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The Great British Breakup

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The Big Split

Its been exactly four years since Tom and I tied the knot, and as much as we tried to cultivate the illusion of eternal love, we just couldnt make it thrive in the garden of married bliss. Now, it was cleardivorce was on the horizon.

So, youre just going to split up and thats it? my friend Sophie asked as we sat in a cosy Italian café, drowning my anxiety with round crusty bruschettas.

Yes. What else can we do? Weve discussed it from all angles. Honestly, this is the best move for both of us.

No, Im not questioning the divorce itselfIm talking about the occasion! Surely you cant just quietly sign the papers. You need to mark it with some proper closure, you know?

I sighed and poked at my pineapple and seafood pizza, burying my stress in carbs. Im already on edge, Soph, theres no need to rub salt in the wound.

Oh darling, its not you Im talking about. Its the break-up. You had such a spectacular weddingIm still paying off my credit card from your cake alone. Why not go all out with the divorce as well? Hire a venue, get a cavalcade, an MC, maybe do a ritual bridge-burning? Id love a good knees-up.

Are you serious?

Im dead serious!

I dont even have any real money for this. Now Ill have to split everythingpillowcases, our duvet, probably even the pet goldfish.

I know a lady who can pull everything together for, I dont know, a bag of potatoes or something. Youll make back the rest in gifts. And as for the hen dowe could make it homely and respectable, as a final farewell to married life.

So, basically, well arrange a girls night, then all cancel last minute because everyones got husbands and kids?

Perfect scenario, if you ask me!

The next day, Sophie and I went to visit the event organiser, a woman called Julia. Oddly enough, she met us in the middle of the shopping centre, working the till at the Pancake Hut, while simultaneously calling out orders.

Can you help? asked Sophie, summarising the whole bizarre request.

Piece of cake! Julia said, her eyes lighting up as she started picturing it. Divorceeelegant and brooding, all dressed up in black, swearing never again. Ex-husband, finally free to wear those wretched tracksuit bottoms all day, says the fateful I dont. Then we all troop down to the pawn shop and ceremoniously sell the rings. Guests shouting, Sweet! or Bittersweet!… Ill work out the rest! With that, she bellowed at full volume, Order sixty-four ready!

Surprisingly, Tom took to the idea with enthusiasm, but our parents werent impressed.

This is all your trendy modern nonsense, grumbled both sets of parents. In our day, people just quietly separated and harboured a lifelong grudge. Dont expect us to foot the bill.

A week later, everything was sorted. Julia had planned the event down to the last detail. The festivities started with a sort of ransom challengeTom had to leave the flat, running a gauntlet of silly games and forfeits. Friends sang at him, helping (or sabotaging) just to hustle him out the door. Since we lived on the twelfth floor, we let him use the liftcramming in his last box of things and his best mate as witness.

Through Julias distant cousin, a retired police officer, we even had a crime scene photographer to officially document everythingfingerprints, the lot. After this divorce, nine people ended up on the record.

To the registry office! Julia declared to the gathering crowd.

In true modern fashion, Tom and I sat together in the carto be driven away separately afterwardswhile the guests received travelcards, bus fare, and rode in the crime photographers car, singing and taking mug shots as if it were some daft team-building. We entered the registrars office to the lively chorus of Im Free! by The Who.

When the forms were stamped and the unit was officially dissolved, we spilled out onto the street. Julia produced a massive birdcage and suggested we catch a couple of pigeons. The crowd sang, laughed, cheered for the newly-split couple. The blokes, in particular, gave Tom hearty handshakes, wishing him many years of glorious solitude. Meanwhile, the wives staged playful arguments right on the pavement, before dashing to catch a bouquet fashioned from old utility bills.

Gosh, look at them celebrate! remarked a guest from another wedding party. Mustve been waiting for this break-up a long time.

No, mate, Im pretty sure theyre actually divorcing, someone replied.

After witnessing the joyous end of our marriage, more than a few couples postponed their own ceremonies, just to rethink things.

Once the padlock on the bridge had been cut and the rings pawned off to cover event costs, we moved on to the restaurant. There, Julia had rallied her old friends to form a mock-funeral band; we had a business lunch, pancakes with honey, and more Pancake Hut treats than I could count (Julias staff discount, of course). Even the cake was made entirely of layered pancakes.

It feels like a wake I whispered, feeling oddly melancholic.

Were saying goodbye to marital bliss, after all, Julia giggled, doubling as MC, and invited the not-so-young-anymore couple for their final dance.

Chopin played softly.

You know, this is actually working out alright, I said to Tom as we shuffled around the floor.

I agree, he grinned. Its the first time Ive seen our parents actually getting along.

As we circled, I noticed my dad and his dad sharing a whisky, arms slung around each other, quietly singing some half-remembered tune andshockinglywiping away tears, after years of barely civil conversation.

The presents table was groaning: single bed linen sets, gig vouchers, dumbbells, single-serving crockery, yoga class passes, gym memberships, even a certificate for a night out at a male strip show. We finished off with keys to separate hotel rooms in opposite corners of London, coupons for Pancake Hut, and a voucher for two free cab rides with the local police taxi service.

In the end, there were fireworks and pancake cake offered at a discount. The guests staggered homehusbands, wives, kids in towand Tom and I went our separate ways.

The photo album was ready three weeks later. Tom dropped by to collect his nail clippers.

Turned out well, didnt it? I said, flipping through pages of beaming faces and incriminating snaps.

Not bad at all, Tom agreed, then asked, Thinking of changing your name back?

No, Im used to Smith now. Besides, Jones isnt much of an improvement.

He smiled. Right, I should get going.

Hold on! I stopped him.

He looked puzzled.

How about dinner at Pancake Hut? Our coupons expire tonight, seems a shame to waste them

True, he laughed. And you know, pancakes are meant to symbolise a fresh start. Maybe thats what we needa second wind. So a date?

Do you really think? I hesitated. Wouldnt that be a bit much after our very public split? I heard we even made the local news

I say, who cares? Were free, we can do whatever we please. Oh, and by the way, our witnesses are splitting up next week too. They invited usyou coming?

Ill think about it, I grinned. Perhaps Ill regift them the single bed linen settheyll need it.We left the flat behind with a careless laugh, stepping into the warm spring air togetherno need for rings or ceremony now, just two people with shared history and an appetite for sticky maple syrup. The city glittered back at us, unburdened, and for the first time in years, I felt light.

On the walk to Pancake Hut, we passed our old bridge. Instead of a padlock, someone had hung a little wooden heart that read, Congratulations on your release! We both burst out laughing. Tom tugged open the door to the café, theatrically bowing me in.

After you, Mrs. Smith, he teased.

I smirked, that familiar mischief rising. Dont get used to saying that. You never knowI might surprise you.

We took a window seat, watching the night fill with neon reflections. Orders arrived fast, syrup puddling around golden stacks. For a moment, everything stilledtwo exes, no longer bound, choosing to linger just a bit longer.

Heres to freedom, Tom said, raising his mug.

To freedom, with a side of friendship, I replied, clinking his mug with mine.

We ate and talked, not about the past or the future, not about what went wrong or where wed go from here. Just now. Just pancakes and laughter, and hope in its most ordinary, unremarkable form.

As we finished and slipped on our coats, Tom grinned and said, Best split Ive ever tasted.

Outside, the night was ours to divide however we chosea little messy, a little sweet, and perfectly ours.

We parted at the corner, waving as if we were old friends, not new exes. And as I walked alone through the citylighter, freer, but never truly aloneI realized this: endings are just beginnings in disguise, and sometimes the best celebrations come after the cake is gone.

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