It’s Never Too Late to Begin

“Mum, have you completely lost your mind?”

The words struck Lillian like a punch to the gut—sharp, cruel. She flinched but kept peeling the potatoes, knuckles white.

*Pain.*

“They’re already laughing at us—my mother running wild like some teenager! If it were Dad, fine—men do what they want. But a *woman*? The heart of the home? Aren’t you ashamed?”

A tear rolled down Lillian’s cheek, then another. Soon, they fell freely as her daughter raged.

Her husband, Colin, slumped in a chair, shoulders hunched, bottom lip jutting. “Your father’s *ill*, Lill. Who’ll care for him? Is this how you repay him—after *everything*?” His voice cracked. “Is it?”

Lillian wiped her hands slowly. “And how *should* I repay him, Tamsin?”

“What?” Tamsin gaped. “Are you *serious*? Look at Dad! She’s *mocking* us!”

Lillian exhaled. “Tamsin, I might as well be a stranger to you. Funny—suddenly you care so much for your father.”

“Mum!” Tamsin’s face twisted. “Don’t play the victim. I’ve had *enough*—I’m calling Nan. Let *her* deal with this disgrace.”

“Oh, brilliant,” Tamsin spat, turning to Colin. “Imagine—I’m coming home from uni, and there they are, strolling arm-in-arm like some revolting romance novel. Reciting *poetry*, no doubt. Did you write it yourself, Mum? Something *passionate*?”

“You’re cruel, Tamsin. And young. Too young to understand.”

“No remorse—typical! That’s it. *Both* grandmothers. They’ll talk sense into you.”

Lillian straightened, smoothed her dress, brushed invisible dust from her sleeve.

“Right then,” she said softly. “I’m leaving.”

“*Where?*” Colin’s voice trembled.

“Leaving *you*, Colin.”

“*What—* How? What about *me*?”

Tamsin hissed into her phone, eyes blazing.

“T-Tamsin—” Colin wailed, as if mourning. “She’s—*gone*!”

“*Gone?*” Tamsin whirled. “Mum—what’s *wrong* with you? At *your age*?”

Lillian smirked, folding clothes into a suitcase. She’d tried to leave before—but Colin’s back “gave out,” the poor love, howling like a wounded dog.

“Lill—think it’s a slipped disc—”

“The MRI showed nothing.”

“Pfft—doctors *lie*. It’s a scam—happened to Dave at work. ‘Oh, just a sprain’—*then* they hit you with surgery bills!”

Last time, she’d stayed.

This time—

“*How* much life d’you have left, Lill?” Her best mate, Lizzie, had said it bluntly. “You’re a *slave* to them. What’s Colin *ever* given you? *Nothing.*”

Lizzie smacked the table. “Spent his youth chasing skirts—dragged home that hairdresser—what was her name—?”

“Millie.”

“*Millie*—like some prize pig. You worked *three* jobs while he *lounged*. ‘Colin needs a spa break—his *poor back*!’ Meanwhile, you’re scrubbing his mother’s floors. *Your* leg’s been numb since you were forty—but *that’s* normal, eh?”

Lillian had flushed. “He’s… diff’rent, Liz.”

“*How*? Sacred *male* creature? Other men *break* their backs for their families. *You’re* the mule.”

Lizzie leaned in. “Why’d you *marry* him?”

Silence. Then—

“Liz… he was born six months early.”

“*What?*”

“His nan *steamed* him in a boot by the oven. Kept him alive.”

Lizzie gaped. “And *you* felt sorry for him?”

Lillian nodded. “All the lads had motorbikes, guitars—Colin just… *existed*. Mum caught us talking once, said, ‘Marry him or stop flaunting yourself.’”

She swallowed. “Stupid, *stupid* girl.”

Lizzie gripped her hand. “You’re *free* now.”

***

The fallout was brutal.

Colin—pitiful. *She*—the harlot.

“Beg his forgiveness!” her mother shrieked. His mother faked a *heart attack*—Lillian stepped *over* her. “*Heartless*!” the woman screeched. Neighbours took *Lillian’s* side—they’d *seen* her life.

Tamsin came, eventually. Apologised. Rebuilt bridges.

Colin arrived once—four limp carnations wrapped in *newsprint*. “*Come home.*”

She didn’t.

Within a month, he was parading with *Millie*, back miraculously “healed.” (Millie didn’t tolerate nonsense.)

Lillian didn’t care. She was learning—*living*.

Tamsin booked her a spa day.

Peter, an old friend, invited her hiking—like *before*.

It’s *never* too late to start again.

The first step is agony.

Then—it gets easier.

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It’s Never Too Late to Begin