Scottish Daily Mail

romance even she couldn’t have dreamt up

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with the landlord, who lived next door, then we toasted the lease with a glass of wine.

I was still numb, still in shock, but he was easy to talk to.

I was back on a rollercoas­ter of emotion: terrified, vulnerable, no idea how I would manage four children under the age of six — and relieved.

We went to his house next door to sign the lease.

As I walked through the doorway, he placed a hand in the small of my back to guide me through, and I felt safe.

A relationsh­ip was the last thing on my mind. I needed to get used to this unexpected change, this new life.

I had married for all of the wrong reasons. Through my 20s I fell in and out of love — and falling hard meant pain — but then I found a man who seemed stable, a man who would be a good husband and father.

I thought I was being sensible choosing with my head, rather than my heart.

I had four beautiful children, all of them distractio­ns from a lonely marriage. I felt stuck and was too scared to leave: I thought I would have to stay until my children went to university. I never dreamed one argument would lead to my husband walking out.

But once I was single, there were a couple of things I felt clear about: I wasn’t getting married again, and all of my focus was going to be on my children.

Even if I had been looking, my landlord was not my type. I had always dated men who were darkhaired and slender, boisterous, with big personalit­ies and a sarcastic sense of humour.

My landlord, with his grey beard and twinkling blue eyes, was quiet and thoughtful. He listened, rather than talked.

When I moved into the cottage with my children at the end of May, he was always available next door if I needed an extra hand or something fixing.

One day I bought an inflatable slide for the children that wouldn’t stay up. Girlfriend­s came over to help, but none of us could figure it out. I heard the landlord next door in the garden and asked if he knew what to do. He fixed the leak instantly as my friends watched from the window.

‘I think he likes you,’ said one. ‘He definitely does,’ said another.

I told them they were being ridiculous. But that night I lay in bed thinking about it. Did he like me? Was that possible? I pushed it out of my head — this was going to be the summer for my children and of getting my head together.

And yet, the children and my landlord started to become intertwine­d. We took the children on his boat, shared picnics and went to the beach. He had a ten-year-old daughter whom he had raised alone and she had an eight-year-old halfbrothe­r who, though not biological­ly his, called him Daddy.

Every day I found myself looking forward to seeing him. Whenever I heard his motorbike putt-putt into the driveway, my heart would start to smile.

Without being fully aware it was happening, slowly, slowly, over the course of a summer filled with children, wine, friends and picnics on the beach, I was falling for my landlord.

One evening two months later as we walked and talked along the beach, he reached for my hand. By the time we had reached the end of the walk, he’d kissed me.

Immediatel­y this felt different from anything that had come before. It was steady and calm, the long road stretching as far as the eye could see. I looked at this man and felt a deep recognitio­n, and a profound sense of peace.

From the very first night, we found ourselves imagining building a house by the beach for our large combined brood.

We had never been on a date, but had fallen into the kind of relationsh­ip I believe existed for other people — I just never thought it would happen to me.

It was peaceful, respectful and, most of all, kind.

He had enormous integrity — he didn’t play games, didn’t disappear for a day or two or not return my calls. He wasn’t controllin­g or angry. He was just there, steady, constant and lovely.

By the autumn I was renting a bigger house, and we found ourselves living together.

People kept asking if I would write about it, but I laughed; surely not even the most romantic of romantics would believe this happens in real life. I fell in love with the boy next door, my landlord to boot, three days after my marriage ended.

But it was lovely; this was the life and man I had always imagined. Three years later we married, and now we have been together for more than ten years.

I have learned many things about marriage in that time. I have learned that the psychologi­st John Gottman is right when he says kindness is the single most important characteri­stic of a good relationsh­ip.

NOT necessaril­y the kindness of bringing your partner a cup of tea in bed (though that is nice), but often simply the kindness of attention.

When your partner asks you to engage in conversati­on, you put down the phone, newspaper or book and give them your full attention for as long as they need it.

It is the kindness of putting your partner before yourself, of treating each other with care, always.

I have learned what an enormous privilege it is to know and be known. Ian and I have seen each other at our best and at our worst, and we love each other anyway.

I’ve also learned that everything passes. Life is cyclical, and however painful it may be at times, however hard, however lovely or easy or fun, everything passes.

For many years, life was forever changing. Blending families second time around comes with an extraordin­ary set of challenges: another set of in-laws, ex-spouses, ex-in-laws and unhappy children who struggle to accept a stepparent and who shout and cry and shoot you filthy looks.

I had no idea how hard blended families can be, how challengin­g the role of step-parent, how unbearably painful it can be to be a stepchild. It took me years to understand that a child of divorce has already experience­d huge loss when their parents split up.

I understand these things now. Ten years on, I love the family we have built, and the children are settled and happy. And, after all those years of saying I wouldn’t write our story, I decided, finally, to use it for inspiratio­n.

It isn’t the story of my husband and me, but rather that of a relationsh­ip between two people, Emma and Dominic, who meet when one rents the other’s beach cottage. It is the story of what makes a good relationsh­ip, of finding happiness in ways you might not expect.

Emma’s life doesn’t follow the course of mine, and yet was drawn from it — from an English woman looking for a fresh start, for a place to call home. Falling: a love Story by Jane green (Macmillan, £14.99).

 ??  ?? Unexpected love: Jane with husband Ian at the Connecticu­t home they share with their six children
Unexpected love: Jane with husband Ian at the Connecticu­t home they share with their six children

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