The house on the old cobbled street of York suddenly hummed like a clock that had lost its hands.
Molly, has James told you yet? the motherinlaw asked, her voice as thin as morning fog. Listen, therell be up to twenty guests, so well start the cooking in the evening. Ill be there early, around six oclock.
What? In the evening? Emily asked, her eyebrows rising like tiny shutters. I never agreed to that.
Hold on, Im not finished, Martha interjected. Ive already sent James a list of groceries; he promised to buy everything.
James had always been the reliable brother for his older sister, Poppy. By the time she turned thirty shed married twice and divorced twice, each time the fault landing on a man she called the wrong one. Their mother, Martha Wilkinson, had repeated to her son since childhood, A sister needs help.
And James helpedpaying money when Poppy was temporarily out of work, fixing the leaky kitchen in her rented flat, shuttling boxes after every breakup. Then he married.
Emily endured at first, but when Poppy, for the fifth time that year, asked to borrow the car for a few days because it had broken down again, Emily said softly but firmly, James, isnt that enough? We need the car this weekend too. I thought we had plans
Whats the alternative? Walk? James muttered.
No, we cant walk to my parents cottage. Theyve bundled two buckets of cucumbers for us. I thought youd heard me when I mentioned it.
Yeah I heard something, but you understand Poppys in a rush.
Again? What exactly?
Im not sure, James grumbled, but she needs it more.
No, James. This time you wont get away with it! Either you refuse your sister, or you buy me a car. Im tired of the trolleybus while you could drive us where we need to go.
James, for the first time, considered refusing, but Martha snapped, Are you going to abandon your sister for your wife? Shes alone! Who else will help her?
So James helped again, despite the fights with Emily. One night they didnt speak for days, and James finally burst, Why are you silent? Upset?
Do you think it took me three days to realise that? Emily snapped. I cant see what youre supposed to be doing.
Emily laughed at his confusion. Seriously? Dont you get it? Your little sister took you away for the whole weekend because she needed to get to a friends cottage. I thought youd just give her a lift, but you stayed there for two days. Does that bother you?
Whats there to be bothered about? We had a few drinks, met her ex, chatted normally. I had to mark the occasion somehow. Why should I have driven?
You could have at least called.
You could have called too, James retorted.
I did! Your phone was off. Imagine what I thought? I was on edge, not knowing where my husband was. He just decided to take a break from me, Emily wailed.
Dont make that up, James waved his hand, indicating a ringing phone.
James stepped onto the balcony and finally answered. He knew Emily would not appreciate another chat with his sister.
Hey, brother! Poppy chirped on the line. My anniversarys in two weeks! Thirty years! You get it, right?
James glanced at Emily, who was pouring soup.
So what do you want? he asked.
You understand me instantly! Poppy giggled. I want to celebrate at your place! Your living room is huge. My rented flat is cramped and the landlady will yell. A restaurant is pricey.
Maybe the café? Ill add whatever you need.
Are you mad? Poppy shrieked. Its an anniversary! You want me to spend on a venue when you have your own flat? Im not a millionaires daughter, you know.
Ill talk to Emily first. Its her flat too. Maybe she had other plans.
Its too late! Poppy cut him off. Ive told everyone the party will be at your house. Clear the flat for the whole day, ok? Mum will sort the food.
James sighed, covering his face with his hand, trying to think of an escape. The phone buzzed again, this time a message from his mother.
Poppy said to draft the menu. Heres the list of dishes. We need to buy the ingredients. Tell Emily to help. And dont forget the cooking.
Meanwhile, Emily, unaware of Poppys impending celebration, settled into her favourite armchair with the remote, ready to watch her beloved series. When James entered the room, eyes lowered, she instantly understood.
What now? she asked calmly, pausing the show.
Emily, listen Poppys anniversary thirty years. She wants to mark the date.
Emily raised her head.
Well, let her celebrate. Are we going to forbid it?
James scratched his scalp.
Its not that. She wants to celebrate at our place.
What? Here? Emily stood, startled. Our flat?
Yes, just for one evening. She says the restaurants too costly, her homes too cramped
And you agreed?
I said Id speak to you first! But Poppys already invited everyone. Mums already planning the menu.
Emily closed her eyes, took a deep breath.
James, are you really an adult, or just a conduit for Poppys wishes?
What are you starting?
Im starting, Emily said, showing him her phone with a hint of sarcasm. And nobody even called me? This is my flat, not a transit hub for your relatives. Poppy wants to party here, Im supposed to help, and even assist Mum, without being asked?
At that moment her own phone rang.
Oh, the cherry on the cake, she whispered, waving the device at James.
Molly, has James told you yet? the motherinlaw repeated, now sounding like a broken record. Therell be up to twenty people, well start cooking in the evening. Ill be there by six tomorrow.
What? In the evening? Emily repeated, skeptical. I never signed up for that.
Hold on, Im not done. James already has the grocery list, he promised to buy everything.
Fine and the money? Where will we get it?
James promised to help, Martha replied shortly.
So you want to turn my flat into a restaurant and expect us to foot the bill? Emily snapped.
Poppy isnt a stranger! Can you spare a day to chop vegetables, make salads, sandwiches Youre the lady of the house!
Martha Wilkinson, Emily interrupted, I just found out about the party. I never gave permission for Poppys birthday to be held in my flat.
What do you mean my flat? You and James are married. Everything is shared! the motherinlaw shouted.
If the flat were Jamess, youd speak differently. Then Id be just a a kept woman.
Dont talk nonsense. Thats it, conversation over. By Friday we need to buy everything, Martha declared and hung up.
What was that? Emily asked James, hearing the short beeps.
Stop playing the victim! James finally said. Youve been told youre wrong. Admit your mistake and stop digging your heels in.
Emily was stunned. She rose, opened the wardrobe, and silently pulled out a large sports bag. She went to the bedroom, opened the chest of drawers, and began to fold Jamess shirts and jeans with mechanical precision.
Meanwhile, James felt triumphant. He banged open the fridge, grabbed a bottle of ale, slammed the door, and plonked himself in front of the TV as if nothing had changed. He imagined Emily would simply cool off and everything would return to normal. He even turned on the football, expecting Emily to call him for dinner. He was wrong.
Half an hour later Emily stood in the hallway, a shopping bag in one hand, the overloaded sports bag in the other, packed to the brim with Jamess belongings. James emerged from the living room, heading for the fridge, and saw his wife.
Whats this now? he muttered. What kind of theatre is this?
Emily looked at him coldly.
This isnt theatre, James. Its the end. I wont be a shadow in my own life, a servant in my flat, a backdrop for your mothers and sisters whims. If you want to be a good son and brotherplease. Go back to Mum. Prepare for the party together. Im sure shell gladly give you a corner in her sitting room.
Youre serious? he stepped toward her. Im not going back.
Absolutely serious, Emily nodded. Ive tolerated enough to start questioning my own existence. Enough is enough. If you dont learn to respect me in three years, theres no future.
Emily you cant ruin everything in a heartbeat!
Impossible to ruin whats already crumbled.
James sputtered, still not grasping that Emily had made her final decision.
And thats that, Emily added, gesturing to the pile of his shirts and jeans. You can thank me later. Pack up and leave now.
He tried to speak, but Emily opened the front door. James stood, his cheeks flushed, lips pressed tight. He still hoped Emily would relent, but her calm anger only fueled his rage.
Fine then! he shouted. Think youll find someone better? Youll have to look far for another me!
Emily sighed and stepped back.
Finding someone like you good riddance.
Youll regret this! James roared, grabbing the bag. Youll be on your knees when you realise no one wants to talk to you! Without me youre nobody!
If nobody means a person who lives in their own flat, works, doesnt cater to an older mans relatives, and wont put up with rudeness, then Im happy being noone.
James left, and Emily was left alone. She breathed deeply, walked to the window, pulled back the curtain, and watched him shove the bag into the boot of a taxi with his foot.
Months later the divorce proceedings were a mess. James tried to paint Emily as greedy and materialistic. The battle over the car theyd bought together became the centerpiece. He insisted, Your Honour, I paid for the car, its in my name! My wife contributed nothing!
Emily, cool as a winter morning, opened a folder of documents, laid bank statements, transfer receipts, and a signed deposit agreement on the table. Im not claiming his share, but I wont give up whats mine, she said.
The judge ruled in her favour.
James, who had already claimed the car as his, now faced selling it and splitting the proceeds. He left the courtroom with a twisted, angry grin.
At home his motherinlaw shouted, You idiot! You gave her everythingcar, flat! At least get a decent solicitor!
On top of that, James had taken out a loan to fund Poppys anniversary dinner at a restaurant, because hed helped her with the flat. Now he slept in a tiny cot in his mothers spare room.
Emily finally slept peacefully for the first time in years. She decided she was still young enough to walk away from men like James. Good, decent men were plenty; the key was knowing who they really were.












