Previews Dangerous Echoes by Mai Griffin | Page 17

Mai Griffin 4 – Bertha In her new village home on the outskirts of Oxford, at the beginning of April, Bertha Matthews looked from the front room window, at the profusion of plants in her small garden. When they were in flower the daffodils here were close enough to enjoy and pick easily, to carry a breath of spring inside. She visualised the sweeping slopes around her old home in spring-time – ablaze with glorious golden trumpets, but so remote. She recalled a succession of gardeners, year after year, planting bulbs within the grounds but none ever came up. Her mother settled eventually for less formal landscaping with a few trees and shrubs. The resulting open views, even from the lower windows, were a pleasing bonus. It should make it easier for that young artist she had met to find the best view of the house, unhindered by too much green growth. A member of the welcoming committee, offering advice to newcomers, picked up her remark about missing the house where her family had lived for generations and asked if she would like to meet Clarinda Hunter who painted beautiful pictures in oils. Bertha was not particularly interested in art. She had grown up surrounded by pictures on every wall in the house; most were originals and all had gone to auction. The majority had been gloomy and uninspired, but the idea of having one specially painted for her, held great appeal. When she met the girl last week, and saw her interpretation of an old Welsh cottage, she was s tunned; it was not just a scene. In it was a depth of vision verging 16