Connect with us

З життя

Now You Can Live Life to the Fullest

Published

on

Now Theres a Chance to Live

Margaret stood at the edge of the grave, watching as the coffin was lowered into the earth.

The November wind was sharp, flapping the mourning ribbon on the wreath and sneaking under her coat, making her shiver and pull her shoulders tight.

Beside her, Aunt Dorisa distant cousin whom Margaret had met only a handful of timessobbed quietly.

Her mother appeared composed, although the fingers clutching Margarets hand were icy cold.

Her father

Margaret stared at the casket, trying to grasp what she felt.

Nothing.

Just a resounding emptiness inside, like an old cottage in the winter, long since abandoned and left without warmth.

He was a good man, someone murmured behind her. May he rest in peace.

Margaret nearly laughed out loud.

Good?!

How could they know?

They saw him at Christmases, sober and smiling, playing the accordion. Golden hands, heart of the party, jolly fellow.

That was all.

They never saw him at home.

Margaret closed her eyes, and memories surfaced: she was about seven, awakened at night by a racket. Her father stumbling in, missing the door, reeking of gin and something sour. Her mother struggling to pull him to their room; he would thrash, shout, You dont respect me! Margaret squeezed her eyes shut and hauled the blanket up to her forehead, desperate to see and hear nothing.

In the morning, her father would sit at the kitchen table, face drawn, sipping pickle juice and saying, Sorry, love, lost control. Wont happen again.

But it always did.

Always.

Margaret opened her eyes. The grave was covered now; wreaths lay atop the mound. People trickled out of the cemetery. Her mother gently touched her elbow:

Come along, love. Weve got the wake

At the wake, Margaret sat among strangers. She ate, nodded, answered condolences. Inside, an unrelenting thought battered her, one she wanted to scream:

Why dont I feel anything? Why doesnt it hurt?

That evening, after everyone left, she remained with her mother in the kitchen. They drank tea in silence. Then her mother spoke:

You know, Margaret, Ive just thought… something odd.

Margaret lifted her gaze.

I realised that nowI dont have to be afraid anymore. He wont collapse somewhere, freeze, or disappear. We can justlive.

Margaret searched her mothers eyes and saw the same terror she felt herself. Not grief, but relief.

Am I bad? her mother whispered.

Margaret shifted closer, wrapping her arms around her mothers shoulders.

No, Mum. Were not bad. Were just exhausted.

They sat there until dawn, recounting memories. Not the drinking, but different ones: her father crafting a dollhouse for Margaret, teaching her to ride a bicycle, bringing home a huge watermelon from the market so the three of them could eat it, sitting cross-legged on the floor because it wouldnt fit on the table.

He was many things. And that, too, was true.

Soon her mother went to bed, leaving Margaret alone. She took out her phone and sent a message to her husband: Im all right. Ill come tomorrow.

Suddenly, Margaret realised she was breathing evenly for the first time in days. No anxiety. No waiting for a call with dreadful news. No constant, gnawing tension.

Her father was gone. Life at last felt peaceful.

She knew the thought would return. She would wake at night, haunted by guilt. Aunt Doris and the others would whisper for ages, Heartless thing, didnt even cry.

But now, in this quiet flat, with no smell of stale gin and no thunderous midnight arguments, Margaret allowed herself a moment of honesty.

Forgive me, Dad, she said softly to the emptiness. I did love you. Truly. But I was so weary of hating you.

In the morning, she left.

On the train, she spent ages gazing at the bleak November countryside, eventually pulling out her notebook to jot down a response to the thoughts swirling in her mind:

Children of alcoholics dont cry at funerals. Theyve shed their tears through years of living with the illness. It isnt heartlessnessits survival.

Margaret closed the notebook and, for the first time in ages, allowed herself a smile.

The train carried her awayto another life. A life where she no longer had to look back.

Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Ваша e-mail адреса не оприлюднюватиметься. Обов’язкові поля позначені *

20 − два =

Також цікаво:

З життя47 хвилин ago

The Whisper Behind the GlassAs she pressed her palm to the cold pane, the faint murmur turned into a warning that only she could hear.

The orderlies, a woman with a weatherworn face and eyes dulled by endless witnessing of other people’s suffering, clumsily shifted...

З життя2 години ago

A Wife’s Infidelity Comes to Light at the Family Dinner — Two Decades LaterThe stunned hush that settled over the table turned the holiday feast into an uneasy tableau of memories and regret.

June 12 Today I turned seventy, and for the past twentyodd years I have held a secret that has sat...

З життя11 години ago

Retiree discovers a wounded dog; the encounter transforms her lifeShe brings the dog home, and together they embark on a mission to rescue abandoned animals across the neighborhood.

Eleanor Whitaker shuffled out of the chemist, the single thought in her head a thin thread: make it home without...

З життя12 години ago

“‘Stay a month, I’m no monster,’ he said as he left for another woman—three years later he returned, trembling, with a ring.”

The suitcase already leaned against the hall door, while a pot of simmering beef stew still hissed on the stoveaccompanied...

З життя13 години ago

Teacher confiscates the girl’s phone, unaware her dad’s already on his way to school.

I’ll call my dad, the girl in the front row announced, pressing the phone to her chest as if it...

З життя14 години ago

— Shut up, you scruffy backwater! — the husband shouted at Vicky. She smiled silently, and by morning the husband lost his job, his wife and his flat.

**Diary 3May** The dining room felt cramped, crowded by an ostentatious spread and an air of smug selfsatisfaction. I set...

З життя15 години ago

Heirs Slash Price on Flat—Now Comes with Its Beloved CatWhen the new owners unlocked the door, the cat leapt onto the windowsill and gazed out, as if approving the bargain they’d just struck.

28April2026 I hung up the phone and stared at it for a few seconds, as if the device itself were...

З життя16 години ago

Anna never trusted her husbandWhen a cryptic key arrived on her doorstep, Anna finally understood why she had always doubted him.

June 12, 2026 Ive never been one to place blind faith in anyone, not even in my own wife, Poppy....