Helen Whitaker was the unpaid housekeeper for her family until, on the occasion of her silver wedding anniversary, she flew abroad for a business venture.
Helen was stirring a pot of soup when Simon Whitaker slipped into the kitchen, tossing a glossy invitation onto the table.
Your school reunion, he said without looking up from his phone. Saturday.
She stared at the cardthirty years since shed left school. A sleek design, gold lettering.
You going? she asked, drying her hands on her apron.
Of course. Just pull yourself together, love, or youll look like a drudge. Dont embarrass the family.
His words landed like a punch. Helen froze, ladle in hand. Simon was already heading for the door when their sons, Max and Dennis, appeared.
Mum, whats that? Max asked, taking the card.
A reunion, she whispered.
Nice! And youll go in that endless dressing gown? Dennis laughed.
Dont mock your mother, interjected their motherinlaw, Ruth Whitaker, entering with the air of someone ready to dispense sage advice. You need a little polishdye the hair, buy a decent dress. Appear presentable.
Helen nodded silently, returning to the stove. A ache settled in her chest, but she hid it well. After twentysix years of marriage she had learned to swallow resentment deep.
Dinners ready, she announced half an hour later.
The family gathered around the table. The borschtperfectly tangy, tender beef, fragrant herbswas accompanied by fresh crusty bread and cabbage pastries.
Delicious, Simon grunted between bites.
As always, Ruth added. You do know how to cook.
Helen ate a few spoonfuls, then slipped away to wash the dishes. In the mirror above the sink she saw a weary fortyfiveyearold woman: silver strands at her temples, fine lines around her eyes, a dimmed gaze. When had she grown so old?
Saturday dawned at five a.m. She had to prepare dishes for the reunioneveryone was to bring something. She decided on a spread: solyanka, herring under a fur coat, meat and cabbage pies, and for dessert, a delicate birds milk confection.
Her hands moved on instinctchopping, mixing, baking, decorating. Cooking was her sanctuary, the one place where she was master and unjudged.
Wow, youve made so much, Max said, descending the stairs at eleven.
For the reunion, she replied shortly.
Did you buy anything new for yourself?
Helen glanced at the only respectable black dress hanging on a chair.
Thatll do.
By two oclock everything was ready. She changed, applied makeup, and even wore the earrings Simon had given her for their tenth anniversary.
You look decent, Simon said. Lets go.
The country house of Sophie Ingram was impressive. A former classmate whod married a businessman, she now entertained guests in a manor with a pool and tennis courts.
Helen! Sophie embraced her. Youve changed hardly at all! What have you brought?
Just a few dishes, Helen placed the containers on the table.
People had prospered, aged, but they still recognized each other. Helen lingered at the edge, watching former classmates brag about their successes.
Who made this solyanka? shouted Victor, the old class monitor. Its a masterpiece!
Its Helen, Sophie pointed out.
Lena! a short man with kind eyes approached. Do you remember me? Paul Mitchell, we sat together at the back of the class.
Paul! Of course, she beamed.
You made this solyanka? Im thrilled! And these pies Ive never tasted anything better.
Thank you, Helen blushed.
No, seriously. Ive lived in New York for ten years, they love Russian food, but Ive never seen this level. Are you a professional chef?
Just a housewife.
Just? Thats impossible. You have real talent.
All evening people flocked to Helen, asking for recipes, praising her dishes. She felt important. Needed. For the first time in years.
Simon, meanwhile, talked about his garage business, occasionally glancing at his wife with astonishmentwhere did this sudden popularity come from?
Monday began as usualbreakfast, cleaning, laundry. Helen was ironing her sons shirts when the phone rang.
Hello?
Helen? Its Paul. We met on Saturday.
Paul, hi, she said, surprised.
Ive got a business proposal. Meet? Talk?
What about?
A job. In Serbia. I want to open a Russian restaurant and need a coordinatorsomeone with taste, who can train chefs, design the menu. Good salary, plus a share.
Helen sank into a chair, heart pounding.
Paul, I I dont know what to say.
Think it over. Call me tomorrow, okay?
The rest of the day she drifted in a fog. A restaurant in Serbia? She, a simple housewife?
At dinner she tried to explain to the family.
Can you believe they offered me a job
What job? snorted Dennis. You cant do anything except cook.
They want me to cook in Belgrade, at a restaurant.
Belgrade? Simon repeated. What nonsense.
Mom, what are you talking about? How old are you? Fortyeight? Max set down his fork.
Besides, who will run the house? Keep the home? Cook? Ruth interjected.
Probably someone was just joking, Simon waved his hand.
Helen stayed silent. Were they right? Was it a joke?
The next day the same argument resurfaced over breakfast. Simon, eyes critical, said,
Youve changed, you need to exercise.
Mom, dont come to my graduation, okay? Dennis said, buttering his toast.
Why? Helen asked, puzzled.
Because all the other parents are stylish, and youre outdated.
Dennis is right, Max added. Dont be offended, we just dont want the kids to talk about you.
Ruth nodded in agreement.
Ladies say you must look after yourself. Women today stay beautiful into old age.
Helen rose from the table and went to her room. With trembling hands she dialed Paul.
Paul? Its Helen. Im in.
Really? his voice brightened. Helen, thats wonderful! But warn you nowhard work, big responsibility, long hours, tough decisions. Ready?
Ready, she answered firmly. When do I start?
In a month. Well sort the paperwork, the visa. Ill help you with everything.
A month passed in a blur. Helen handled the documents, learned Serbian basics, drafted a menu for the new eatery. Her family remained skeptical, treating her plan as a fleeting fancy.
Give her a month or two, shell realise homes better, Simon told his mates.
The money must not be lost, Ruth added.
The boys never took her seriously. To them she was part of the décorcooking, washing, cleaning. What could she do overseas?
On the day of her departure Helen rose early, packed a weeks worth of provisions, left notes for laundry and cleaning. She headed to the airport alone; everyone was busy.
Well call, Simon muttered as he waved goodbye.
New York greeted her with rain and unfamiliar scents. Paul waited at arrivals with a bouquet and a wide grin.
Welcome to your new life, he said, embracing her.
The following months flew by. Helen recruited staff, refined the menu. She discovered she could not only cook but also lead, plan, decide.
The first patrons arrived three months later. The dining room was packed, people queued outside. Borscht, solyanka, pelmeni, pancakeseverything vanished in minutes.
You have golden hands, Paul declared. And a sharp mind. Weve created something special.
Helen watched satisfied faces, heard compliments, and realised she had finally found herself. At fortyeight she was beginning anew.
Six months later, Simon called.
Lena, hows it going? When are you coming home?
Fine. Working.
When will you be back? Were struggling here.
Hire a housekeeper.
Who, and for how much?
For the same rate I earned for twentysix years.
What do you mean?
Nothing special. I was the free housekeeper for my family until my silver anniversary sent me abroad for business.
Silence hung on the line.
Lena, can we talk normally? No grudges?
Im not angry, Simon. Im just living. For the first time, Im alive.
Her sons reacted similarly, unable to grasp a mother who had turned independent, successful, needed by others.
Mum, stop playing businesswoman, Max said. The house falls apart without you.
Learn to live on your own, Helen replied. Youre already twentyfive.
Simon didnt oppose divorce; it was merely a legal acknowledgment of reality.
A year later, the restaurant Moscow was one of Belgrades hottest spots. Investors courted her to open a chain; she appeared on culinary TV shows; critics praised her.
The Russian woman who conquered Belgrade, read a headline.
Paul proposed on the restaurants anniversary. Helen thought long before saying yesnot because she doubted himhe was a good manbut because she cherished her independence.
I wont cook for you every day or wash shirts, she warned.
On the second anniversary, Simon arrived with the boys. Seeing Helen in a sharp business suit, accepting congratulations from local celebrities, they were stunned.
Mom, you youve changed, Dennis murmured.
Shes beautiful now, Max added.
Im just being myself, Helen corrected.
Simon spent the evening in silence, occasionally stealing bewildered glances at his former wife. When the guests left, he approached her.
Im sorry, Lena. I never understood
What?
That youre a personyour own dreams, your talent. I saw you only as part of the household.
Helen nodded. There was no anger, only sorrow for lost years.
Should we start over? he asked.
No, Simon. My life is different now.
Today Helen is fifty. She runs a chain of restaurants, hosts her own cooking show, and has a bestselling cookbook. Shes married to a man who values her as an individual, not a free housekeeper.
Her sons call now, proud of their mother, wanting to visit. She enjoys hearing them, but no longer feels guilty for living for herself.
Sometimes, standing in the kitchen of her flagship restaurant, watching chefs prepare her signature dishes, she wonders, What if Id never taken that step? What if Id stayed a drudge in a dressing gown? She quickly shoves the thought away. Life rarely hands out second chances to everyone. She was luckyand she seized it.
Starting over at fortyeight was terrifying, but it turned out to be the only way to discover who she truly is.





