I thought you were respectable, but you live in such squalor,” said the fiancé, just five minutes before meeting the parents.

17October2025 Diary

I have always believed that a respectable woman should live within her means, yet today I learned how thin that veneer can be.

Mabel, my twentysevenyearold sisterinlaw, works as a nurse in the childrens clinic on the edge of Birmingham. When she arrived home that morning she held out a gaudy tablecloth covered in bright, almost garish poppies.

Look at this, Mother, Mrs. Liddell exclaimed, eyes sparkling. Itll sit perfectly on our kitchen table. Itll make the whole house feel like a celebration.

Mabel forced a tired smile.

Mother, its a cheap synthetic. It screams, she said. Lets get something plainlinen, perhaps. White or beige.

Mrs. Liddell waved her hands dramatically. Linen! Have you seen the price of your fine linen? I snagged this one at a discount in the market. Practical, beautiful, and cheap! Just a quick wipe with a cloth and its as clean as a whistle.

Mabel sighed. Its tasteless, Mother. It looks cheap.

Oh, Mabel, happiness isnt measured by a cloth, Mrs. Liddell muttered, tucking the gaudy piece under the counter. If we were healthy, our home would be a palace. Anyway, lets go; my legs are buzzing.

They threaded their way through the bustling Bullring market, Mabel watching her mothera small, wiry woman in an old but meticulously pressed coatshuffle from stall to stall. The perpetual pennypinching, the endless chant of cheap and practical weighed heavily on Mabel. She worked oneandahalf shifts, taking night duties to keep the modest twobed flat on the council estate afloat. She never complained; she simply dreamed. She dreamed of the day she could buy Mother not only the medication she needed but also a proper linen tableclothjust because she could, not for any occasion.

It was at a little café on Oxford Street, after a grueling night shift, that Mabel first met her prince, Arthur Blythe. He sat at the next tabletall, impeccably dressed, a confident smile, and an expensive watch glinting on his wrist. He rose and approached her.

Excuse me, miss, he said politely, your eyes look a shade too weary. May I offer you a pastry? A touch of sweetness might lift your spirits.

His charm was undeniable, his compliments precise, never vulgar. You have gentle hands, he observed. Thats a rarity nowadays. He guessed correctly that she was a nurse.

Arthur worked for a major construction firm, held a respectable position, and whisked Mabel around the city in his polished foreign car to restaurants shed never imagined. He sent her bouquets that cost about half her monthly wage, regaled her with tales of overseas trips, and spoke of grand plans. Mabel listened, breath held, feeling as though shed stepped into a storybook.

He confessed he was tired of vultures hunting his wallet, and that in Mabel he had found what hed been searching forpurity, sincerity, decency.

Youre genuine, he murmured, kissing her hand. Unspoiled. I thought such people no longer existed.

The only thing that unsettled Mabel a little was that he never tried to visit her flat. Their meetings were always in the city centre, or hed collect her from the bus stop near her home.

I dont want to keep you up late, and I certainly dont wish to disturb your mother, he would say.

Mabel felt a sting of shame about their shabby, peelingpaint stairwell and the modestness of her flat. She wanted him to see her as a princess, not a poor mess.

Six months later, Arthur proposed in a dreamy evening at an upscale restaurant, candles flickering. He knelt, presenting a velvet box set with a sparkling stone.

Mabel, I want you to be my wife. I want to wake up beside you every morning. I want you to run my household.

She accepted, tears of joy streaming as she clutched the box. The fairytale seemed to go on.

They arranged for Arthur to meet Mrs. Liddell first, then they would both visit his parents. The meeting day was set for Saturday. Mabel and her mother prepared as if it were the most important event of their lives. They scrubbed the tiny flat for three days. Mrs. Liddell dug out an heirloom china set shed kept for a special occasion. Mabel spent her last £20 on a crisp, white, starchfinished linen cloth.

Mother, look how beautiful it is! she exclaimed, laying it over the table. It feels like a restaurant!

Just pray the groom appreciates it, Mrs. Liddell sighed, sliding an apple crumble into the oven. Im nervous, Mabel. Hes a solid fellow, and were plain folk.

Mum, he loves me, not our flat! Mabel replied.

Arthur was due at five. By 4:45p.m. Mabel stood by the window, scanning the street for his silver car. She wore her best dress, smoothing her hair repeatedly.

Here he comes! she shouted when the familiar sleek vehicle turned into the courtyard.

She bolted down the stairwell, heart hammering as if it would leap out of her chest. Arthur stepped out, immaculate in a tailored suit, clutching an enormous bouquet of roses. He looked like a leading man from a Hollywood film.

He smiled brightly, headed for the entrance, and then his smile slid off, replaced by a sour scowl. He entered the dim, damp, catsmelling stairwell, eyeing the cracked plaster, the flickering bulb, the scrawled lift doors. With each step upward his expression grew darker. When he reached the thirdfloor landing, he stopped a metre from Mabel, staring not at her dress or her eyes but at the modest hallway: the threadbare coat rack, the worn rug at the doorway. His gaze was cold as ice.

Is this where you live? he asked softly, contempt dripping from his tone.

Yes here, Mabel managed.

He gave a bitter halfsmile, glanced at his expensive suit and polished shoes, then back at the shabby corridor.

Right, he said, handing her the bouquet almost mechanically. I thought you were respectable, but you live in such poverty.

He said it as if stating a fact, then turned and descended the stairs without looking back.

Mabel clutched the absurdly lavish roses, unable to move. She heard his footsteps fade, the door thud, the engine start, and then an oppressive silence.

Mrs. Liddell emerged from the kitchen, wiping her hands on an apron.

Well, Mabel, wheres the groom? The crumbles ready

She saw Mabels pale face and the wilted roses, understood instantly. She stepped forward, took the flowers, and gently guided Mabel to the living room.

Sit down, love.

Mabel sank onto the sofa, tears not flowing but a hollow void filling her.

He hes gone, Mother.

I see, Mrs. Liddell replied quietly, sitting beside her, wrapping an arm around her shoulders. He said we were poor.

She pressed her tighter.

Darling, how lucky you are that this happened now rather than ten years down the line. Lucky that the Lord has taken this charlatan off your path. He was nothing but a hollow shell in a fancy coat. He never loved you; he only knew how to consume. He saw not you, but an imagined ideala pure, impoverished girl he could rescue. When reality showed him a peeling stairwell and a threadbare rug, he fled. Thank God, the rubbish cleared itself.

She smoothed Mabels hair as she had done in childhood, speaking simple, wise words. Wealth isnt measured in pounds. Decency isnt the price of a suit. Real love isnt frightened by poverty or cracked walls.

Cry, dear, let the grief flow. Then wash your face, stand up, and go on. Youll meet a true man, one who loves your soul, not the linen on your tablewhether its cotton or silk. As long as youre there, thats all that matters.

Mabel wept, long and bitter, pressed against her mothers shoulder, mourning not just Arthur but the shattered fairytale she had believed in.

When the tears ceased, she rose, approached the table set for a celebration that never happened, and ran her hand over the linen cloth.

The crumble must be cold by now, she said.

Never mind, her mother replied, smiling. Well put the kettle on and have tea together. Just the two of us. Today is our own little holidayour liberation.

We sat down with tea and apple crumble on the white linen, and it was the most satisfying meal and the warmest evening I have ever known.

This episode has taught me that the glitter of a polished exterior can hide emptiness, and that true worth lies in honesty, humility, and the love that endures when all the trimmings fall away. It is a lesson I shall carry forward, remembering that a mans character is revealed not by the price of his suit, but by how he treats those with nothing more than a plain linen cloth and an honest heart.

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I thought you were respectable, but you live in such squalor,” said the fiancé, just five minutes before meeting the parents.
Dagen då min före detta svärmor kom för att till och med ta min dotters gunga – och hur jag ett år senare lät henne kliva in i mitt nya hem fullt av nya möbler, stolthet och frihet