З життя
The Wife Packed Her Bags and Disappeared Without a Trace: When Family Means Control, Not Love, and One Sister’s Choice Sets Everyone Free
His wife had packed her belongings and vanished into thin air.
Stop pretending youre some martyr. Shell calm down. Women are like that, they shout a bit and then get over it.
The important thing is weve got a son now. A proper heir. Thats what matters. The family line continues.
Dina said nothing, her eyes fixed on her brother.
George, she leaned in, lowering her voice to a whisper, you told me last week youd taken care of Emilys pregnancy. What exactly did you mean by that?
George put down his fork, leaning back in his seat.
I meant what I said. She spent five years making excusesnot ready, career this, lets wait.
And Im thirty-two, Dina. I wanted an heir. A real family, you know? SoI swapped her pills.
Dina stared, aghast.
Did you tell her that? When?
The day she left, George muttered, avoiding her eyes. She started yelling, so I told herget used to it, darling, you wanted this, I just helped things along.
He sighed, confident. I honestly thought shed realise she had no choice and calm down. But shes something else. Grabbed her bag and legged it.
***
On the kitchen table, among the mountain of unwashed baby bottles, lay Georges forgotten hairbrush.
Dina glared at it, irritation bubbling inside. Why did there always have to be a mess?
The baby next door had finally settled, but the silence was no reliefgive it an hour, two, and it would all begin again.
She straightened her old housecoat and filled the kettle. Just a month ago, theyd brought Emilyher sister-in-lawhome from hospital. George had been beaming, bustling about with huge bouquets for the nurses. Emily, though
Emily had looked like she was being led to her execution.
Dina had chalked it up to exhaustion. First child, hormones, the lot. Now she wondered why she hadnt seen it sooner.
The front door slammed. George was home from work. He loosened his tie as he stomped into the kitchen, heading straight for the fridge.
Anything to eat? he said, not glancing her way.
Pastas in the pot. And I boiled some sausages for you.
George, hes only just nodded off. Keep it down, will you?
George huffed, grabbing a plate.
Im knackered, Dina. Been rushed off my feet all day. Clients theyve drained the life out of me.
Hows the little chap?
Little chap is your son, Dina put her mug down on the table with a loud clatter. His name is Arthur.
Hes been screaming for three hours straight. Tummy pains.
Youre coping, though, arent you? George shrugged, utterly unconcerned as he sat down. Youre a womanits in your blood.
Mum managed with both of us on her own, remember, back when Dad worked away all the time.
Dina bit her lip, fighting the urge to hurl the plate at him.
She was only here temporarily, while she sorted out her debts and studio rent, but in two weeks, shed become unpaid nanny, cook, and cleaner.
George behaved as if nothing had happened. As if his wife hadnt packed up and disappeared overnight.
Has Emily called? Dina asked, watching him wolf down his food.
George froze, fork halfway to his mouth. For a moment, his expression clouded.
She refuses to answer. Goes straight to voicemailthe nerve! Walking out and leaving a child behind. All because I swapped those pills, sped things up a bit.
Youre a bastard, George, Dina said quietly.
What?! he looked at her, astonished. I did all this for the family! I work, I bring home the money.
And she abandoned the child. Whos in the wrong here?
You took away her choice, Dina stood up, voice trembling. You lied to the person you claim to love.
What was she supposed to say? Thank you, darling, for ruining my life?
Oh, dont start, George waved her off. Shell come round. Where else will she go? Her stuffs here, the childs here. Shell run out of cash and come crawling back. Meanwhile
He looked pleadingly at her.
Youll help, wont you? Ive got too much on, end of month reports due and all that.
Dina didnt reply. She walked from the kitchen to the nursery.
Arthurs tiny fists were clenched in sleep. Dina gazed at him, her heart twisting.
On one hand, there was this helpless, blameless bundle. On the other, Emily, lured into a trap.
She pitied them both.
She opened her phone, flicking open her messenger. Emily had been online three minutes ago. Dina wrote, erased, and wrote again.
Emily, its Dina. Im not asking you to come back. I just want to make sure youre alright.
And its hard on my own. Can we talk? No shouting.
The reply came ten minutes later.
Im at a hotel. In three days Im away for a work trip, out of town for three weeks. Was planned before I found out, ages ago.
When Im back, Ill file for divorce. Im not abandoning Arthur, Dina. But I cant be there. I cant even look at him, do you understand? I just see George in him!
Dina exhaled.
I understand. Truly. George told me everything.
And? Is he proud of himself?
He seems to be. Thinks youll come back.
Let him dream. Dina, if its too much for youplease say. Ill find a way to hire a nanny, send money.
But I wont go back. Ever.
Dina put her phone down and let out a long breath. She needed a job, to pay her debts, to build her life. Yet she couldnt leave Arthur alone with George, who barely knew which end of the nappy went where.
***
The next three days were endless purgatory.
George came home late, ate and crashed into bed.
Every time Dina asked for help with the baby, the response was, Im exhausted, or, Youre better at settling him.
One night, Arthurs screams pierced the house so loudly that Dina snapped.
She stormed into her brothers room, flicked on the light.
Get up, she said, ice in her voice.
George squeezed his eyes shut, pulling the duvet over his head.
Dina, for Gods sake, let me sleep. Ive got to be up at six.
I dont care. Get in there and see to your son. Hes hungry, and my hands are shaking so badly from exhaustion I cant feed him.
Are you mad? George shot up, bleary-eyed and furious, Thats why youre here! I give you a place to stay, pay for bills!
Oh, is that it? Dinas temper snapped. So Im just your servant?
Call it what you like, he grumbled. Emilyll be back soon, then you can rest. Until thenget on with it.
Dina walked out without another word.
She didnt sleep that night. Sitting in the kitchen, rocking the cradle with her foot, she pondered what could teach George a lesson. Hed gone too far.
Morning brought resolve. Once George left for work, Dina messaged Emily again.
We need to meet. Today. Before he gets back. Please.
Emily agreed.
They met in a small park not far from the flat.
Emily looked dreadful: pale, sunken-eyed, thin. She approached the pram and gazed at her son, hands trembling.
Hes grown, she whispered. Changed so much in two weeks.
Emily, he hardly knows you, Dina spoke gently.
I know. Emily buried her face in her hands. Im not a monster, Dina. I suppose I love him. Somewhere inside, I know hes mine. But imagining having to live with George, share a bed with the man who did that to meI can barely breathe.
What if you didnt have to? Dina asked.
Emily lifted her head. What do you mean?
He thinks youll come crawling back. That you belong to him, you and the baby. But lets face ithes not a father, hes a project manager, running his own perfect family scheme. He doesnt get up at night, doesnt even know how much formula to use. He just wanted an heirnot the work of raising one.
So what are you suggesting?
You go on your work trip, Dina said, voice steady. Work, recover. Ill stay here for three weeks, hold the fort. Meanwhile, Ill sort things out.
What exactly?
The divorce. Custody. Emily, you never have to go back to him. You can rent a place. Ill move in with you, help with Arthur while you work.
My finances will improve soonIve found a few online commissions. Well manage. Just us.
Emily eyed her, uncertain.
Youll take on your own brother?
Hes my brother, yesbut his actions were vile. I wont be an accomplice in his deception. He thinks Im on his side because Ive nowhere else to go. Hes wrong.
Emily was silent for a long while, watching sunlight dancing on the prams hood.
And what about him? He wont just let Arthur go. Hell kick up a scandal.
He might, Dina nodded. But we have an ace. Hes admitted, in front of me, that he swapped your pills. If that gets out in court, with witnesses, Ill back every word up.
As for his help in parentingIll explain everything.
George doesnt actually want the child, Emily. He just needs someone to control. When he realises Arthur needs proper care and attention, hell lose interest.
Its easier to play the part of heroic abandoned dad to his mates than to actually look after a baby.
For the first time in ages, Emily managed a thin smile.
Youve grown up, Dina.
I had to, Dina sighed. Sois it a plan?
Yes. Thank you.
Three weeks raced by.
George grew increasingly irritable, finally noticing that Dina no longer ran to fetch his dinner the instant he got home.
Whens Emily back? he barked one evening, tossing his briefcase on the sofa.
Tomorrow, Dina replied shortly, holding Arthur.
Finally! Maybe we can go to a proper restaurant, Im sick of pasta. I guess Id better buy her a presentshut her up a bit. A ring, or earrings. Women like that sort of thing.
Dina shot him a look of almost physical disgust.
You really think jewellery will make things right?
Look, George came closer, tried awkwardly to pat her shoulder. She stepped away. Stop acting all high and mighty. Everythingll be fine. Women are forgiving, let them have their shouttheyll calm down. Important thing isweve got a son. The family continues.
Dina didnt respond.
***
The next morning, Emily arrived while George was at work. She didnt come up, just waited outside in her car. Dina had packed up the babys things, her own bags, everything necessary.
It took three trips up and down, but eventually Arthur was fastened snugly in his car seat.
Dina returned to the flat for one final thingleaving the keys on the kitchen table, right where Georges hairbrush had been three weeks before. Next to them, she placed a note.
George, were gone. Dont try to reach Emilyher solicitor will be in touch. Arthur is with her. So am I.
You wanted a family but forgot its built on trust, not manipulation.
Theres pasta in the fridge. Youll have to handle it on your own from now on.
They drove away.
Emily found a small but cosy flat on the other side of the city. The first days were hardArthur struggled to settle, Emily kept crying, Georges calls and furious messages flooded Dinas phone.
He screamed down the line, threatened courts and custody, raged about taking the child and leaving them penniless.
Dina kept calm.
They survived.
After a few days, Georges fury ebbed, and he faded out of view.
Emily filed for divorce through the court. At the hearing, George said nothing about raising Arthur himself.
Dina had been rightGeorge didnt want the responsibility. He chose to escape with a monthly payment.
He never even asked for visitation. He preferred the story of the wronged father to the reality of parenthood.
