An Unpleasant Aftertaste
Its over! Theres not going to be any wedding! Sarah exclaimed.
Wait, whats happened? Tom stammered, surprised. Everything seemed fine!
Fine? Sarah scoffed. Sure, if you mean just fine. But She stopped for a moment, searching for words, then decided to be brutally honest. Your socks smell! Im not ready to breathe that in for the rest of my life!
Did you really say that? Sarahs mum gasped when told about the withdrawal of the wedding application. Unbelievable!
Why not? Its true. Sarah shrugged. Dont pretend you didnt notice.
Of course I noticed, her mum admitted, embarrassed. Butits just humiliating. I thought you loved him. Hes a decent lad. Smelly socks is a minor issue; that can be fixed.
How? Teach him to wash his feet? Change his socks? Use deodorant? Mum! Listen to yourself! I wanted a husband to rely on, not to adopt an overgrown boy and train him.
So why did you go so far with Tom? Why did you even register the wedding?
That was all you, Mum! Toms such a good, kind lad. I really like himyour words, werent they? And another one: Youre twenty-seven, about time you got married and gave me some grandchildren. Why are you quiet now?
Well, Sarah, I really thought youd made up your mind. It seemed serious between you two, her mum replied. And you know, Im proud you didnt rush into it. You thought carefully and made a choice. But darling, his socks stink is a bit much. Not like you at all.
Thats exactly why I said it, Mum. So hed get it. Plain and simple. No way back
***
At first, Tom seemed funny and a bit awkward to Sarah. He wore jeans and the same faded t-shirt all the time. He didnt ramble on about Picasso, but he could talk for hours about classic British films. His eyes would light up as he told the stories.
Sarah felt relaxed and at peace with him.
It was this calm that drew her in, worn out from dramatic relationships and chasing the one.
After two months of wandering through cinemas and coffee shops, Tom, shyly, suggested:
Fancy coming back to mine? Ill make shepherds pie. Cooked it myself!
The offer, so homely and warm, made Sarahs heart skip. The Cooked it myself! finished her off.
She agreed
***
But Toms flat left Sarah unimpressed.
It wasnt dirty, but the place had no warmthjust chaos and neglect. Bare, grey walls, an old worn-out sofa with just one cushion. Boxes, books, and magazines piled everywhere. A pair of trainers bang in the middle of the floor. And an air heavy with dust and mustiness.
It felt more like a temporary stop than a real home.
So, what do you think of my castle? Tom spread his arms, grinning with pride, genuinely oblivious to anything odd.
Sarah forced a smile; she did like him and didnt want to start a fight.
They went to the kitchen, which was no improvement: a thin layer of dust on the table, dirty plates in the sink, mugs stained dark brown. On the hob sat a battered saucepan. Sarahs eyes caught the kettle.
I wonder, she thought, what colour was that originally?
Her mood soured.
She barely listened to Tom, who kept trying to make her laugh, rambling along. But when he handed over a plate of shepherds pie, she firmly refused, blaming it on her diet.
Eating anything cooked in that kitchen was not an option.
Back home, Sarah mulled over her visit.
At face value, everything shed seen in Toms flat was trivial. So he lived alone and couldnt keep up with houseworkso what?
But the mess signalled something bigger: how could someone live like this? Not because he was too lazy to clean a plate, but becauseto himit was perfectly fine!
That unpleasant aftertaste remained
***
Then Tom visited Sarah, officially proposed, even gave her a ring. They filled in the forms. Their families started planning the wedding.
It felt nice to be the bride. Still, whenever Sarah was alone, thinking about Tomalways trying to please her, making shepherds pie, telling jokesthe image that popped into her mind was the mystery-coloured kettle.
And she realised: it wasnt just a kettle. It was evidencea sign of Toms approach to life, to home, to himself, and probably to her.
One morning Sarah imagined their future together and shuddered.
Shed wake up, come to the kitchen, and find half-drunk tea and a mess of crumbs. And when shed say, Love, could you tidy this? hed look confused, just like hed looked at his flat, completely baffled. He wouldnt argue, or shout. He simply wouldnt understand. Every day shed need to explain, tidy, remind. And her love would slowly drain awaya thousand tiny jabs, invisible to him.
And her mum was thrilled that she was getting married.
***
Married
The ease and warmth shed felt with Tom started to vanish, replaced by a thick, creeping anxiety.
Sarah, are we alright? Tom would ask almost daily, searching her eyes anxiously. We love each other, dont we?
Of course, shed reply, feeling something crack inside.
Finally, Sarah spoke to her friend Lucy, spilling all her fears.
So what? Lucy was baffled. A bit of dust, an old kettle My husband could leave a tank in the kitchen and not see it. Men just dont notice these things!
Thats just it! They dont, whispered Sarah. And hell never see. But I do! All my life! Itll slowly destroy me!
***
No, she didnt blame him. He never tricked her. Tom was genuine. He simply lived in a different worlda world where a dirty plate in the sink was normal. But to her, it signalled total misunderstanding and indifference.
It wasnt even about cleanliness; it was about how they saw the world. The split in her mind was growing into an unbridgeable chasm.
Best call it off now, she thought, before she fell right to the bottom in a few yearswhen itd be too late.
She just waited for the right moment
***
Sarah and Tom were invited to a party.
They arrived, took off their coats and shoes
Walked into the living room
A horrible smell followed them like a shadow.
Sarah didnt realise where it came from at first.
But when she didand saw that everyone else realised tooshe burned with embarrassment and wished she could disappear. Without a word, she fled to the hallway, threw on her coat, and left.
Tom ran after her, caught her arm. She turned to him and said, almost with resentment:
Thats it! Were not getting married!
***
There was no wedding.
Sarahs sure she did the right thing and has no regrets.
And Tom he still doesnt understand what the big issue was. Smelly socks? He could have just taken them off.
Some things, Sarah learnt, might seem small to others but are impossible to ignore once youve seen them. When it comes to love, sharing values and understanding is as important as sharing affectionotherwise, what starts as comfort can become a lifetime of quiet unhappiness.












