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Carrying On: The Next Chapter

Adrian lingered on the old man Edwards words for a long time. *”You need a woman in the house.”* Yes, he knew it was true. Every evening, returning to his empty flat, the silence crushed him. The cold walls and the scent of unworn clothes still hanging in Sophies wardrobe cut deeper than the graveyard ever had.
Months passed, and the neighbours began dropping hints. *”Adrian, theres a young widow at the marketperhaps youve seen her?”* *”A quiet girl comes to churchshould I put in a word?”* But nothing touched him. Until the day Edward took him by the arm and led him to the home of a distant cousin, Margaret.
Margaret wasnt beautiful by the villages standards. Her face was round, her nose too broad, her eyes a dull shade of grey, and her movements heavy. The women whispered behind their hands: *”Poor Adrianafter Sophie, look what hes settled for.”* And so the cruel nickname stuck*the homely wife.*
What they didnt see was her kindness. Margaret cooked without complaint, drew water from the well without sighing, andmost of allshe knew how to listen. Adrian, who had spent months with no one to share his grief, found in her a rare stillness.
Their wedding was simple. Two witnesses, a vicar, and a few candles. Adrian felt no spark of passion, but something elsean anchor. And after years of storms, an anchor is more precious than any fleeting beauty.
At first, the villagers pitied him. *”He only chose her so he wouldnt be alone.”* *”No luck with women, that one.”* But gradually, the whispers faded. Adrians house, once echoing with emptiness, now smelled of fresh bread and dried lavender. On long winter evenings, Margaret read to him in a soft voice from the old books Sophie had left behind, and Adrian closed his eyes, soothed by the dulled edge of his pain.
One day, Edward stopped by. He lingered in the doorway, watching Margaret sew by the window while Adrian stacked firewood. The old man smiled beneath his white moustache and murmured: *”Pretty or plainit doesnt matter. What matters is youve found each other.”*
Adrian turned to him and, for the first time since the funeral, truly smiled. The village might always call her *the homely wife*, but to him, Margaret was lifes unexpected giftproof that true beauty lies not in a face, but in the quiet it brings to ones soul.
And in that quiet, Adrian finally felt alive again.
