З життя
Ex-Husband Promises Apartment to His Son, But Only If He Marries Me Again.
A former husband promises his son a flat, but sets one conditionmarry me again.
At sixty, I live in Oxford. Never did I imagine that after all these years, following two decades of utter silence, the past would barge into my life with such brazen cynicism. And the cruelest twist? The one who brought it back was none other than my own son.
At twenty-five, I was hopelessly in love. Richardtall, charming, full of witseemed the very image of a dream. We married quickly, and a year later, our son Oliver was born. The early years felt like a fairy tale. We lived in a tiny flat, shared dreams, made plans. I worked as a teacher; he was an engineer. Nothing, it seemed, could shatter our happiness.
But Richard changed. He came home late, spun lies, grew distant. I ignored the rumours, turned a blind eye to strange perfumes. Until the truth was undeniable: he was cheating. Not just once. Friends, neighbours, even my parentsthey all knew. I clung to our family for Olivers sake. I endured, hoping hed come to his senses. Then one night, I woke to an empty bed and finally understoodI couldnt take it anymore.
I packed my things, took five-year-old Oliver by the hand, and left for my mothers. Richard didnt stop us. A month later, he moved abroadsupposedly for work. Soon, he found another woman and erased us from his life. No letters, no calls. Just silence. And I was alone. My mother passed, then my father. Oliver and I weathered it allschool, illnesses, graduations. I worked three jobs so hed want for nothing. I never lived for myselfthere wasnt time. He was my everything.
When Oliver started university in London, I helped where I couldparcels, money, endless support. But a flat? I couldnt afford one. He never complained, insisted hed manage. I was so proud.
Then, last month, he visited with newshe was getting married. My joy vanished when I saw his hesitation. He wouldnt meet my eyes. Then it spilled out:
“Mum I need your help. Its about Dad.”
My lungs emptied. Hed reconnected with Richard, whod returned to England and offered Oliver the keys to a two-bed flat, inherited from his grandmother. Butone condition. I had to remarry him. And let him move into my home.
I couldnt breathe. Oliver kept talking:
“Youre alone Youve no one. Why not try again? For me. For my future family. Dads changed”
I stood, wordless, and walked to the kitchen. Kettle, tea, trembling hands. The room blurred. Twenty years, I carried everything alone. Twenty years, he never cared how we survived. And now he returns with a *bargain*.
I came back and said, quiet but firm:
“No. I wont agree.”
Oliver raged. Shouted. Accused me of selfishness, of robbing him of a father, of ruining his life again. I stayed silent. Every word cut like glass. He didnt know how Id sold my wedding ring to buy him a winter coat. How Id skipped meals so he could have meat. How exhaustion kept me awake for years.
Im not lonely. My lifes been hard but honest. I have my job, my books, my garden, my friends. I wont take back a man who betrayed menot for love, but for convenience.
Oliver left without goodbye. He hasnt called. I know hes hurt. I understand. He wants whats best for himjust as I once did. But I wont sell my dignity for square feet. The price is too high.
Maybe one day hell see that. Maybe itll take years. But Ill wait. Because I love him. Love without conditions, without flats or *what-ifs*. I brought him into this world with love. Raised him with love. And I wont let love become currency now.
As for the ex-husband? Let him stay in the past. Thats where he belongs.
