BOY FOR BEATING

Mary, you and your husband share equal blame for the divorce, the counsellor said, meeting my eyes.
Im to blame? No! Hes the one who tore the family apart! I snapped.
You see, Mary, when a couple splits the fault is split evenly, fiftyfifty. Not ninetyten or sixtyforty, exactly half each. Dont argue. You couldnt build a proper relationship, the counsellor replied calmly and confidently.

What should I do? I have two daughters. My ex loves them. I loathe him. What now? I wanted to believe him. It seemed he held a magic wand that could set everything straight.

First, calm down, Mary. You cant rush headlong or youll break. Who will look after the children? They need a sensible mother, not a hysteric. Say, are you planning new relationships?

Never! Not again! I cant be disappointed a second time.

Take your time. Youre still young, life ahead of you. Why did you marry?

For happiness, I answered, tears welling.

Right. Everyone wants great happiness, yet many end up divorcing. School teaches us maths, not marital wisdom. The result: couples rush into marriage, then run off crying into divorce, the counsellor sighed heavily. And the prime years slip by. Youth fades fast.

I tried for the family! I put up with my husband for fifteen years while he was oblivious, passive in everything Im fed up. I cant stand to see him. Our love lies in ruins! I let it all out.

Id like to propose an experiment. Are you willing, Mary? the counsellor smiled mischievously.

What kind? I asked, interested.

Im sure youll want to move on eventually. Take a pause, find a practice boy, so to speak, and work on him. Sharpen your domestic skills. Learn to live with a man, make it comfortable, the counsellor looked at me questioningly.

Where would I find such a fool? I wondered.

You dont need to look. That practice boy can be your exhusband.

How?

You dont mind him anyway. If he walks away, youre fine. So experiment. Its a winwin, Mary, the counsellor was persuasive.

I decided to try. After all, nothing to lose. I wasnt sorry for Peter. Let him go

Peter had become such a nuisance that I packed Lucy and Emma and left his flat for a rented one. The court followed, divorce. Peter begged me to reconsider, to wait. I burned the bridges.

I had no men on the horizon; after fifteen years of marriage I craved solitude.

Peter started frantic, showering me with cheap gifts, flowers, even invited me to a spa A belated attention from him. I was exhausted

Peter still couldnt accept it was over.

When I moved into the flat with the girls, I felt an enormous relief. I breathed out, finally in my own little heaven, floating on clouds.

But the girls pulled me back to reality:

Mum, why is our dad at fault?

I was stunned. How do I explain to them that life with their father is over, that his words are empty wind, that life feels cramped and grey?

Thats when I went back to the counsellor, hoping for guidance.

So the experiment began.

I called Peter a month after the split:

Hey! How are you? Fancy meeting up? I have a few things to ask.

Mary? You? Sure, lets meet. Anytime! Peter choked on his joy.

We spent the evening on a park bench. Peter kept leaning closer, trying to take my hand.

We talked about nothing. No questions from me. Peter walked me home, gave me a warm kiss on the cheek, handed the girls a small gift.

Back in the flat I looked out the window. Peter was still there. I waved at him; he sent a cheeky airkiss.

Well, those little meetups with my ex were fine. No fights, no broken dishes. Life started to look brighter.

We began seeing each other once a month coffee, cinema, the park My days wove together with joy. I felt ready to stitch our paths.

A year passed.

Peter, are we meeting today? I asked eagerly.

Sorry, Mary, cant. Very busy. Ill call when Im free, Peter hung up.

That happened three or four times.

I grew anxious. What was wrong? Had he found someone else? Jealousy gnawed at me. I needed answers.

I called him:

Peter, the girls miss you. Lets take them to the zoo.

Mary, Ive got a wife in the maternity ward, Peter blurted.

What wife? Youre joking! I shouted.

No joke, Mary. Were expecting a baby with Lily.

I was speechless. All I could manage was:

Goodbye. I wish you cloudless happiness.

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