When Harriet found out she was pregnant, her family was utterly gobsmacked. They couldnt quite stomach the idea that she was involved with someone who, frankly, they assumed was more a passing cloud than a permanent fixture.
Harriet was as ordinary as they comejust your average girl from Norwich, raised in a perfectly normal household. She grew up with her mum and a stepdad who did a decent job filling in for her actual father. Her parents always had her back and shed never doubted that she was loved, nor that she could count on them in a tight spot. Harriet finished school, scraped through her A-levels, but the prospect of university was shaky thanks to her rather dire grasp of French.
Harriet decided some one-to-one lessons might do the trick, so she went hunting for a tutor. She settled on Simon, who hailed from Ghana but had come to England for his own studies. Simon had impeccable French and had been giving tutoring sessions for years. At first, things were a bit of a disaster for Harriether verbs seemed destined for eternal confusion. But over time, she started to really warm to Simon, and soon enough, things between them became decidedly more than educational. Neither wanted to play the long-distance game any longer.
When Harriet realised she was expecting, her family nearly had kittens. They didnt much care for the idea that she was involved with someone they assumed would vanish quicker than English sunshine. Visions of Harriet as a lone, struggling mum filled their heads, not to mention their horror at the thought of the child standing out at the school gates.
After Simon completed his degree, he did, in fact, head back to Ghana, but he and Harriet kept in touch religiously. They anxiously awaited the arrival of their baby, video calling and chatting on WhatsApp every day. Harriets little one arrived right on schedule, but her familys increasingly frosty attitude gave her no choice but to make the move to Ghana herself.
Life in Africa wasnt quite cucumber sandwiches and afternoon teathey both struggled with the relentless heat and the general sense of being fish out of water. Eventually, they packed up and returned to England. Some time later, a second daughter made her debut. The family, however, remained stony in their silence, and Harriet flat-out refused to break up with the love of her life just to keep the peace. Now, she and Simon are plotting a move to Canada, hoping for friendlier faces and perhaps less fuss about who fits in at the school gates.












