I'm going to tell you a true story, or at least as true as I can remember it. Let's be honest here and concede that when we're in the middle of something, we don't stop to write down the exact detail, we don't have a voice recorder to capture every aspect of who said what and when. So even in stories like this, we use writing skills and some imagination. As a writer, I've always thought that imagination is borne of experience; sometimes it's our experience, sometimes it's that of others. This is my experience, even if all the words and actions were not mine, and even if the names have been changed (which they most certainly have!).
Chapter One: To set the scene
My name is John and at 34 years of age, three long years after my first marriage had been declared over, I finally gave up on my so-called 'life' in London. I want to tell you about that transition, and what I discovered. I think it will take several chapters, and since I'm new to this writing thing, even as I tap at my keyboard, I'm not sure how much detail to share. Let's find out, together.
To rewind: At 22 I had qualified as a secondary school history teacher; a year later I married Eve, who I had met whilst training, and who, like me had got a job at a school in London. The schools were almost twenty miles apart, but that seemed for the best at the time, because there was next to no chance of professional overlap. For five years we worked like Trojans, sharing a small 2-bed flat in the north of the city and travelling everywhere by public transport. With two meagre salaries in an expensive city, we saved very little. I still think it was right that we spent our spare time, and a fair proportion of our spare money, enjoying the weekends and holidays in each others' company. We ate out each and every Sunday lunchtime; we chose a film or concert one weekend each month; we travelled to major European cities once or twice a year, went skiing once with some other teacher-friends, and even got as far as New York for 5-night long weekend. We were much in love and there are very few twenty-somethings who