“I thought, after my divorce, Id never be able to trust anyone again,” James murmured, rolling the empty espresso cup between his fingers. His voice wavered with such convincing pain that Emily leaned forward, unable to help herself. “When youre betrayed, it feels like you lose a piece of yourself. She cut deeper than anyone ever had. I honestly thought Id never climb out of that hole never feel whole again…”
James heaved sighs as he spoke, his story unspooling slowlythe wife who never valued him, the ache that wouldnt fade, the terror of beginning again. Each of his words pressed gently on Emilys heart like warm pebbles, and she found herself imagining being the woman to mend himto restore his faith in love. She pictured them healing together, finding real happiness, the kind only their togetherness could offer.
James only talked about Oliver on their second date, slipping it in between the sticky toffee pudding and after-dinner tea…
“Ive got a son, you knowhes seven. Lives with his mum, but every weekend hes with me. Thats what the court decided.”
“Thats wonderful!” Emily beamed, her smile bright as a spring sunrise. “Children are such a blessing.”
In her mind, she crafted idyllic scenes: three at the breakfast table on Saturdays, strolls through Hyde Park, cosy film nights together. Shed be more than a stand-in, shed be a second mothernot replacing his own, of course, but someone hed grow to love as family.
“Youre sure you dont mind?” Jamess lips curled into a strange smirk, one Emily mistook for a flicker of doubt. “Most women bolt when they find out about the kid.”
“Im not most women,” she replied, proud and assured.
That first weekend with Oliver felt like a celebration. Emily made blueberry pancakesthe boys favourite, as James had tipped her off. She patiently hovered over his maths homework, explaining things in simple terms. She laundered his dinosaur t-shirt, ironed his school kit, tucked him up in bed by nine on the dot.
“You need a break,” Emily suggested gently, noticing how James had sprawled on the sofa, TV remote in hand. “Let me take care of everything.”
James noddedgratefully, or so she thought at the time. Now she realised it was the nod of a man accepting his due.
Months stitched themselves into years. Emily held a managers post at a shipping firm, gone from the flat at eight, back by seven each night. Her pay was decentby London standardsbut it stretched only so far. It had to cover three.
“Theyve delayed things again on the site,” James would say, as if reciting some grim disaster. “Client pulled out. But theres a big contract coming, I promise you.”
That big contract had hovered on the horizon for eighteen monthssometimes nearer, sometimes furtherbut it never quite arrived. The bills, however, never missed. Council tax. Electric. Wi-Fi. Groceries. Child maintenance for Sarah. New trainers for Oliver. School fees. Emily paid everything in silence. She pinched pennies on lunch, bringing pasta in Tupperware, refusing Ubers even in relentless rain. She hadnt been to a nail salon in over a yearshe trimmed and filed her own nails, trying not to think of easier days.
In three years, James had brought her flowers precisely three times. She could recount each bunchthose limp, cheap supermarket roses from the kiosk near the station, thorns snapped off and petals tired as if theyd been on offer.
The first was an apology for calling her hysterical in front of Oliver. The second came after a spat over her friend showing up unannounced. The third, a late birthday gesture when he forgot and spent the night drinking with his mates.
“James, I dont need lavish gifts,” she would say softly, choosing her words with care. “Sometimes, I just want to feel youre thinking of me. Even a card would mean so much…”
His face twisted instantly.
“Moneys all that matters to you, isnt it? Presents. Thats all. Never mind love, the things Ive been through!”
“Its not about”
“You dont deserve it,” James spat, flinging the words at her like muck. “After all I do for you, you dare complain?”
Emily fell silent. She always didit was easier that way. Easier to live, to breathe, to pretend things were fine.
Meanwhile, James always seemed able to scrape together cash for himselfpub nights, live football, Thursdays curry house. Hed come home tipsy and flushed, stinking of sweat and old tobacco, and collapse into bed, oblivious to Emily lying awake next to him.
She convinced herself: this is what real love issacrifice, patience. Hell change, of course he will. She just had to wait a little longer, love a little harder, because hed survived so much already
Any talk of marriage was like picking her way through a minefield.
“Were happy as we arewhats a bit of paper mean?” James would wave the topic away. “After what Sarah put me through, I need time.”
“Three years, James. Three years is a long time.”
“Youre pressuring me. Always pressuring!” His irritation would drive him from the room, ending the conversation in a dead hush.
Emily wanted childrenher own children. At twenty-eight, her biological clock grew louder with every passing month. But James had no interest in fatherhood again; in his mind, one son was more than enough.
That Saturday, Emily asked for one thing. Just a single day.
“The girls have invited me over. Its been ages. Ill be home by evening.”
James stared at her as if shed just announced she was leaving for Australia.
“And Oliver?”
“Youre his dad. Spend the day together, just you two.”
“You mean youre abandoning us? On a Saturday? When I wanted a rest?”
She blinked, once, twice. In three years, shed never left them on their own. Never once asked for a free day. She cleaned, cooked, helped with homework, did all the washing, all while holding a full-time job.
“I only want to see my friends. A few hours And he is your son, James. Cant you manage one day with him on your own?”
“Youre duty-bound to love my boy as you love me!” James burst out suddenly, voice echoing off the small kitchens walls. “You live in my flat, you eat my food, and now youre showing your true colours?!”
His flat. His food. Yet Emily had paid the rent on that flat. She shopped and paid for the food with her own wages. For three years she had supported a man who screamed at her just for wanting a day off with her friends.
Now, as she looked at Jamesfurious, his jaw clenched, a vein throbbing in his templeshe finally saw him as he truly was. Not some broken soul, desperate to be saved, but a grown man, perfectly adept at exploiting kindness.
To him, Emily was not a beloved partner, nor a future wife, but a financial crutch and unpaid housekeeper. Nothing more.
Once James left to drop Oliver back to Sarahs, Emily calmly reached for her holdall. Her hands moved with certaintyno shakes, no hesitation. Passport. Phone. Charger. A couple of tees. Jeans. Anything else could be bought later. Nothing else mattered.
She left no note. What was the point explaining herself to someone who rendered her invisible?
The door closed softly behind her, void of fanfare.
The calls started an hour later. First one, then another, then a barragea ceaseless stream of shrill rings that vibrated the phone against her palm.
“Emily, where are you? What the hell is this? I come home, youre gone! What gives you the right to do this? Wheres my dinner? Am I supposed to starve? This is disgraceful!”
She listened to his voicefurious, demanding, righteous indignation dripping from every wordand marvelled. Even now, even as she disappeared, James could only think of himself. His discomfort. Who would cook for him now? No word of “sorry.” Not a whisper of “Are you alright?” Only “How dare you?”
She blocked his number. Then found him on WhatsAppblocked there. Facebookblocked. Anywhere he might reach her, she built a wall.
Three years. She had spent three years with a man who did not love her. Who devoured her compassion like a commodity, convincing her that sacrifice was the core of love.
But that isnt love. Love isnt humiliation. Love doesnt turn one partner into hired help.
Emily walked down a dusky London street, breathing easier than she had in years. She made herself a promise, right then: never again would she mistake self-effacement for love. Never again would she rescue those who trade on pity.
From now on, she would choose herself. Only herself.












