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The Father Set Off for the Village with the Cool Confidence of a Man Who’s Used to Always Being Right

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The father set off for the village with that chilly certainty people have when theyre used to always being right.

Three months more than enough time, he thought, for arrogance to turn into habit, for that habit of luxury to melt into anger, bitterness, and longing for whats gone. He pictured it all clearly: his son unshaven, shoulders hunched, dead eyes; next to him, an exhausted, disappointed girl; a forced marriage, endless arguing, that heavy silence. This was meant to be a lesson. Harsh, but fair.

The closer he got to the village, though, the more unease crept up on him a prickly feeling, as though something was about to go off script.

From the distance, he spotted the house. It wasnt grand, but it was looked after fresh fencing, tidy garden, the gate newly painted. Flowers everywhere. Not weeds, not neglect actual flowers.

He frowned.

Must be the neighbours helped them out, he muttered, climbing out of the car.

But as soon as the gate swung open, he stopped dead.

Out came his son. Not dressed up, not in scruffy village trousers just a plain, clean shirt, jeans, sturdy boots. Suntanned. Standing tall. His eyes clear, calm.

Dad, he said, minus that old mocking tone. Youre here.

The lack of fear or anger in his voice was the most off-putting part.

You werent expecting me? the father asked, keeping his voice cool.

I was, the son nodded. Just didnt know when.

Then out came the girl the dairymaid.

But the father barely recognised her.

Three months back, he remembered a shy, barely noticeable girl, always looking down. Now, she walked with confidence. Hair swept back, face free of bright make-up, but open, alive. In her arms, she cradled a tiny puppy, wiggly and excited.

Careful, she chuckled. Hes a right handful.

The father realised hed been staring longer than was polite.

Hello, she greeted him, steady as anything. You must be knackered from the drive. Come in.

There was no neediness, no defensive tone. Just quiet confidence.

Inside, the place smelled of fresh-baked bread. The table was set. Simple food, but everything in its place not luxury, but order and care.

The father took his seat, bracing for awkward silences, sharp words, tension. Nothing like that happened.

You working? he asked his son eventually.

Yeah, the son answered. Down at the local workshop. At first it was voluntary, learning the ropes. Now they pay me.

And thats enough for you? the father snorted.

It is, the son replied, steady as ever, because I know what Im earning it for.

Silence lingered.

And you? The father turned to the woman. Did you know what you were signing up for?

She met his gaze head-on.

I knew he was a rich mans son, she said. That was before the wedding. Afterwards, he was just my husband.

And whats it like living with this, what would you call it experiment? the father quipped, dripping sarcasm.

The son tensed, but she just rested a gentle hand on his shoulder.

Fine, she said. Its hard sometimes. Sometimes it really hurts. But its honest.

The father leaned back.

You shouldve run off, he told his son. After a week, tops a month.

The son smiled, tired but real.

Thats what I thought, too.

So what changed?

The sons eyes flicked to his wife, then back at his father.

When you took everything away, he said, I thought it was humiliation. I was furious. I hated you. And I hated her, too because it felt like she was part of the punishment.

She didnt look away.

And after? the father pressed.

Then I realised, for the first time in my life, nobody was afraid of losing me. No one kept me around for my money. If I acted like an idiot, people simply ignored me. If I was lazy, nobody picked up the slack.

He gave a small, nearly amused sigh.

That first month, I was unbearable. Id shout, blame, threaten. But her he glanced her way she just got on with things. Up with the dawn. Worked hard. Didnt complain, didnt try to fix me.

Im not a nanny, she said, cool as you like. And Im no saviour.

The words pinched at something deep inside the father.

And you stayed? he asked.

I stayed, the son nodded. Because for the first time, I felt like a person, not just a shadow of your cheque book.

The father drifted to the window. Outside, he watched as his son played with the puppy. She was laughing and speaking to him, nothing forced, no tension.

You know, the father said quietly, still facing away, when I stripped you of everything, I thought you’d break.

I did break, the son replied. Just not in the way you expected. I broke the part of me youd spent years building.

The father turned.

I can give the money back, he said. The houses, the cars the lot.

The son shook his head.

Not now. Maybe one day. But not as some condition or leash.

She stepped closer.

If you really want to help, she said softly, just come round. No strings attached.

The father stood there a long moment, and then it truly hit him: his plan had worked but not how hed imagined. Hed wanted to punish but what hed done was set them free.

Ill come by, he said, his voice gentle. If Im not in the way.

His son smiled properly, fully, for the first time.

Wed like that.

Sitting back in his car, the father didnt start the engine for ages.

For the first time, he realised: it wasnt his son whod learned the hardest lesson.

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