Connect with us

З життя

I Married My 82-Year-Old Neighbour to Prevent Him from Being Placed in a Care Home…

Published

on

I married the widower next door, Arthur Bennett, whos eighttwo, just to keep the care home at StAlbans from taking him.

Are you mad? my sister Emily sputtered, nearly spilling her tea when I told her.

First, hes eightytwo, not eightytwo years old, I said, calm as a summer night. And second let me finish.

It all began when I caught his children gossiping under his kitchen window. They turned up twice a yearjust to check that their father was still breathingthen vanished again. This time they arrived with glossy leaflets for residential homes.

Dad, youre eightytwo. You cant live alone, they urged.

Its eightytwo years, not eightytwo illnesses, Arthur snapped in his raspy, warm voice. I cook for myself, I shop at the market, I even bingewatch dramas without a nap. Im fine!

That evening he knocked on my door, a bottle of red in hand, his eyes the colour of stormclouds, ready for a desperate yet important conversation.

I need a favour a rather odd one, he said.

A couple of glasses later, that odd favour turned into a proposal of vows.

Just on paper, he explained. If Im married, my kids will find it harder to ship me off somewhere out of sight.

I stared into his blue eyes, still bright with mischief and stubbornness, and thought of my lonely evenings: a hollow flat, the telly buzzing, silence pressing in.

He was the only one who asked me how my day went, every single day.

Whats in it for me? I asked.

Half the bills, Sunday shepherds pieand someone wholl be glad when I walk through the door.

Three weeks later we stood in the register office at Covent Garden. I wore a dress that said found this this morning. He was in an old tweed suit that smelled of mothballs and memories. Our witnesses were Mrs. Patel, the corner shopkeeper, and her husband, who barely held back their chuckles.

You may now kiss the bride, the clerk announced.

Arthur planted a kiss on my cheek so loud it seemed to tear open an envelope.

From then on everything fell into a strange rhythm: he rose at six, did his legendary five pushups; I sipped yesterdays coffee and stayed up late after work.

This isnt coffee, its torture, he grumbled.

Your exercises are a parody of sport, I retorted.

On Sundays the house filled with the scent of shepherds pie and our laughter. He talked about his late wife, the love of his life, and about his children who saw him more as a burden than a father.

One afternoon they stormed in, accusations blazing.

Shes using him! shouted his son, Tom.

I hear you perfectly! Arthur barked from the kitchen, And by the way, your coffee is terrible!

Whats the point of this marriage? his daughter Lucy asked, her gaze icy.

I glanced at Arthur, humming as he poured me a fresh cup.

Its simple. Im not alone. I have someone to share Sunday dinner with, someone to say Im home to, someone who lights up when I laugh. Is that a crime?

The door slammed shut with such force it seemed to punctuate their argument.

Arthur returned with two mugs.

They think Ive lost my mind, he said.

Theyre not wrong, I smiled.

Youre mad too, he replied.

Thats why were perfect for each other.

Your coffee is still poison.

And your pushups belong in a cartoon.

Family, then.

We clinked our mugs against the golden light of the setting sun, a scene of a love that felt both unreal and undeniably true.

Six months later: he still gets up at the crack of dawn, I still ruin his coffee, and Sundays still smell of shepherds pie and happiness.

Do you ever regret it? I ask, each time.

Not one second, he answers.

Let the world call our marriage a sham. To me, its the most genuine thing thats ever happened in my life.

Click to comment

Leave a Reply

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

два × чотири =

Також цікаво:

З життя22 хвилини ago

My date suggested a walk in minus 20 degrees because “only gold diggers sit in cafés”—but I wasn’t thrown off…

His name was Oliver. In his photos, he looked like your typical thirty-five-year-old Englishmantidy, nothing outlandish. His profile was full...

З життя23 хвилини ago

The last message I sent her was brief: “I’m here if you need anything.” It sat with the status “Sent” for exactly eight hundred and forty days.

The last message I sent her was brief: Im here if you need anything. It floated, stuck at Delivered, for...

З життя1 годину ago

Brilliant! Husband Spends Nights with His Current Wife and Days with His Ex-Wife

Im 38 years old, and for the past two years Ive been living with a man whos five years my...

З життя1 годину ago

You Stay Home All Day Doing Nothing – After Hearing These Words, I Decided It Was Time to Teach Him a Lesson

So, right before I got married, my friends used to warn me. Theyd say, You know, once a bloke ties...

З життя2 години ago

My Thrifty Friends Invited Me to a Birthday Party—But I Came Home Hungry

I have friends I jokingly call thrifty. They save on almost everythingfrom food to clothes. Its not that theyre hard...

З життя2 години ago

My Daughter-in-Law Won’t Let Me See My Grandchild Unless I Bring Money, and My Son Doesn’t Say a Word

My son isnt divorced. He lives with his girlfriend, but he has no say in anything. Every time I try...

З життя3 години ago

He Doesn’t Love You Anymore. Build Your Own Life Without Him! We’re Happy Together. You Must Admit It’s Not Right to Live Without Feelings. Mark Isn’t Leaving His Child—He’s Leaving You.

Leave me alone! cried Emily to Alice, whose cheeks were streaked with tears. Go and live your own lifewithout him!...

З життя3 години ago

When I Retired, I Downsized from a Three-Bedroom Flat to a Studio—and I Haven’t Regretted It for a Moment

When I finally retired, I found myself living alone in a rather spacious two-bedroom flat. It wasnt just me a...