His Pregnant Mistress Sat In My Home — Then I Showed Them The Deed-heuh

When Bennett first asked me to marry him, I said yes before he had finished the question.

That is the sort of detail that embarrasses me now, not because I regret loving him, but because I remember how certain I was.

I had not been careless with my heart.

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I had not ignored warnings or rushed into a fantasy.

We dated for two years before the wedding, and in those two years he was steady in a way I mistook for goodness.

He remembered the small things.

He carried my bags without making a performance of it.

He rang when I was late leaving work, not to check up on me, but to make sure I had eaten.

When we walked home in the rain, he would tilt the umbrella more towards me than himself, so his shoulder ended up wet.

It is hard to believe a man is capable of cruelty when you have watched him shiver quietly for your comfort.

Our wedding felt like proof that I had chosen well.

There were smiling relatives, proud parents, flowers that cost too much, and speeches that made everyone dab at their eyes.

Margaret, his mother, held my hands that day and said she hoped I understood what family meant.

I thought she was welcoming me.

Later, I understood she was warning me.

My mother gave us the house as a wedding gift.

It was three storeys, narrow and solid, the kind of house where sound travelled up the stairs and the hallway always filled with shoes, coats, bags, and bits of ordinary life.

It had a small back garden, a kitchen with a slightly temperamental tap, and a front step that turned slippery whenever the weather got miserable, which was often enough.

To anyone else, it was property.

To my mother, it was protection.

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