**Diary Entry**
Bloody hell, there comes a time when patience snaps like a dry twig. No warning, no fanfarejust done. Mine ran out on an ordinary Tuesday evening while I was frying chips.
The day had been a proper nightmarework piled up, the boss harped on about some report, and then Tom rang: *”Luv, Mums dropping by. Shes been in town.”* Right. As if Margaret *ever* just “drops by.” Always when Ive just dragged myself home, shoes off, feet aching.
There I stood, flipping bloody chips. Head pounding, feet throbbing from heels, hands moving the spatula on autopilot. Back and forth, back and forth. All I wanted was to collapse on the sofa, telly on, phone off
*”Emily!”* The front door creaked. *”Where are you?”*
And there she was. Didnt even turn. I knew the drillher signature heels clicking down the hall, the inevitable kitchen inspection
*”Ah, there you are.”* Margaret settled at the table like she owned the place, phone already in hand. *”Make us a cuppa, love, and a sandwich. Im knackered.”*
I froze. Something in my head *clicked*. Three years. Three years of *”fetch this,” “do that,”* like Im some unpaid skivvy, not her sons wife.
*”Kettles on the hob,”* I said, eerily calm. *”Breads in the cupboard.”*
Silence. The kind you could cut with a knife. Out the corner of my eye, I saw her head snap upslow, disbelieving.
*”Excuse me?”* Her voice turned arctic. *”What did you just say?”*
I turned off the hob. Wiped my hands on that sunflower tea towel shed brought when we moved in*”For a bit of cheer,”* shed said. Faced her.
*”I said Im a person, not a servant.”* Quiet, firm. *”Ive had a long day too. If you need help, ask. Dont order.”*
And right on cue, Tom shuffled in. Stopped dead. Eyes darting between us like a startled deer. Christ, hed rather walk on hot coals than face a row.
*”Tommy!”* Margaret gasped. *”Your wifes being *unbelievable*”*
I cut her off. *”Tom. Do *you* respect me?”*
Cars hummed outside. Chips cooled on the hob. The three of us frozen, a bloody tableau. And suddenlycalm. Like a weight lifted after three long years.
Toms face? Priceless. His quiet, pliant wife had finally shown teeth.
**A week later.**
The silent treatment from Margaret. Heavy sighs, dramatic exits. Tom tiptoeing like a spooked horse. And me? For the first time, I felt like a person, not a doormat.
That night, curled in Toms dads old armchairthe only thing hed kept after his dad passedI pretended to read some trashy novel. Words blurred. All I could think: *Whys it so bloody hard? Why cant we just live without her meddling?*
*”Em.”*
Tom stood in the doorway, hair mussed, lost. My sweet boy who never quite grew up.
*”You alright?”* he mumbled.
*”You?”* I set the book down.
He sank onto the sofa, stared at his hands. *”Just thinking.”*
*”About?”*
A beat. Then: *”Youve gone all cold. Mum says”*
*”Lets leave Mum out of it,”* I cut in. *”Just us. Tom, whyd you think I married you?”*
He blinked. *”Dunno. Love?”*
*”I fell for the bloke who proposed in Hyde Park, crowds and all. The one who stood up to your mum when she said we were too young.”*
*”Yeah,”* he half-smiled. *”First time I ever disobeyed her.”*
*”And now? Now she runs our home? Tom”* I leaned forward*”I wont be a skivvy. Not to her, not to you. Im your *wife*. Your *partner*. Get it?”*
The old clockanother of Margarets “gifts”ticked loud in the quiet.
*”If a wifes just free labour to you, maybe we need to rethink this.”*
He flinched. *”You threatening me?”*
*”No, love. Im just done being your second mum.”* I laughed then, sudden. *”Your mums a bulldozer, but at least shes honest. You? You hide behind her *and* me.”*
Silence. Jaw working, eyes fixed on the carpet. Then
*”Remember how we met?”*
*”Hyde Park. You had that daft Labrador.”*
*”Knocked you clean over. I was terrified youd scream. But you just laughed and played with her.”*
*”Your point?”*
*”Youve always been strong. And I took the piss, didnt I?”*
Something shifted. In him. In me.
*”Tom,”* I whispered, *”we need to fix this. I cant do this anymore.”*
The next morning, sunlight woke me. Toms side empty. Clattering from the kitchenodd, he never stirred before noon.
I pulled on my dressing gown. Froze in the doorway.
Margaret packing. Her ancient suitcase by the door. Tom loading jars of chutney, tins of biscuits
*”Morning,”* I said softly.
She turned. Lips pursed, nodded. A week ago, Id have scurried to put the kettle on. Not today.
*”Ordered Mum a cab,”* Tom said, not meeting my eye. *”Half an hour.”*
I moved to the hob. Scrambled eggs*not* burntand a French press of my favourite cinnamon coffee.
*”Son,”* Margarets voice wavered, *”think this through. I only want whats best”*
*”Mum.”* Tom finally looked up. *”I love you. But this is my family now.”*
She opened her mouththen shut it. Maybe she saw it then: the set of his jaw, the steel in his eyes. The man Id fallen for, buried under years of apron strings.
When the cab pulled away, I stayed by the window. Not happy. Not sad. Just quiet.
*”Coffee?”*
Tom stood by the hob, awkward with the French press.
*”Since when do you make proper coffee?”*
*”Could learn,”* he shrugged.
And there it was. The moment a boy becomes a mannot when he shaves or marries, but when he stands on his own two feet.
*”Teach me to make those cheese scones of yours?”* he said, pouring. *”Feels wrong, just eating them.”*
I laughed. Hugged him from behind, nose pressed between his shoulder blades. He smelled of coffee, my shampoo, and*freedom*.
*”Ill teach you,”* I whispered. *”Everything.”*
Later, we drank coffee, and I showed him how to knead dough. The first batch burned. Still the best scones Id ever tasted. *Our* scones.
Funny thing? In a way, Im grateful to Margaret. Without her barking orders, without my patience finally snappingwed still be playing roles. Her obedient boy. His dutiful wife.
Now? Now weve got a shot at being a real family.
They say happiness is a quiet thing. True enough. But sometimes, to reach that quiet, youve got to weather the storm. And the trick? Not fearing the storm. Because dawn *always* comes after.







