The air smelled of old wood and dampness as Emily stepped over the threshold, her fingers tight around the suitcase handle. A cold draft slithered through the hallwaythe front door gaped open behind her, and in the room where her mother usually slept, the light burned unnaturally bright.
“Your mother doesnt live here anymore,” said James, meeting her gaze without flinching. His voice was calm, almost detached.
Emily froze. “What do you mean? I was only gone three days for the conference. Where is she?”
James shrugged, stepping aside to let her in. He looked tired but resolute, as if hed shed a great weight. “I took her to Aunt Margarets. She agreed to take her in for a while.”
“For a while?” Emily kicked off her heels, the parquet floor cold under her bare feet. “What kind of while? And why didnt you discuss this with me?”
“Because I couldnt take it anymore.” His voice didnt waver. “Three years, Em. Three years of this. Ive reached my limit.”
She marched to the kitchen, dropped her bag on the table. Her hands shookfrom exhaustion, from shock, from the fury simmering beneath her ribs. She yanked open the fridge, grabbed a bottle of water, drank deeply.
“Let me get this straight,” she said, forcing her voice steady. “You kicked my mother out while I was away?”
“I didnt kick her out. I moved her. With dignity, with all her things.” He leaned against the doorframe, arms crossed. “And you know it was the right choice. Shes your mother, but our marriage comes first.”
Emily exhaled sharply. Funny how life could shift in an instant. That morning, shed left Manchester certain everything at home remained unchanged. Now, the world had tilted.
“I need to talk to her.” She pulled out her phone.
“Its late,” James said. “Nearly midnight. Call her tomorrow.”
“Im going to Aunt Margarets.”
“No, youre not.” His tone left no room for argument. “Youre exhausted. Well sleep. Well talk in the morning.”
She dialled her mothers number. No answer. Then Aunt Margarets. The line rang and rang. James watched in silence.
“What did you say to her?” Emily tossed the phone onto the counter.
“The truth. That we couldnt live like this anymore. That our marriage was crumbling. That one of us had to leaveher or me.”
“You gave her an ultimatum?”
“Shouldnt I have?” He ran a hand through his hair. “Emily, weve had this conversation a hundred times. I cant do it anymore. I want us backjust you and me. No more screaming matches. No more walking on eggshells.”
Emily sank into a chair, pressing her palms to her eyes. Yes, theyd talked about it. But she never thought hed act. Shed assumed things would settle on their own.
“How did she take it?” she asked quietly.
“Better than I expected. Said she saw it coming. Packed in an hour. Didnt even cry.”
Emily let out a bitter laugh. That sounded like her motherstoic, unyielding, never one for theatrics, even if her heart was breaking.
“I need to see her.”
“In the morning,” James repeated. “Right nowshower and sleep. Youre dead on your feet.”
She obeyed. Under the scalding water, she tried to make sense of it. Her mother had moved in after the stroke. The doctors had insisted she needed constant care. Leaving her alone felt unthinkable. So Emily brought her homeno questions, no hesitation.
James hadnt objected at first. Family duty mattered. But months passed, and Marjories recovery was slow. She grew bitter, sharp-tongued. Days of silence would rupture into tiradesespecially towards James.
“Not a proper man,” shed mutter when he left for work. “Cant even change a fuse. Cant provide properly. Youll waste your life with him.”
Emily defended him, of course. Explained that times had changed, that James was a software engineer, that they had a good lifea house, a car, holidays abroad.
“Your grandfather wouldve been ashamed,” her mother would snap. “A real man can do anything.”
James bit his tongue, but the tension thickened. He worked later, skipped dinners. When he was home, he hid in the bedroomworking or just waiting it out.
Conversations between him and Emily dwindled to logisticswhod pick up the dry cleaning, whod do the food shop. Their marriage, once warm and intimate, had become a flat-share.
And nowthis. James had made the choice for her while she was away. Her mother, exiled to a distant aunts. No discussion. No say.
She slipped into bed. James pretended to read, but his jaw was tight.
“I understand,” she said, pulling the duvet up. “But you shouldnt have done it behind my back.”
“I waited three years for you to decide,” he said, setting the book aside. “Three years of suggesting alternativesa carer, a nice assisted living place. We can afford it. But you wouldnt listen.”
“Because shes my mother,” Emily shot back. “She raised me alone. Worked two jobs so I could go to private school, have piano lessons. I cant just hand her off to strangers!”
“And what am I?” James asked softly. “A stranger too?”
Emily didnt answer. The room hummed with silence, broken only by the ticking clock. James switched off the lamp, turned away. Emily stared at the ceiling, her pulse hammering.
Morning came with a phone call. Aunt Margaret assured her everything was fine, that Marjorie was settling in.
“Dont rush over,” she said. “Your mother wants time to adjust.”
Emily didnt buy it. Her mum always wanted her nearcalling if she even popped to the shops. “Where are you? When will you be back?”
“Im coming today,” Emily said and hung up.
James sipped his coffee, pretending not to eavesdrop. The kitchen felt eerie without the usual clatter of pans, without Marjories running commentary on the state of the dishes.
“I took the day off,” James said, standing. “We need to talk. Properly.”
Emily nodded. They did. They had to untangle this mess.
“Ill see Mum first,” she said. “Then well talk.”
Aunt Margaret lived across town, in a weathered red-brick walk-up with no lift. As Emily climbed the chipped stairs, she wondered how her mother would manage four flights with her cane.
The door opened before she knocked. Aunt Margaretplump, dyed-red hairushered her in. A cousin twice removed, barely more than a stranger.
“Shes in the kitchen,” Margaret said.
Emily stepped inside. The flat was cramped, low-ceilinged. The kitchen barely fit a table.
Marjorie sat by the window, spine straight. She didnt turn when Emily entered.
“Mum.”
“You came,” Marjorie said coolly. “I thought your husband might forbid it.”
“How could you think that?” Emily sat opposite her. “Of course I came.”
“And whats happened, really?” Marjorie finally looked at her. Her face was calm, but her eyes glistened. “Your husband showed his true colours. I always said he was weak. I was wrong. Hes a tyrant.”
Emily sighed. Always black or white, no in-between. How to explain that people were more complicated?
“Hes not a tyrant, Mum. Hes just”
“Just what? Tired?” Marjorie scoffed. “And I wasnt? Sick, dependent, listening to how Im a burden? You think I didnt see how he looked at me? How he sighed when I walked in?”
Emily reached for her hand, but Marjorie pulled away.
“Dont pity me. I didnt raise you for that. You chose himlive with him. Ill manage.”
Margaret tactfully excused herself. Emily studied her mothergrey-haired but still striking, chin high. Unbending, always.
“I could rent you a flat near us,” Emily offered. “Hire a carer”
“No.” The word was final. “Ill stay here awhile. Then go back to my own place.”
“But the doctors said”
“Doctors say a lot of things.” Marjories lips thinned. “Ill exercise. Monitor my blood pressure. Learn to live differently.”
Her voice was firm, but Emily saw the tremor in her hands, the white-knuckled grip on her teacup. For the first time in decades, her mother was afraidtruly alone.
“Ill visit every day,” Emily promised.
“Dont.” Marjorie shook her head. “Youve your own life. Weekends are enough.”
Emily knew that tone. Once her mind was set, there was no persuading her. Pride had always been her greatest flaw. And her greatest strength.
They talked for an hourabout the flat, what supplies Marjorie needed. She refused most offerstoo much trouble, shed manage.
As Emily stood to leave, Marjorie grabbed her wrist.
“I only ever wanted you happy,” she said softly. “Maybe your James is right. Maybe youll be better off without me.”
Emily hugged her tight, breathing in the familiar scent of lavender and rosethe smell of home, of safety.
“I love you, Mum. Ill always be here.”
Marjorie nodded, pulling back. The moment passed; the mask returned.
“Go,” she said. “Dont keep your husband waiting.”
Outside, Emily stood on the pavement, gulping cold air. Guilt and grief twisted inside her. Rationally, she knew James was rightthis was better for everyone. But her heart ached at the thought of her mother feeling discarded.
At home, James had laid the table, made her favourite shepherds pie. They sat opposite each other, like old times.
“How is she?” he asked.
“Stoic,” Emily said. “Pretending its all fine.”
He nodded. He knew his mother-in-lawiron-willed, never showing weakness.
“Em, I know youre angry,” he said, holding her gaze. “But I couldnt see another way. We were destroying each otherall three of us. Your mum was miserable with me. I was miserable with her. And you were torn in half trying to please everyone.”
Emily stayed silent. There was truth in his words, bitter as it was.
“Heres my proposal,” he continued. “We rent her a nice flatsomewhere modern, with a lift. Hire a carer to check in dailycooking, cleaning, groceries. Get her a panic button in case she falls. You visit as much as you want. But she lives separately.”
“And if she gets worse?”
“Then we reassess. Maybe assisted living then. But only if necessary.”
Emily studied himtired but determined. Hed endured three yearsfor her. Three years with a woman who despised him. And he hadnt left.
“Alright,” she murmured. “But no more decisions behind my back.”
James smiledproperly, for the first time in ages.
“Deal. No more secrets.”
They ate in silence, but it was different nowcomfortable, warm. As if something between them had clicked back into place.
Later, Emily called her mother with the new plan. To her surprise, Marjorie agreed almost immediately.
“I pick the flat, though,” she said firmly. “And the carer. No strangers.”
“Of course, Mum.” Emily smiled into the phone. “Whatever you want.”
That evening, she and James curled up on the sofa, watching an old film they used to love. He draped an arm around her; she rested her head on his chest. Simple. Familiar. Long forgotten.
“You know,” James said suddenly, “I thought Id lose you. That youd choose her over me.”
Emily looked up.
“And I was terrified Id come home one day to find you gone,” she admitted. “That youd had enough.”
“Never,” he said, pulling her closer. “I promise.”
They kissed like they had years agohungry, desperate. Then talkedreally talkedspilling every buried fear, every unspoken regret.
Sometime past midnight, Emily remembered Jamess words from the night before: *Your mother doesnt live here anymore.* At the time, theyd felt like an ending.
Now, she wonderedmaybe they were a beginning. A new way forward for all of them. A life where they could love without smothering, care without controlling.
She fell asleep curled against him, and for the first time in years, no nightmares came. Just a dream of warm sand, endless ocean, and a sun risingnot settingon the horizon.






