On getting married.
They say there comes a point in your life when you know you’ve met the person you want to spend the rest of your life with.
By the same rule, I can now confirm there comes a point when you know for sure you haven’t.
And when your boyfriend is knelt in front of you holding out a sparkling platinum and diamond engagement ring and asking you to marry him is not, you might say, the ideal moment for it to happen.
Alex is not Mr Right.
Why?
I don’t know.
I just know.
My true love hath my heart, and I have his.
‘The Bargain’, Sir Philip Sidney (1554-1586)
Have you ever broken somebody’s heart?
It’s horrible. I think I’d rather have my own heart broken. I think it would hurt less.
Telling Alex I can’t marry him is without a doubt the hardest thing I have ever had to do in my life.
I don’t have to say the words. My eyes tell him for me, when they fill with tears. Not the happy kind.
“You don’t want to marry me, do you?” he asks quietly, clutching the ring in his hand.
I shake my head.
“But it’s not because I don’t love you.” It seems like such a stupid thing to say. Do I think it will soften the blow somehow? A consolation prize of sorts? Hard luck mate, she won’t marry you, but on the plus side, she does love you.
“Then why?”
It’s a fair question.
“I don’t know. I just can’t.” As answers go it’s inadequate. But it’s the only one I have.
Of course, saying yes would have been easier. Because I do love Alex. And I know we could have a good life together. And I am scared I won’t ever meet that person I seem to have convinced myself I’m meant to be with – that person I think I might love more than I love Alex. But I also know if I did marry Alex, then I’d be settling. And we both deserve more than that.
The next day I move out.
The minute I heard my first love story
I started looking for you, not knowing
How blind that was
Lovers don’t finally meet somewhere
They’re in each other all along
Jabal ad-Din ar-Rumi (1207 – 1273)
Fliss and Derek have offered me their spare room while I sort my life out. It’s quiet where they live. You can hear the slightest noise. The pipes creaking as the central heating cools down. An insect hitting the window outside. My own heart beating.
I can’t sleep. I’m not used to being alone in bed. I’ve spent nights away from Alex, of course, but it’s been a long time since I’ve slept alone because I am alone.
I haven’t told anyone yet – apart from Katie. I can’t face the questions. People who believe in Mr Right will be surprised because they thought I was happy and because they thought Alex was Mr Right. And people who don’t believe in Mr Right will just think I’m bonkers. And everyone will want to know why. But even I don’t know that.
At 4.30am, after waking on and off all night, I give up trying to sleep and go in search of the kettle.
I’m pouring water into a mug when Fliss walks into the kitchen.
“Oh I’m sorry Fliss, did I wake you?”
“No, no, I’m not a good sleeper these days,” she says. I look at the ungodly time on the clock on the oven.
“It’s my age,” she laughs. “I always wake up early.”
I hold up the hot chocolate. “I hope you don’t mind?”
“Don’t be silly. You must help yourself to anything you want while you’re here, lovey.”
“Do you want one?”
“That would be lovely.”
We take the drinks through to the living room and Fliss turns on a lamp.
Sitting on the sofa I pull my knees up to my chest and balance my drink on them in my hand, blowing on it gently.
A painting on the wall above the television catches my eye. It’s a woman sitting on a deckchair, holding a parasol. I lean forward to confirm what it is I think I’m seeing. The woman in the picture is Fliss, only much younger – about my age.
“Who painted that picture of you in the deckchair, Fliss?” I ask.
“It’s one of Derek’s” she says. “He did it on our honeymoon. We had such a wonderful time,” she smiles, remembering. “We went to Cornwall for the week. Had sunshine the whole time. It was perfect. He painted that picture on our last day. We didn’t want to forget.”
“I didn’t know he could paint. It’s fantastic. It looks just like you.”
I blow on my drink again and sip it tentatively.
“How are you doing, lovey?” Fliss asks. “Are you okay?”
“Not really,” I admit. “But I know it’s for the best.”
“Are you sure? Is there no way you and Alex can work things out?”
“There isn’t really anything to work out – that’s the problem. It’s not like one of us has cheated or anything – you know, something you can get over if you both really want to. It’s more than that.”
“Hmm.” She sips her drink. She probably doesn’t understand. Fliss is of the generation where a guy met a girl, they went out and then they got married. And they stayed together forever – for better or for worse.
I, on the other hand, am from the generation where one in three couples give up on a marriage. Which kind of makes you think twice about doing it in the first place, doesn’t it? Or at the very least it makes you more determined to find the right person in the first place – because surely then it can’t possibly fail – not if you’ve found that one person you are meant to be with.
Or maybe it doesn’t really work like that at all. Maybe there are lots of people out there we could make it work with. But we’re so busy looking for that one person that we can’t see all the other possibilities.
“I do understand, you know,” Fliss says, breaking my thoughts, reading my mind.
“If something isn’t meant to be, you won’t ever make it work. No matter how much you might want to.”
I sip my drink. It’s cooling down.
“Fliss…,” I say.
“Yes, lovey?”
“How