The Irony of Fate
It was one of those quintessential English winters, when snow had blanketed everything in a quiet hush. My legs grew numb waiting far too long for the Number 42 bus from Warwick Road. I could feel the cold seep up through my boots. Eventually, that foolishness landed me in the gynaecology ward with a chesty cold that wouldnt shift.
Youll need a proper course of treatment here, Dr. Spencer said, not unkindly but with the sort of briskness reserved for the unwell who ought to know better. Thirty-seven isnt that old, Alice. You might want another child someday. I had no such plans, but I nodded along and submitted myself to the hospitals cocooning chilliness.
Lying on that hard NHS bed, with its crumpled grey sheet and the bite of antiseptic in the air, I thought about the unremarkable shape my life had taken. My daughter, Claire, was thirteen now. As for Sammy husbandwell. The man who brought a lacklustre cottage pie in a plastic tub yesterday, looked at his phone for all of five minutes, then left because of some urgent meeting. Hardly the stuff of sweeping romances.
We were three in the ward. Anna, opposite me, was my age, her face lit up with anticipation. She was here on bed rest before her third baby.
Simon and I, she smiled, stroking the roundness of her belly, pray its a little girl this time. Weve two boys already. Simon says hed have ten children if he could, but I think three will do! She beamed every time her husband rang; she seemed utterly content.
Id only ever known one pregnancy and one betrayalSams dalliance with a colleague, thirteen years gone now. Id learned about the affair just before giving birth, but hed promised it would never happen again. Hed talked me round, my mum urging me to believe hed changed.
Love, forgive him, wont you? Mum would say, Men, they just well, they always think the grass is greener. Hes promised, love.
Forgive I did, more out of exhaustion and the terror of raising a baby alone. Over the years, I suspected Sam of wandering more than once, but he always wormed his way out of it. Mum was blunt: Sams like an alley cat, darling. But hes cleveryouve never caught him, have you? Its your call.
In fourteen years, Id carved out my own separate world: work, Claire, the small market town I called home. Sams business paid the bills handsomely; I made no scenes, and he satisfied his conscience thus.
Near the window, on the third bed, was Keira: a girl in her early twenties, undeniably beautiful. Porcelain skin, ash-blonde, eyes like a cloudless sky, hands manicured so elegantly I almost felt embarrassed of my bitten nails.
She looked, I thought, like she came from a good family.
At first I ignored Anna and Keiras chat, but curiosity won. Keira was speaking now, her voice equal parts pride and innocence.
He treated me like a princess, really, she said, twisting a blonde strand. Told me his home was joyless and that I was all he looked forward to. Sams very attentive
My heart thudded. The blood roared in my ears.
He isnt exactly handsome, Keira confided. Bit stout, losing his hair but very, you know, respectable. Has his own business, and he promised as soon as I have the baby, hell sort things out and well live together.
What needs sorting? Anna asked, smiling kindly. Hes married, then?
Yes, hes got a wife and a daughter, Keira replied, as if this were nothing more than stating the weather. But Ive my own flatDad gave it to me. Thats where Sam and I meet.
She said all this with such careless pride that I felt each word hammer at my temples. Portly business Sam. Our market town wasnt large. It didnt take a genius to connect the dots.
It was my Sam.
Not just another shadowy affair or some abstract seductressKeira, in the ward with me, was carrying his child. I schooled my features, but inside, I was reeling.
Of course hed go for someone so prettywho could blame him? But what did she see in him? Couldnt she find someone her own age, smart and full of promise? But I knew, Sam could talk the angels out of the sky when he wanted.
That evening, Sam rang. My voice was so icy I thought the receiver might frost over.
Whats up with you? he asked, nervous now. You sound strange are you alright?
Sitting on a battered hospital settee, I said quietly, Im fine, Sam. But you I know, Sam. About Keira. Shes here with me. Shes not hiding anything. Dont come to see me again.
He spluttered, started denying, but I held firm.
Stop. Theres no point. When Im out, Ill be filing for divorce. Its over. Take your things and go.
And just like that, I cast him from my life. Gone, like the dried bouquet Id finally tossed out one day, no longer able to stand the sight. Sam packed up and left before I was even discharged, no arguments. He knew as well as I didthere was no forgiveness left in me.
When I left hospital, I collected Claire, whod been staying with Mum. I set about the paperwork and the weary intricacies of separation. Sam didnt fight me. I daresay he was busy feathering his new nest for young Keira.
Six months passed; winters starkness gave way to the damp, hopeful green of an English spring, then the humid, hazy days of summer. I was thinner, perhaps a few more lines around my eyes, but I held my head higher. My job took me to an architecture firm in Oxford for a meeting.
Hello, I greeted politely.
Good afternoon, said the client, an older but still striking mangrey eyes earnest, posture assured, smile gentle.
Im Andrew. And you?
Alice, I replied.
Our talk about beams and lintels drifted, somehow, into a conversation about books, and Chopin, and how the woods smell after rain. Andrew was thoughtful, insightful. With him, I didnt need to try so hardnot to be clever, not to be cheerful. He seemed to see me, truly, and to value what he saw. It felt unnerving, like taking a long sip of clear water when you didnt know how thirsty youd grown.
Alice, perhaps we could meet somewhere less office-like next time? Andrew suggested, shyly, as I readied to leave.
I hesitated, cheeks flushed. Alright. Id like that
We started meeting at a nearby café after work. Once, twice, then more. He already knew I was divorced and raising Claire alone. He too had been on his own for years. One afternoon, with the sky threatening rain, Andrews voice trembled as he confided,
Ive a daughter. Shes very young, made some mistakesgot mixed up with a scoundrel twice her age, who left his family. Shes pregnant, due any day her name is Keira.
The air left my lungs. My coffee was suddenly stone cold in my hands. I slowly took in Andrews familiar profile, the lines deepened by worry. So here he wasKeiras father. The father of the girl who had obliterated my marriage.
The irony was so cruel, so acutely absurd, that there was nothing left inside but a great, cold emptiness. Andrew saw my change, worry clouding his features.
Alice? What is it? Are you alright? His voice faltered.
We sat there, two castaways, drawn together by the wreckage of our respective livesthanks to his daughter and my ex-husband.
My daughters name is Claire, I began, quietly, voice cracking. My ex-husband is Sam.
Andrew froze, understanding flooding his featuresgrief, horror, and shame, all at once. He knew.
So we sat, in the dim evening light, two people bound not by hope, but by the madness and sorrow of fate. The chasm between us, dug deep by his daughter and my husbands choices, alsosomehowbecame our bridge.
God, I didnt think things like this happened in real lifebut they do, dont they? I murmured.
Andrew watched me softly.
Life can be cruelly inventive, Alice, but I hope we canget through this, together?
I gave no answer, feeling blank. Lets give ourselves some time, Andrew. Lets not see each otherfor now. We both need to figure things out.
He nodded, understanding. Alright. But I hope this isnt our ending.
Another half a year flowed by before I saw Andrew again. He quietly persisted, hopeful. By then, I sensed it too: Andrew was my future, the shape of happiness Id long forgotten was possible. We belonged together.
Keira had her babya daughter. She lived with her mother, Andrew. She cut Andrew off, after the truth finally came out between them. Sam never made things work with Keira; he paid his maintenance dutifully, then vanished from Oxford for good.
A year later, Andrew and I married. The very ordeal that broke us was the thread that wove us together. We found solace, and finally, joy.





