a shower, leaving Alice alone in the kitchen. In the other room, the children are asleep. Harry is ten, Sophie is eight. The mortgage, the bills, school meetings. She feels like shes dissolved in this house. And her husband is ashamed of her.
Has he completely lost the plot? Molly, her best mate and hairdresser, stares at Alice as if shes just announced the worlds end.
Embarrassed to take his wife? Who does he think he is?
Hes the warehouse manager. Just got promoted, Alice shrugs.
So now his wifes not good enough? Molly slams the kettle on, angry. Listen. Do you remember what you used to do before the kids?
I was a teacher.
Not work. Your jewellery. The beading. I still have that necklace with the blue stone you made. People always ask where I got it.
Alice remembers, making necklaces at night, when David still looked at her with interest.
That was ages ago.
If youve done it once, you can again, Molly insists, pulling her closer. Whens this dinner?
Saturday.
Perfect. You come to mine tomorrow. Ill do your hair and makeup. Well ring Emilyshes got frocks for days. And you can find your own jewellery.
Molly, he said
Never mind what he said. Youll go to this dinner. And trust me, hell be the one sweating.
Emily brings over a plum-coloured dresslong, off the shoulder. They pin, fit, and fuss for over an hour.
That colour calls for something special, Emily circles. Not silver. Not gold.
Alice opens her old jewellery box. At the bottom, wrapped in soft cloth, waits her seta necklace and earrings she made herself.
Blue goldstone, handmade. She crafted it eight years ago, for a special occasion that never came.
My word, it’s gorgeous, Emily breathes. You made this?
All by myself.
Molly gives her a soft wave, understated makeupsubtle but striking. Alice steps into the dress, fastens her jewellery. The stones sit cold and weighty on her skin.
Go on then, have a look, Emily nudges her towards the mirror.
Alice approachesand doesnt see a woman whos spent twelve years scrubbing floors and making stews. She sees herself, the woman she once was.
A riverside restaurant. The room hums with suits, evening gowns, music. Alice enters fashionably late, just as planned. The chatter dies for a moment.
David stands at the bar, laughing at a joke. Then he sees her, and his face freezes. Alice walks past without looking his way and takes a seat at a table in the corner. Sits tall, hands folded calmly.
Excuse me, is this seat taken?
A man in his mid-forties, grey suit, smart eyes.
Free.
Owen. Im Vadims business partner in the bakery. And you are?
Alice. Im the warehouse managers wife.
He looks at her, then her jewellery.
Is that goldstone? Handmade, isnt it? My mum collected stones. Thats rare to find.
I made it myself.
Really? Owen leans in slightly, studying the craftsmanship. That’s talent. Do you sell?
No. Im… just a housewife.
Strange. With hands like yours, most wouldn’t sit at home.
He doesnt leave her all night. They talk about stones, creativity, about losing yourself in the daily grind.
Owen invites her to dance, brings over sparkling wine, makes her laugh. Alice notices David glaring from across the room, getting gloomier by the minute.
When she gets ready to leave, Owen sees her to her car.
Alice, if you ever decide to get back into making jewellerycall me. He hands her a card. I know people who are looking for unique work. Properly looking.
She takes the card and nods.
David doesnt last five minutes when she gets in.
What was that all about? With that Owen chap? Everyone saw! My wife hanging over some stranger!
I wasnt hanging over anyone. I was talking.
Talking! Three dances! THREE! Vadim asked me what was up. I was mortified!
Youre always mortified, Alice slips off her shoes by the door. Ashamed to take me out, ashamed when Im noticed. Is there anything youre not embarrassed about?
Shut up. You think putting on a bit of a dress makes you someone? Youre nobody. Just a housewife. Living off my money, and now youre prancing about like some fairy tale princess.
Once, she mightve cried. Gone to bed in silence. But something inside her has shifted. Or perhaps, clicked into place.
Weak men fear strong wives, she says quietly, almost serenely. Youre full of insecurities, David. Youre terrified Ill see how small you really are.
Get out.
Im filing for divorce.
Hes silent. Stares at her, and for the first time, theres confusion in his eyes instead of rage.
Where will you go with two children? You cant live off beads.
I can.
The next morning, Alice pulls out the card and dials the number.
Owen is patient. They meet in cafés, talk business. He tells her about a friend who owns a bespoke gallery. That handmade pieces are in fashionpeople are tired of factory-made.
Youve got a rare gift, Alice. Talent and taste, all at once.
She works through the nights. Goldstone, jasper, carnelian. Necklaces, bracelets, earrings. Owen collects the finished pieces, brings them to the gallery. Within a week, he callseverythings sold. Orders pile up.
Does David know?
We dont talk anymore.
And the divorce?
Found a solicitor. Were starting the paperwork.
Owen helps. No drama, no fuss. Just contacts, a hand finding her a rented flat. When Alice packs her bags, David leans in the doorway, smirking.
Youll be back in a week. Crawling.
She closes the suitcase and leaves without a word.
Six months on. A little two-bed out on the edge of town. Kids, work, commissions flowing in. The gallery offers her an exhibition. Alice sets up a social page, posts her work. Followers grow.
Owen often visits, brings books for the kids, checks in. Never crowding, never rushingjust always there.
Mum, do you like him? Sophie asks one evening.
I do.
We like him, too. He doesnt shout.
A year later, Owen proposes. No knee, no roses, just says over dinner:
I want all three of you to live with me. If youd like.
Alice is ready.
Two years pass. David walks through the shopping centre. After being sackedVadim learned the truth about how David treated Alice, and let him go three months laterhe now works as a porter. Bedsit, debts, loneliness.
He sees them outside the jewellers.
Alice, in a light coat, hair styled, that blue goldstone at her throat. Owen holding her hand. Harry and Sophie laughing, chattering away.
David stops by the window, watching them get into the car. Watching Owen open the door for Alice. Watching her smile.
Then, he catches his reflection in the glassfrayed jacket, grey face, hollow eyes. He realises hes lost a queen. And that shes learned to live without him.
And thats his real punishmentknowing, far too late, what he had.
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