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Family’s Treasured Recipe

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*The Family Recipe*

“So, youre seriously going to marry someone you met online?” Margaret Spencer eyed her future daughter-in-law with the same scepticism shed use on a dodgy banknote. Her heavy gaze swept over Alices simple hairstyle, her modest dress. “You barely even know each other!”

Alice felt goosebumps prickle her arms. They sat in the tiny but cosy kitchen of the flat where James had grown upspotless, smelling of vanilla and old wooden floors.

“Mum, come on,” James cut in, slipping an arm around Alices shoulders. “We didnt *meet* online, just chatted there first. It was a book clubsix months of talking! And Alice is brilliant.”

Their story had started when Alice ran a little blog about forgotten classics. James, a software engineer with a quiet love for literature, stumbled on her post about *Wuthering Heights*. Their debate spilled into messages, then late-night calls. They laughed at the same jokes, valued the same thingsquiet moments, honesty, the smell of old pages. Their first meeting by the Brontë statue wasnt even a date, just an extension of their conversation. With her, he felt at ease. She saw past his shyness to the thoughtful man underneath.

“Brilliant,” Margaret scoffed, clinking her spoon loudly against her china cup. “And yet shes from another city, no job herewho even knows what shes after? I raised my son, worked hard, and now some girl waltzes in”

Alice clenched her jaw but stayed silent.

Shed figured it out: to Margaret, she wasnt a person, just a threatsome stranger stealing her son. Margarets life ran on strict rules and zero tolerance for weakness. After her husband died five years ago, shed tightened her world around James.

Every attempt to bond failed.

When Alice baked an apple pie with cinnamon and nutmeg”just like Grans”Margaret nibbled a corner and muttered, “Too sweet. Not how we do it here.”

When Alice offered to help clean: “No need. I know where everything goes. Youd just move things.”

Alone in Jamess roomcluttered with model planes and physics bookshed shrugged. “Dont take it personally. Mums prickly. Like a hedgehog.”

“Im trying,” Alice murmured, staring at the rows of identical balconies outside. “Living in a cold wars exhausting. And we cant move out yet.”

But she didnt give up. She believed every fortress had a hidden door.

One Saturday, Margaret pulled out an old photo album while dusting. Alice asked to look and spotted her lingering on a faded picturea younger, smiling Margaret beside a tall, dark-haired man.

“Whos that?” Alice ventured.

Margaret stiffened, caught off guard. “My brother, Andrew,” she sighed, her voice softer now, tired. “We fell out. Twenty years ago, over some land. Stubborn, both of us. Said awful things.”

Alice stayed quiet, but a plan formed. James had mentioned his mum grew even more closed-off after that fight.

A week later, chatting with the nosy neighbour, Mrs. Wilkins, Alice “happened” to ask about Jamess family.

“Oh, Margaret and Andrew?” Mrs. Wilkins sighed. “Thick as thieves, they were! Andrew lives over in the new estate now. Had heart surgery last yearall alone, his kids up in Edinburgh.”

That evening, as James read and Margaret knitted, Alice said carefully, “Margaret did you know your brother had heart surgery last year?”

The needles froze. “What? How do you?”

“Mrs. Wilkins mentioned it. Said hes been on his own, no one to help”

Margaret left without a word. Alice heard her pacing all night.

Next morning, Margaretusually slow to risewas dressed early. “Visiting a friend,” she muttered, buttoning her best coat.

She returned at dusk, eyes red but softer. Spotting Alice in the kitchen, she paused. “Thank you,” she choked out, then hurried away.

Later, they learned shed taken the bus to Andrews, hesitated at his door for half an hourthen rang. Theyd stared at each other, these two greying, stubborn people, before crumbling into tears, laughing at how petty their feud seemed now.

“You were right,” Margaret admitted days later over tea, watching the steam rise. “Sometimes you just have to take the first step. Twenty years wasted over a patch of dirt Silly.”

After that, she warmed to Alice. Not as an intruder, but as family. One evening, sorting groceries, she asked quietly, “Alice that pie of yours, with the nutmeg. Could you show me? James mentioned liking it.”

Hands trembling, Alice reached for the flour. They worked side by side in the tiny kitchenMargaret, for once, not criticising. As the pie baked, Margaret wiped her hands on her apron. “Andrew hes glad we made up. Asked who talked me into visiting.”

Alice just smiled.

James came home to find them both at the table. “Looks like youve been busy.”

Alice leaned into him, nodding. Sometimes, to mend things, you just had to remind people of the love that existed long before you came along. You just had to find the right thread.

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