Nothing Can Be Undone

Nothing Can Be Fixed

Life for James Whitmore had split into two uneven parts: before Emily and after. But now, standing before the locked door of his own home, he realized there was a third phase”after the after.” And it was empty.

At thirty-seven, James was a renowned expert in the beauty industry, owned a house and a flat, and had long since stopped worrying about money. Yet none of it saved his marriage.

They met when he was twenty-two. Emma was just seventeen, fresh out of school, with timid dreams of university. She was stunningly beautiful, and he was instantly smitten. But when, a year later, she told him she was pregnant, his first reaction was fear.

“Maybe not yet?” James asked carefully, avoiding her gaze. “Youve only just started studying”

“Ill think about it,” she replied softly.

But it was too late to thinkwhether from inexperience or intent, Emma had missed all the deadlines. Her parents came to meet the father of their grandchild, polite but cold, demanding nothing. Yet as they left, her father muttered under his breath, “Dont worry, well raise the child ourselves.”

Guilt and a dormant sense of responsibility pushed James to propose. He married without joy, only a vague feeling it was the right thing to do.

The first years were a struggle. He was still studying; she stayed home with the baby. When he started working, money was tight, and they relied on grandparents for help. Emma never complained. Before even finishing university, she found part-time work.

“Why?” James asked, baffled. “Those pennies wont even cover mascara! Our daughters only two, already in nursery or with her grandparentsbarely seeing her own mother!”

“Then earn more!” Emma snapped back, steel in her voice. “Go into private practice!”

“With my experience? They wouldnt even hire me as a cleaner!” he shot back.

She never asked for anything for herself, but her reproaches became frequent: James didnt help around the house, didnt spend time with their daughter, didnt provide enough. A classic young family, scraping by in London.

After graduating, Emma landed a full-time job and shot up the career ladder. Late nights, business trips, corporate events. The house grew empty. James, in contrast, spent more time with their daughter, consoling himself: “Itll passher work frenzy will ease, and things will settle.” But they never did. Emma seemed to avoid being home.

One evening, embracing her as she cooked, James whispered,

“Lets have another. A son.”

Emma froze, then carefully stepped away.

“Start earning properly first. Then well talk.”

It was during those cold, distant years that Emily entered his lifea young, cheerful, undemanding assistant from a nearby department. She adored him, laughed at his jokes, was warm and easy. She became his escape. He seriously considered leaving, held back only by thoughts of his daughter.

Years later, when James was finally earning well, the unexpected happened. His wife brought up a second child herself.

“On one condition,” James said firmly, confident in his finances. “Family comes first. Work second. Ill provide.”

Emma agreed. She conceived almost immediately and transformed. The house smelled of baking again; warmth returned. James was relieved, yet still flew off to the seaside with Emily under the guise of work trips. His mistress knew nothing of the pregnancyhed convinced her he and his wife slept in separate rooms.

Then Emily began acting strangetoo much perfume, unexplained tears, suspicions over his phone.

“How are things at home?” she asked casually once.

“Same as always,” he brushed off.

Then came the visit. Emma arrived at his workplacefor the first time in yearsto drop off forgotten documents. Emily saw her rounded belly. The moment Emma left, hysterics erupted.

“You knew! You knew and said nothing!” Emily screamed, loud enough for three floors to hear.

“What are you on about? Calm down!”

“I wrote to your wife! A month ago! I told her everything!”

James demanded proof. She refused, but he wrestled her phone away. The messages stunned him. Emily had written: *”James and I have loved each other for so long He deserves real love and warmth Dont stand in our way”*

Emmas reply was two words: “Alright, Emily.”

That was all.

Now James understood Emilys recent behaviorshed expected a reaction, but hed known nothing. Because Emma had acted completely normal, living with her cheating husband for over a month without a hint of anger.

Horrified, he ended things with Emily and suggested she find another jobhed never expected such betrayal. She sobbed, begged, but he wouldnt lose his family.

That evening, he confessed. Emma sat drinking tea in the kitchen.

“You knew?” he asked, heart pounding.

Emma looked up, surprised. “Knew what? About that girl? You were actually with her? I thought it was a scam or a crush. Didnt expect it was serious. If it is, youre free to pack your things.”

She asked him to move out. James refused”Were having a baby!”swore it was over with Emily. He stayed in the guest room. Emma asked no more questions but never fully reconciled, speaking only when necessary. She gave birth prematurely, with complications. James took leave to help, showered her with gifts, devoted all his time to family. He adored his son.

A year and a half later, he thought the nightmare was overEmma had forgiven him. Then she announced she was returning to work.

“We had an agreement!” he snapped. “Family first! Olivers still tinywait till hes three! We have the money!”

“That agreement,” she said coolly, “belonged to our life before Emily.”

James surrendered. Emma went back to work. A nanny appeared. Life became endless chaos, calls, petty fights, brief truces.

Then, last year, he bumped into Emily. Memories flooded back; they had coffee. She was still single, still sweet. Guilt and foolish pride made him offer her a joba friend needed an assistant. She accepted.

A week later, they were back where they started.

The end came six months later. At a birthday party, Jamess drunken friend raved about his new assistant:

“Emilys brilliantgolden hands, easygoing, efficient! Dunno how I managed without her! Cheers, James, for this gem!”

Clueless about their affair, he sang her praises in front of everyoneincluding Emma. She smiled, nodded, said nothing. A week later, she handed James a stack of printouts: messages, screenshots, photos.

“Move out,” she said simply. “If you wont, Ill take the children and go.”

He left. Within a week, he knew he wanted nothing more than to return. He brought toys for the kids, enormous bouquets for Emma. She accepted the gifts for the children with chilly politeness; the flowers went in a vase by the door, like a forgotten umbrella.

One night, he found her alone. The children were asleep.

“Just tell me what to do to make you forgive me. Ill fix everything. I dont want anyone but you. Emilys gone.”

Emma looked at him blankly.

“You still dont get it, do you? Emily doesnt matter. You broke us years ago when you asked if I wanted an abortion. You married me out of guilt, tolerated me, while I wanted to be loved. All this time, I tried to be good enoughlook good, earn well, keep house. But you, James, only ever wanted someone easy and warm. Im tired of trying. Go.”

He stepped outside, and it hit him. His wife hadnt been stewing in resentment all these years. Emma had simply stopped loving him long ago. Her silence after Emilys letter wasnt forgiveness. It was a sentence, delivered quietly, without drama. Shed just been waiting for him to read it.

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Nothing Can Be Undone
Surrendering to Love – “Katie, think it over! Your boyfriend is eighteen and you’re twenty-six! What a perfect couple! What could he possibly offer you? Nothing but endless problems. Your colleagues will laugh at you—teacher falls for her student; that’s unheard of! Quit your job at that school before it’s too late, or they’ll sack you for being immoral,” my mum vividly described the situation. And yet I felt like howling. Somehow, Igor and I had fallen in love. Yes, he was much younger and my student. But in a year he’d finish school and we’d marry. The age gap wouldn’t be so obvious then. I just had to wait. I couldn’t bear to part with him—Igor was my first love. Mum may have exaggerated when she said everyone knew; we were seeing each other secretly. Still, I realised that this “juicy” news would spread through the whole school—everyone would find out. I couldn’t control myself, I melted in his arms, and hung on his every glance. I knew I was setting a bad example. As a teacher, I should be sowing wisdom and goodness. …My mum, also a teacher, couldn’t understand my choice. I regretted sharing my anxious happiness with her; I found no support. How many times did I break up with Igor in my head? Too many to count. But the moment I saw him, my heart skipped—a hopeless, overwhelming love! With Igor, I felt like a giddy schoolgirl. He was a top student, athletic, level-headed, with girls chasing after him everywhere. I felt joyful—and anxious, too. …The last bell rang; Igor entered university. And I… found out I was pregnant. Mum noticed the change and sniped, “Well, what now? Will you get rid of the fruit of your love? Should’ve listened to me!” “No, I won’t,” I said. …Our daughter, Sophie, was born. Igor was in no rush to marry me. His studies came first, and gradually he drifted away—he avoided me, “forgot” to call, focused on university and his new female friends. We broke up. I crashed back to earth, left alone with my daughter. And I could tell no one I’d had an affair with a student—the ridicule and judgment would be too much. My soul was numb. Seeing my state, Mum comforted me: “I feel things aren’t right with Igor. But even in ashes, sparks can remain. Everything can work out.” Years passed, two of them. I met Alex, the “man with the dog,” in the park where I pushed the pram and he walked his dachshund, Honey. He was lovely, warm, and funny—a whole new light. We fell in love. Sophie and Honey kept Mum company while we went out to the cinema and cafés. Mum beamed: “Go, enjoy yourselves. I’m happy to babysit.” …In time, Sophie and I moved in with Alex. It was calm and peaceful, no emotional turmoil. One day Mum called, flustered, “Sophie’s father came. He shouted in the stairwell, demanding to see you. I gave him your address. See what your precious pupil turned into?”, “Don’t worry, Mum—we’ll sort it,” I said, nerves tingling. Why had Igor resurfaced now? Soon Igor arrived: “Hello, Katie. I see you’re doing well. You’ve got a husband raising my child—what gives you that right?” “Igor, where’s it written that Sophie is your daughter? You gave her up. What’s your complaint?” He softened, “Katie, maybe we could get back together? We once loved each other.” “I remembered for a long time—but Alex helped me forget you. Thanks for the love lesson. You lost me, you won’t get me back. Goodbye,” I said, shutting the door. Alex came home and asked what was wrong. I told him about Igor’s visit. “Nonsense. Don’t worry. Maybe he just got nostalgic. Let’s have dinner,” he smiled, pulling me to the kitchen. “Husband? But my passport’s blank!” I teased. “Katie, will you marry me?” Alex, on one knee, asked softly. “Scared my ex would steal me?” “Terrified. Well, do you agree?” “I’ll think about it,” I winked, knowing he would always look after me. …We married that summer; Alex adopted Sophie. A year later, our son Max was born and we had our cosy family nest. Igor never bothered us again. I heard he married a classmate, who soon left him with their three-month-old—ran off with an army officer. …Years have flown by. Alex and I have touches of grey. Sophie married a foreigner and now lives in Italy, taking Honey’s descendant with her: “At least one family member to keep me company far from home.” Now our only worry is Max, who at twenty-two is besotted with his literature lecturer—a married woman with two daughters. What do I say? Remembering myself, I know I can’t talk him out of it. Everyone learns from their own mistakes. “Max, decide for yourself. Just please, don’t hurt this woman. Don’t make a mockery of her. Be a man. Think carefully before you act,” was all I could say. “Mum, you and Dad are the best examples I could wish for. Thank you for not lecturing me,” he said, kissing my cheek. …There was no big wedding. Lecturer Marina and Max registered their marriage at the town hall, and their daughter Zoë was born in due time. When it comes to love, there’s just no escaping…