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Shut Up!” The Man Roared, Hurling the Suitcase to the Floor. “I’m Leaving You and This Miserable Swamp You Call a Life

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“Shut it,” the husband snapped, tossing his suitcase to the floor. “I’m leaving you and this swamp you call a life.”

“A swamp?” Margaret slowly turned from the stove, where shed been frying potatoes for dinner.

“That swamp fed your mother for twenty years while she was in and out of hospitals. Forgotten already?”

“Whats Mum got to do with this? Dont you dare bring her into it!”

“Everything, Edward. While you were off chasing your big deals in London, I was here looking after your paralysed mother. Changing her nappies, if you must know.”

Edward stood in the doorway of their two-bed council flat, sharp in a new suit, suitcase at his feet. Margaret hadnt seen him look this good in yearstrim, tanned, smelling of expensive cologne. Not like the old days, coming home from the factory reeking of engine oil.

She remembered how theyd met. A dance at the factory social clubhim a young mechanic, her from accounts. Hed spun her around to some old song, whispering nonsense in her ear. Then a modest weddingthirty guests, prawn cocktail, and cheap sparkling wine. His mother had wept, hugging Margaret: “Thank you, love, for taming my Eddie.”

Tamed him. Twenty-two years theyd had. Raised a daughter, Lucynow at med school, scraping by on grants and Margarets extra tutoring shifts. Edward hadnt given them a penny in three yearsall sunk into his “business ventures.” What business? She never quite figured it out. One minute he wanted to open a garage, the next he was into haulage. All of it went bust.

“You just dont get it,” Edward lit a cigarette right there in the hallway. “Daves offered me a job in London. Runs a chain of car washeswants me to manage one. Even sorted a flat to start.”

“Going alone?” Margaret wiped her hands on her apron. They trembled, but her voice stayed steady.

“Not alone.” He looked away. “With Sophie. She… gets me. Believes in me.”

Sophie. Margaret had known about her for months. Seen the texts on his phone while he was in the shower. “Babe,” “love,” “miss you.” Twenty-eight, this “babe.” Worked at the dealership where Edward had been eyeing up a caron finance, mind you, which Margaret was still paying off from her teachers salary.

“What about Lucy?” she asked. “Your daughter. Shes got finals next year.”

“Shell understand. I cant live like this anymore. Im forty-five, Marg. Still young enough to change things.”

Margaret walked to the window. Down in the yard, their neighbour Sheila was hanging laundry. She spotted Margaret, gave a little wave. Sheila knew everythingabout Sophie, about Edward barely coming home the past six months. Brought round pies sometimes: “Hang in there, love.”

“Remember,” Margaret said quietly, “when Lucy was five? Pneumonia. Doctors werent hopeful. You worked double shifts for the medicine. I sat by her bed for days. You said, Were family, Marg. Well get through anything.”

“That was years ago.”

“Fifteen. Or when your mum had her stroke? Who traipsed to hospitals with her? Who stayed up nights turning her every two hours so she wouldnt get sores? Me, Edward. You were always busy. What business? You were already chasing your next scheme.”

Edward stubbed his cigarette on the windowsill. Margaret wincednew sill, saved up for it herself last month.

“You never forget a thing, do you?” he snapped. “All the bad stuff. What about the good? That holiday I took you on?”

“Ten years ago. A week in Brighton.”

“Nothings ever enough for you!”

Margaret turned to him. Tears pricked her eyes, but she wouldnt let them fall. Not for him.

“You know what, Ed? Go. Off you pop to Sophie. But heres the thingI looked after your mum till the end. Two years she lay there. Two years I spoon-fed her, bathed her, gave her meds. And where were you? Working? On what, Ed? Youve barely held a job in five years. Too busy dreaming big.”

“I tried! For this family!”

“For us?” Margaret scoffed. “Lucys working night shifts as a care assistant to afford textbooksbecause Dads playing entrepreneur. Im doing double school shifts plus tutoring. Who exactly were you trying for?”

Edward gripped his suitcase handle, silent.

“Funniest part?” Margaret continued. “Your mum said to me before she died: Forgive him, love. Hes weak. Always was. Thanks for putting up with him. I didnt get it then. I do now.”

“Dont!” Edward exploded. “Dont call me weak! Im suffocating here! In this flat, this town, with you! Your perfect little life is burying me alive!”

“My perfect life?” Margaret laugheddry, bitter. “These past years Ive done nothing but bite my tongue. When you came home drunk. When money vanished from savingsfor your projects. When you reeked of someone elses perfume. I thought youd grow out of it. Family, right?”

She went to the cupboard, pulled out a folder. Edward tensed.

“Whats that?”

“Divorce papers. Prepared them a month ago. Waited to see if youd man up first. But you beat me to itwell done. Sign them.”

Edward gaped at the documents.

“You… knew?”

“Im not stupid, Ed. Just gave you a chance. Gave myself onemaybe I was wrong. I wasnt.”

“The flat…” he started.

“Mine. In Mums name, left to me. Youre on the lease but have no claim. Try court if you likethough bit tricky when youve been unemployed three years. Fancy paying Lucys maintenance?”

“Shes an adult…”

“Full-time student. Required till she graduates. Section 25 of the Family Law Act, if youre curious.”

Edward snatched the pen, scrawled his signature, flung the folder onto the side table.

“Happy now? Twenty-two years down the drain?”

Margaret studied him. Grey at the temples, wrinkles by his eyes. Once, her whole world. Now a stranger.

“Not wasted, Ed. Weve got Lucy. Clever, kind, hardworking. Takes after me,” she smiled sadly. “And thank youfor the good years. You just… lost your way. Or maybe you were always like this. I just didnt see it.”

Edward lifted his suitcase. Lingered in the doorway.

“Youll regret this. Be lonely without me.”

“I wont. Ive got Lucy. My job. Friends. Know what? Im finally joining that salsa class. Always wanted to learn. You said Id look dafttwo left feet. Well see.”

The door slammed. Margaret stood in the silence, then returned to the kitchen. The potatoes were burnt. She dumped the pan in the sink, opened the windowair it out.

Her phone rang. Lucy.

“Mum, you alright? Sheila called, said Dad left with a suitcase.”

“Im fine, love. Dinner later?”

“Mum… Are you crying?”

“No,” Margaret truly wasnt. “Chopping onions. Making salad.”

“Im coming over. Right after my shift.”

“Dont, Luce. Your exams tomorrow.”

“Mum, dont be daft. On my way. And Mum… I love you. Youre the strongest person I know.”

Margaret hung up. Took a bottle of wine from the fridgea Teachers Day gift, saved for a special occasion. Poured half a glass, held it up to the sunset gilding the rooftops.

“To new beginnings,” she murmured.

Below, a taxi door thudded. Edward loaded his case as a young blonde waved from insideSophie. Margaret had seen her at the dealership. Nothing special. Just young.

Sheila called up from the yard: “Marg! Bringing you a pie! Cheese and onion, your favourite!”

Margaret smiledproperly, for the first time in months. The divorce papers lay on the table beside Edwards abandoned keys. She picked them up, weighed them in her palm.

Tomorrow, shed change the locks. Sign up for that class. Maybe even get that bob cut shed fancied.

Tonight, shed drink wine with Sheila, eat pie, and not think beyond this moment. Because ahead? Just life. Hers. No looking back at the man who walked away.

Her phone rang again. Unknown number.

“Margaret? Its the med school deans office. Your daughters been awarded the Chancellors Scholarship. Congratulations! Lucys one of our brightest!”

This time, Margaret did cry. But they were happy tears.

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