Easter Without My Son
My mobile buzzed on the kitchen worktop just as I was rummaging in the fridge for some butter. The call was from Danny. I smiled the smile all mothers wear when they’ve waited all day for a call and would never admit it to themselves.
Hello, Danny love. I was just about to ask youwill you and Emily be getting the afternoon or the evening train on Sunday? Then Ill know when to put the roast on.
There was a pause at his end. Not the kind you get when someone’s thinkingrather, the kind you get when somethings already been decided and theyre just searching for words.
Mum, hang on. That’s what Im ringing about.
I set the butter down and absentmindedly wiped my hands on the tea towel.
Go on.
We arent coming up this year. Not at Easter. Thats it.
I couldnt answer straightaway. I stared at the butter, the chopping board, the half-empty packet of sultanas meant for a simnel cake.
What do you mean, not coming?
Mum, its just how its worked out. We wanted a quiet one at home this time. Emilys worn out, its end of quarter at work, shes running on fumes really and needs a proper break. A real one.
You can have that here. Ill cook. You wont have to do a thing.
Mum, he said, quietly but firmly, with all sorts packed into that one word that left me speechless.
Mum, can I be honest? Please dont get upset right offhear me out.
Im listening.
Every time we come up, Emily it takes her days to recover after. Not because of anything bad, youre lovely. But she never actually relaxes. She feels like shes always getting things wrong somehow. You correct her, the way she cuts veg, how much salt she uses, what she buys at the shops. She tries so hard to please you, but it feels like she never gets it right.
I never meant to upset her. I just
I know you didnt, Mum. I know. Its just how she feels. And I cant ignore that. Shes my wife, Mum.
I stood in silence. A car went by in the street. Somewhere out the front, a dog barked. The world, as ever, carried on.
Alright, I managed, eventually. I understand.
Youre not cross?
I understand, Danny. I repeated. You two stay home. Have a rest.
I hit the red button, still standing by the table. The sultanas were still in their packet. The butter was beginning to soften. Three eggs, laid out in advance for baking, peered up from the wood.
I didnt cry. I put the butter back in the fridge and stepped out of the kitchen.
My husband, Graham, was in the lounge, reading the paper. Even though papers hardly got delivered these days, he still liked to keep the old habit, folding up something in his hands.
That was Danny, I said.
I heard. They not coming, then?
No. Not this time.
Graham lowered his newspaper and looked at me. After thirty-four years, he could read me better than I realised.
Oh well. Well have Easter here, just us.
Graham, I bought three packets of sultanas.
Well eat them.
I went back and started packing the shopping away, carefully, methodically, each item in its place. Id always been good at order, even when everything inside felt upside down.
For the first two days, I convinced myself that Danny had got the wrong end of the stickthat Emily couldnt really have said any of itthat blokes always exaggerate, blow one sentence into a whole story. Maybe, I told myself, shed just said she was tired.
By the third night, even I couldnt keep up the pretence.
I lay awake, memories crowding in. Last time theyd visited, at ChristmasEmily had come in, asked if she could help in the kitchen. I was delighted and set her peeling potatoes. After a moment, I corrected her: Skinning them too thick, sweetheart, well run out. She redid them quietly. Then, when she cut the herring for the salad, I checked and said, A bit too finewe like sturdy chunks here. She redid that too. At the shops she picked up the wrong mayonnaise. Of course, I noticed at the till and asked for the right one.
In the darkness, I tallied all these moments, feeling increasingly hollow.
It was never malice. I just wanted everything rightfor the meal, the day, the family. Thats how Id always done it, carried everything on my back. On our little plot, the house, our boy, my husband. I was used to needing to be the last linewithout my eye, things would go amiss. It wasnt about controlling, not really; it was fear, that everything would unravel.
Emily couldnt know that fear. She just saw what she saw: her efforts checked and constantly adjusted.
Graham snored beside me. I stared up at the ceiling.
My thoughts trailed back to my own first married years, visiting Graham’s mum, Margaret. She was a good woman, kind, but just the samebetter at everything, always redoing what I tried to help with, never unkind, just matter-of-fact. I used to feel like a volunteer invited to a party, but treated like an errant pupil. After a few years, I stopped even offering to helpjust sat and waited till called to the table.
There it was.
That worderrant pupilthat Danny used. He hadnt made it up. Emily mustve told him, in her own way, the very thing Id once felt at Margarets.
The circle was uncomfortably complete.
Next morning, I was up before Graham. Made myself coffee, sat by the window. Early Aprilbare trees lining the street, earth dark and swollen. In the front garden, someone already poking about with a spade. Life carrying on, needing no explanations or regrets.
Graham wandered in, made himself a mug, sat opposite me.
You’ve been up all night?
Not really.
Thinking about Danny?
I nodded.
Youre giving yourself a hard time for nothing. Theyre young, they’ve got their own lives now.
Graham did you know that Emilys tired of me?
He paused. Set his mug down.
I guessed.
And you never said?
What was there to say? Would you have listened?
I didnt answer because I knew the truthId have snapped, claimed I was only ever doing it all for them.
I turned out just like Margaret, I said.
Graham raised an eyebrow.
Bit harsh?
No. Exactly the same. Absolutely.
He didnt contradict me. That in itself said plenty.
At Easter, we had a quiet Sunday, just the two of us. I still baked a little simnel cake, couldnt do without altogether, but only a small one for us. Dyed a few eggs, made Grahams favourite pork pie. Nothing fancy. No three-course fuss, no what if theres not enough or what if its wrong. We just ate, watched a black-and-white comedy on the telly.
Strangely peaceful. Odd, but not half as bad as Id feared.
I phoned Danny that evening.
Happy Easter, Danny.
You too, Mum. Hows things?
Good, thanks. Quiet. You?
All good. Emily says thank you for understanding.
That understanding stung a bit, packed with a history Id rather have not known. So Danny had filled Emily in. Maybe she was there, thinking, About time! or Thank goodness.
I squeezed the phone tighter.
Tell her Im glad shes getting a rest.
For the next few weeks, I lived with that low, background ache. Not a sharp pain, not tears, just that splinter deep inside which you cant forget is there. Id alternate between assuring myself Id seen reason, and fuming that I even needed to. Thirty-two years Id poured everything into this family and now turns out, apparently, it was all wrong? My care had been suffocating, not comforting?
I thought about it queueing for a GP appointment, at the supermarket, on my walks to the Wednesday market for cheese.
And then, one day in May, it finally clicked.
On a busy town bus, smelling of warm metal and someone’s perfume, I stood clutching the pole, staring out eagerly for my stop. Beside me, a stout older womanseventy-five, in a blue coatsat next to a young, deeply tired woman, maybe thirty. Everything about herthe way she held her shouldersspoke of someone waiting for criticism.
The old lady was murmuring, not loudly, but I could hear it all.
You neednt have worn those bootsthe black ones are perfectly good. And not that bag again. Didnt you see the leather one? What are you doing walking about with fabric, like a student?
The young woman gazed out the window. Not replying. Just that vacant look of people whove learnt to tune things out. Not because words dont reach, but simply because its the only way to cope.
And whats the big rush? Im still talking. Are you listening?
Im listening, Mum.
Just two flat words. No spark.
Watching her, something twisted in my chest. Not quite pitysomething harsher. Recognition.
Behind those tired eyes, tense shoulders, that calculated Im listeningI saw Emily. Chopping potatoes, bracing for correction. Choosing the wrong mayo, already sure it would be wrong. Going home after a holiday, drained for days.
At the stop, the old woman heaved herself up, the young one helping her, steady as you like, clutching arm and bag, fussed and chided. No gratitude, but just a habitsilent shoulders bearing it all.
The doors closed. I kept standing, hand on rail.
Thats how it looks from outside.
Id always thought my help came across differently, softer, warmer, full of love. But, looking at that girl on the bus, who could tell the difference? The old ladys was rough, blunt. Mine more mild, perhaps hidden behind a smile. But the tension in those on the receiving end felt identical.
At my stop, I got off and walked home slowly, past the chestnuts just sprouting, kids playing football in the playground, a cat sunning itself in the window.
I thought about how parenting grown children isn’t the same as parenting young ones. With the young, you direct, correct, protectit’s your role. But in time, that job changes. Your child grows up and your role isnt builder now, but guest. And a good guest doesnt shift the furniture around.
Danny was grown. Emily was his wife, his family, his life. And what I called loving effort was really something else. I tried to do things my way, as Id always thought bestbut thats not the same as doing whats right for them.
At home, I put the kettle on and phoned my old friend Brendasince college days.
Brenda, got a minute for a chat?
Of course. Whats up?
Nothing, really. Just need to say something out loud so I know I’m not losing the plot.
Brenda listened. About Danny, about Emily, the bus ride, about Margaret. Wise woman, Brendashe said little, but in the end, simply remarked:
You know whats striking, Val? That youre even thinking about all this. Most people your age wouldve just taken offence and dug their heels in.
I did, at first.
Sure, but you didnt stop there. Thats rare.
Dont know, Bren. After seeing that girl on the bus, I thoughtdo I look like that, to Emily? Is that what she sees when she looks at me?
So what will you do now?
That question rattled round my mind for days after. What to do? Ring Emily, have a big talk? But about whatSorry I was a nightmare? Thatd just be awkward. Danny had likely told her everything, shed probably hashed it through already. They were living their own life, not waiting for any grand gestures, I reckoned.
Or maybe they were. Maybe Emily was waiting for some sort of signfrom me, to show Id heard her.
I thought it over at night, lying awake while Graham slept, sifting and sorting thoughts.
In the end, no grand conversation. Not out of shyness, but because even that might turn into another attempt to control: Lets talk about how Ive changed! That would still be about me, not Emily.
Best to show, not tell.
Late in May, Danny called to say theyd moved to a new flat, inviting us to visit.
Come Saturday, Mum, well be in.
Something awoke inside me. The old instinct to start prepping immediatelywhat to pack, what to bake, what to bring. Id already made half a list before I stopped myself.
Stop.
Instead, I went to the shopping centre, not the market or the kitchenware shop, but a department store. I wandered, then stopped by a relaxation gift set: a little basket, lavender oil, sleep mask, a small diffuser, funny earplugs shaped like stars. Not expensive, but thoughtful.
There were spa vouchers, but I didnt know if Emily liked spas. This set was safe: rest and nothing else.
I picked up the set. Then, after a moment, I added a voucher for a massagenot indulgent, but practical, for tiredness.
For Dannya good hardback on British architecture. Hed mentioned it a few times.
Graham glanced over when I got home.
Presents for Emily?
Yes, proper ones. Not kitchenware.
He grunted, unconcerned.
On Saturday we trekked across London. Danny met us at the door, pulled me into a hug, shook Grahams hand. Fifth floor, lifts working. Up we went, and I felt that prickly tension in my chestlike nerves before an exam I set myself.
Emily answered, wearing jeans and a simple T-shirt, no frills. She smiled, a little warily, like someone unaccustomed to warm greetings.
Hello, Valerie, Graham. Come in.
Hello, Emily love.
The flat was small but full of light, open windows, pots of jade plants on the sill, one cheerful print of a field. Their style, not mine, but homely.
Its lovely here, I saidand meant it.
Emily looked genuinely surprised.
Thank you. Theres still bits to docurtains, for one.
Better without them for now, said Graham, heading off to inspect the balcony.
Emily had laid out a simple supper: cheese, cold meats, salad, bread. Tea for everyone. Nothing forced, no look what Ive made, do you approve?
I noticed the cucumber was cut in chunky rings. My instincts flared, but I said nothing. Just picked up my fork and ate.
Such a small effort, completely invisible from the outside, but inside it felt like lifting a weight.
Afterwards, I handed Emily her gift.
For you. Congratulations on the new flat.
She unwrapped the set, glanced at the sleep mask and scented oil, and for a moment her face brightenednot in show, but truly.
This this is for me?
Yes, love. You work so hard. Danny told me. Just for a rest.
Emily looked at mereally looked. Not nervously, not guarded, but honestly.
Thank you, Valerie.
Youre welcome.
Danny looked on, silent but watchful. Graham popped in and told everyone the balcony was fine for growing tomatoes in pots come July. That lightened the mood; Graham and gardening is always good for a laugh.
We chatted about the area, the buses, the neighbours. No one needed to prove anything. Once or twice, I felt the urge to offer adviceabout curtain rails, houseplants, better teasbut each time, I let it pass. Not here, not now, not in their home.
When Emily brought out shop-bought biscuits for tea, I clocked it instinctivelyhome-bakeds always better. But I just took one. Delicious.
Graham talked about the allotment neighbours, Danny laughed; Emily sipped her tea, looking far more at ease than at our flat, years earlier. Here, she was herself, just drinking tea.
That meant the worldeven if words cant express it.
At the door, as we were leaving, I squeezed Dannys hand.
You did right, speaking up at Easter.
He hesitated.
I was worried youd be upset.
I was. But you were right.
He hugged me, solid and sure, like when he was a boy after falling off his bikeneeding comfort more than anything else.
We left the flat, the evening warm and scented with lime blossom.
Shes a good lass, Graham remarked as we headed for the car.
She is, I said.
You were good today.
In what way?
You didnt say a word about the cucumber.
I laughed. So did he.
Life after fifty-five is all about learning new tricksnot languages or gadgets, though sometimes that toobut learning to let go without losing yourself. Remaining a part of your childrens world without owning it. Loving them without strings, when all your life love meant doingfeeding, cleaning, providing.
I walked on, thinking it late, but better late than never. At fifty-eight, I was learning how to be a proper mother-in-law. Late indeed, but no less worthwhile.
Would it get easier? Probably not always. Some days, Id want to correct or fuss again. That urge doesnt vanish overnightits habitual, ingrained over decades.
But something had shifted.
Family relationships arent some theory in a book. Theyre personal, practicala quiet moment, a forkful of roughly cut salad, and keeping quiet. Thats real work. No applause, no fanfare. Just doing it.
A few weeks later, Danny called.
Emily reckons you changed her life with that sleep mask. She wears it every night now.
I laughed.
Well, thats good then.
Are you both still coming in June? Were doing kebabs on the balconyEmilys found a new recipe.
Well be there, of course.
But Mum, alright? Just come. Dont lug food for three days.
Alright. Just a loaf of bread.
Breads fine.
I hung up, sat a moment, then went to make dinner. An ordinary dinner, nothing special. Potatoes, a stew, some cucumbers neighbour Zoe had given me that morning.
I sliced them. Big chunks.
I tasted. Tasty.
Sometimes bigger is better than finer.
I didnt know why, but I chuckledalone in the kitchen, staring at those cucumbers.
Graham wandered in.
Whats funny?
Nothing. Sit down and eat.
He sat, took a bite.
Decent slicing.
I know.
Outside, the evening was quiet, uneventful. No holiday, no drama. Just life. And after fifty-five, you finally realise how much that just life holdsgrandparents, children, hurt and forgiveness, plates of cucumber, sleep masks. One long, tangled, living story.
How to get on with your sons familynobody can tell you in a neat little guide. Its not instructions. Its a route. And everyones is different.
I poured out tea. Thought about June, another barbecue on the balcony, Emilys recipe waiting for me to tryjust try, nothing more.
Just try.
Family tensions dont clear up overnight. They build over years, like limescale in a kettle, and cant be scraped off in one go. It takes time, candour, the nerve to hear uncomfortable truths without flouncing off in a mood.
I didnt know if Emily had truly forgiven me, deep down. Maybe not straight away. You cant undo years of tension with a gift set.
But Id taken the first real stepnot for instant reward, but because I knew nothing else would do.
That was something I wouldnt deny myself.
The tea was hot, perfect. Ive always been good at tea.
Graham tucked in quietly. Afterwards, he asked, Whens June, then?
Danny’ll tell us. He’ll ring.
You promise not to bring half the kitchen?
I paused.
Just bread. He said its allowed.
Graham nodded.
Weve got a good lad.
A good ladand a good wife too.
It wasnt a revelation or a feat of heroism. Just the plain truth, spoken aloud. Sometimes thats all it takes.
We finished our tea. Cleared up. Graham went off for the news, I wandered onto the balcony for some air. Stood quietly, staring at the dusk.
Kids shouted in the courtyard, chasing a ball. The neighbours cat had vanished. The air was thick with hawthorn blossom.
I stood there, not really thinking. Just breathing, learning at last to stand still and let be. Not planning, not listing, not checking if everythings done.
Just breathing.
Let Emily sip tea in her own flat with the jade plants. Let Danny read about cathedrals. Let their home have its own quiet evening.
And wed have ours.
And that felt good.
A few weeks on, in mid-June, we finally made it to theirs for the barbecue. While Graham and Danny talked cars in the car park, Emily came down to greet me and we rode up together, just the two of us.
We walked in silence for a bit. Then Emily said:
Valerie, I I wanted Thank you, for that gift set. Not just that. For understanding. Danny said you did, and that meant a lot.
I walked along beside her, listening. Resisting the pull to jump in and explain, or to make excuses.
I dont want things to be difficult, Emily added. I just want us to be a normal family.
I want that too, I replied.
We reached the door.
It wasnt some tearful scene. More understated, and more real for it. Two people deciding to try again, new place, new habits.
On the balcony, the barbecue sputtered, filling the air with comfort. Danny and Graham joked downstairs. Emily laid the table, I sat and watched her.
There wasnt much salt in the saladI noticed straightaway. But I just reached for the salt, sprinkled some on my plate, and left it at that.
Emily kept serving, perhaps unaware. Or perhaps not. Either way, it didn’t matter.
What mattered was this.
Emily, I said, its really cosy here.
She looked up and, for the first time, smiled for real.
Thank you.
Danny came in with the food.
Sowhat do you think? First time on this grill.
Smells good, Graham said.
Lets taste it first! joked Emily.
It was delicious. Different to my old recipe, but good in its own way.
I ate quietly. Looked at Danny and Emily, their table, their jade plants thriving.
Somewhere inside, the urge to correct, to fix, remained. But on top of that, something new had grownquiet, careful, real.
I finished my meal. Took another helping.
Danny, well done you.
He looked up, surprised.
Oh, it was Emilys recipe.
Emily as well, then. Youre both doing brilliantly.
It came out easily. Simply true, no fuss.
The table quieteda good kind of quiet, where everyone is content.
Then the talk moved onto holidays, neighbours, the weather in July. The ordinary stuff. The living.






