They Saved Her No Dinner, Only The £512.40 Anniversary Bill-heuh

I walked into my parents’ thirty-fifth anniversary dinner with a handmade photo album in my hand and rain still clinging to the shoulders of my coat.

The restaurant was warm, softly lit and full of the kind of polite noise that usually makes people feel safe.

Glasses chimed.

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A waiter moved between tables with a card machine tucked under one arm.

Somewhere near the bar, someone laughed in that careful way people laugh when they do not want to disturb anyone else.

I had spent three weeks making the album.

Not buying it.

Making it.

Every page had been chosen after work, after errands, after the long train home, while the kettle clicked off in my small kitchen and my tea went cold beside the laptop.

I had scanned old photographs from shoeboxes, cleaned up scratches, brightened faded faces and placed them in order.

My parents on their wedding day.

My parents in their first flat, standing beside a sofa that looked older than both of them.

Family holidays where my father wore the same navy jumper every year.

My mother in a summer dress, laughing at something outside the edge of the picture.

Sabrina and me as children, sunburnt and sticky-fingered, pretending we were not fighting over who got the last ice lolly.

And one photograph of me at five years old, wearing a yellow raincoat on the front step, holding a bunch of flowers that were mostly weeds.

I had almost left that one out.

Then I thought Mum might like it.

That was how I thought then.

Always one more chance.

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