Part 1: The Breakup
My husband had left me shortly before Christmas. He'd found someone else, someone younger, someone who would probably be willing to break their boundaries and acquiesce to his sexual demands.
He'd tried and tried over a series of months to get me to allow a threesome, but I had always had this nagging suspicion in the back of my mind. You see, I think he'd picked the person to fuck before asking me, and that meant that it wasn't a fantasy he wanted fulfilled but rather it was him asking me for permission to cheat.
I suspected it was Natalia from his office, so imagine my surprise when two days after our breakup - two days after he'd ended our six year marriage - my sister had spotted him on a date with her, feeding each other pasta like it was Lady and the fucking Tramp. It was confusing for me because she seemed so different, it made me worry that I was missing something, or that I didn't fit his vision of a wife. I had long, thick, dark hair, brown eyes, and was slightly below average height, whereas Natalia was blonde, and petite with blue eyes. How could I compete if I simply just wasn't what he wanted? Whilst I had spent the days following our breakup wallowing a pit of despair; crying and lamenting the ending of our marriage, he was out there, living his life with the girl he'd always wanted.
It made me so angry, but it also changed my perspective. I quickly went from "I'm not good enough" to "he's incapable of maintaining a relationship". The switch sounds subtle, but the change was enough to help me recover from my feelings of low self worth. It would take a long time to heal from this marriage, but at least now, in my mind, the fault was his and not mine.
I remember the first time he'd asked about bringing a partner into the bedroom. It was approaching Valentines 2023, and we'd had a few days away planned at a beautiful cliffside hotel with a luxurious room and a hot-tub on the balcony. As we were planning the stay, we talked about what we'd bring with us to make our Valentines special. I suggested we bring our camera and take some sexy photos, perhaps record our sex to watch back at a later date; kinky, but something that was well within both of our boundaries. He'd suggested bringing an extra participant.
Our argument was so severe that we barely spoke whilst at the hotel, and we certainly didn't make love. I would not share my marriage bed with another person; when we said our vows, we said them to each other only. I'm certainly not against threesomes, orgies, or anything related to it; after all, if we were still dating, then I'd be open to it. The point is that when we married each other we made a personal and permanent commitment to just each other. He was well aware of this boundary, yet he suggested it anyway.
Whenever I think of Valentines Day, I think of him. I think of the pain he caused me, and the subsequent months of tension that led to the dissolution of our vows. Valentines Day, the day of celebration of love, was now reduced to smoking husk of regret and self-pity.
When I picture his face, instead of the gorgeous rugged features I'd always appreciated, I now imagine his face sneered into a grin, living the life he'd always wanted. I want nothing more than to wipe that grin off his face.
Valentines Day was always such a special occasion for me. My parents had gotten married on Valentines, and so every year from the moment I could perceive it, the day was filled with love, appreciation and gifts. When I first met Kees, he was a romantic. He showered me with affection, and he made Valentines Day special to me - it was finally a celebration of my love, and not the love of my parents. It was as if he'd sensed how much the day meant to me, and he wanted to show me he cared as much too. He'd proposed on Valentines Day as part of a grand display of our love together, and throughout our marriage, he always went all-out on February the 14th. To me, it was the most beautiful day of the year; it was the day I appreciated throughout my childhood, and my entire adulthood so far.
And now he's ruined it.
Yesterday, I awoke at my sister's house to a buzz in the air. I'd been staying with Ada and her husband Christiaan since the breakup. Kees hadn't kicked me out, but I couldn't stand to stay in that house any longer, everything within those walls reminded me how much pain I was in, and if I was going to ever put it behind me, I needed to get away. Ada offering me her guest room couldn't have come at a better time; I jumped at the opportunity.
As I got up and came downstairs, I could see her frying some eggs at the kitchen island, with Chris stood behind her, his arms wrapped around her body. They were singing along to their couple's Spotify playlist, recounting songs from their long history of dating.
Chris looked up and saw me, then immediately stepped back, and switched the music off.
"Sorry, Mila," he'd said, raising his eyebrows in anticipation. It was evidently too early for him to have shaved yet, and I thought the new hair that lined his cheeks and lower face suited him perfectly. He was six feet tall, and with an active physique, floppy light brown hair and a strong chin, so the stubble fit well into his look.
"Don't be sorry on my part," I replied flatly. "Go on about your frolicking."
I hadn't meant for it to come out sarcastically or hurtfully, but based upon their reactions, that's how it had sounded.
"Don't be like that Mi'," Ada said. She brushed her dark hair out of her face with her wrist as she flipped the eggs with the spatula. Her hair was styled slightly differently to mine, but it was of the same thickness and dark colour that obviously ran in our genes. She was slightly shorter than I, but she had a kind and warm energy that filled any room she was in - a stark contrast to the energy I brought into her house.
"I didn't mean it like that," I said, holding my hands up as if caught doing something illegal. "I've just woken up, so the part of my brain that controls my tone hasn't powered up yet. I meant it, go on about your morning, I don't want to bring it down."
"It's okay, the eggs are about done anyway," she said. "Do you want some?"
"I don't feel like eating, sorry." As I said it, she gave me a sympathetic glance, then passed the frying pan to Chris as she walked around the kitchen island and over to me.
"Hey, I hate seeing you like this," she started. "I know I can't expect you to be over Kees yet, but it's important to me that I at least see you trying."
"I am trying. I felt really good yesterday," I said, sitting down upon the sofa. "I just had a dream about our last Valentines, and it made me angry all over again. It's like my mind is torturing me, recounting all our fights."
Ada settled in next to me, and took my hands. Holding my hands gently in one of hers, her other ran her perfectly manicured nails softly across my fingers. "I know how special that day was to you, and I know that Wednesday will be your first Valentines without him."
"You don't understand," I said, taking my hands from hers. "When we were growing up, it was so special, and he's taken all those happy memories and he's torched them. When I think of the day, I don't think of those memories any more, I think of his stupid face, and I think of that bitch Natalia."
Ada sat closer and placed her hand on my back, softly rubbing me up and down, comforting me. "I'm sorry your going through this. I really am."
"Don't be sorry," I snapped without realising how it came out, "you didn't break up with me, he did."
I felt the emotions hit me like a tonne of bricks, I thought they came out of nowhere but Ada could clearly see them bubbling up within me even if I ignored it. The tears began to flow.
Ada looked helplessly over to Christiaan who was plating their breakfast. He locked eyes with her, then slowly closed them and nodded.
"Come here," she said, taking me into her arms as I cried. She was always such a caring big sister, and the caring didn't stop when we left our parent's homes. "I think we just need to take these horrible memories and replace them with something stronger."
"What's stronger than having my entire life fall apart?" I gasped between sobs.
She took a deep breath, then stood, and took my hand. "Follow me."
The tears that streaked down my cheeks had melted away the makeup I'd forgotten to remove last night; I'd look at home with the emo kids we grew up with in the mid 2000's.
She led me upstairs to her bedroom and sat me down on the chair in-front of her makeup table.
"Look in the mirror there," she said. "What do you see?"
"Oh I don't know, some sort of sad panda?" I quipped through tears.
She took some makeup wipes, slid one out of the top of the packet and wiped my face. The makeup stains began to disappear, but so did the tears. She was so gentle with me, I felt like an eight year old again when she used to do my makeup for me, testing out different looks, making me into her perfect little doll.
"How about now?"
"I'm not sure you've wiped away the sadness, but I'm certainly less of a panda."
"You know what I see?"
I turned to look at her, she stood over me, her head tilted to one side.
"I see one of the most beautiful women on the planet, a girl that any person, man or woman would kill to be with. I see someone who's got the world at their feet. I see someone who had tethered themselves to a man who didn't appreciate her, and that she is finally free to do what she wants." She paused. "I also see someone who is fully capable of making her own memories, and not letting that prick of an ex-husband have this much of a hold over her."
Her words had helped. I was not fixed, but somewhere on the horizon a glimmer of hope had appeared, a beacon telling me I was headed somewhere instead of remaining in the stagnant water of my old relationship.
"Christiaan and I have been thinking," she said. "You need a Valentines Day you can remember, one that blows all the other ones out of the water."