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Figure It Out for Yourselves, Won’t You?

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“No, Emily, dont count on me. You got marriednow rely on your husband, not me. I dont need strangers in my home,” Margaret snapped.

Emilys throat tightened as she gripped the phone. The dismissal stungshe hadnt expected such coldness.

“Mum Hes not a stranger. Hes my husband, your son-in-law. Were not asking you to buy us a flatjust to stay with you while we save for the deposit.”

A short, bitter laugh crackled down the line.

“Oh, I know how this goes. Let you move in, and youll never leave. First the deposit, then the repairs, then something else. Peace? Forget it. No, Emily, dont take it to heart, but your father and I managed on our own. So can you.”

“Mum, how? You know were both working, penny-pinching just to pay rent. At this rate, with prices rising, well save for a shoebox, not a home!”

“And who has it easy these days?” Margarets voice sharpened. “Your father and I never lived with our parents. We went through it aloneno complaints.”

“Alone, alone Mum, dont rewrite history. I remember Grandma helping you.”

“Dont compare. That was different. Grandma helped because she wanted to. We never begged. I earned this flat fair and square!”

“Did I ask to be born into nothing?” Emily spat, slamming the phone down.

Her chest burned. Margaret had every right to refusebut the way shed done it as if shed built an empire from scratch, while Emily dared to hitch a ride. Except history told another story.

When Margaret learned she was pregnant, she wasnt married. Thomas, Emilys father, was carelessstill chasing fun, dodging responsibility. His mother, Dorothy, had long divorced, forever hunting happiness. So Margaret turned to Thomass grandmother, Agnes.

Agnes wept with joy, hugging her tight. “Dont you worry, love. Ill talk to that boy. And since its come to this Ill sign the cottage over to you. Ill move in with my daughter. This old place is too much for me, and youll need it for the baby.”

Margaret gaped. “The cottage? But thats”

“I wont take it with me, will I? I was never happy. Might as well see you be.”

Agnes kept her wordand more. She put the deed in Margarets name, knowing her grandson couldnt be trusted. Margaret swapped the cottage for a two-bed flat.

Thomas never changed. He drank, strayed, and his paychecks often vanished. Margaret knewbut she endured.

“Children need both parents,” shed tell her own mother, refusing divorce. “When Emily turns eighteen, then Ill leave.”

Emily disagreed. Better a single mum than a house of tears and shouting.

At eighteen, Margaret finally filed for divorce. Emily thought freedom had comeuntil Margaret announced, “Were on our own now, love. Half the bills, half the foodstarting next month.”

Emily, still at uni, panicked. Her student loan wouldnt cover a loaf of bread, let alone Margarets meat-and-veg standards. Part-time jobs paid pennies. She dropped out, took full-time work.

That decision haunted her. No degree meant closed doorseven for shelf-stacking.

Margaret shrugged. “Not your path, then.”

They lived as flatmatesno fights, no warmth.

Ten years passed. Emily married Daniel, an electrician. They rented a dingy one-bed, scrimping for a deposit. “At this rate, itll take twelve years,” Daniel sighed.

So Emily called Margaretwho had a spare room.

“No strangers under my roof,” came the reply.

Emilys heart ached. Shed never asked for anything. Now, when she didice.

Fine. If Margaret prized independence, Emily would too. There was the cottageleft to her by her other grandmother.

Mum had managed it for years, planting veg, fixing leaks. Emily never claimed ituntil now.

Two days later, she called again. “Mum, clear your things from the cottage. Were renting it out.”

Silence. Then a scoff. “Rent it? Whod want that dump?”

“Not your concern. Its mine. Youve had your turn.”

“After all Ive put into it? The repairs, the money”

“You chose to. I never asked.”

Margaret hung up.

The cottage gathered dust. No renters came.

“Sell it, or move there,” Daniel said.

Emily listed it. It hurtnot the bricks, but the memories. Summer apples, Grandmas jam

Then a call. A woman haggled, arranged a viewing.

Margaret showed up instead. Shed seen the ad, sent a friend to call. Too proud to dial herself.

“Discount for family?” she smirked.

Emily agreedjust to end it.

Six months later, she and Daniel sipped tea in their own flat. No unannounced visits. No checks.

The phone rang. Margaret.

“I was at the cottage,” she said softly. “The apples came in heavy. Made too much jam. Want some?”

Emily sighed. The sale had hollowed her. No anger, no love left. Just business. And business partners didnt deliver jam.

“No, Mum. Well manage.”

“Suit yourself.”

Things would never be the same. Margaret had her way; Emily had hers. The walls theyd built had no doors left.

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