Previews Dangerous Echoes by Mai Griffin | Page 8

Dangerous Echoes illness Jean, a private nurse, ‘lived in’ to tend him for the final three years of his life. She had been almost as devastated by his death as Margaret herself. It had seemed natural for her to stay on as a companion. Jean was ten years Margaret’s junior and very fit ...it was a terrible blow when she was killed ...a wicked shame, everyone agreed, to be mown down by a drunken driver. The tragedy had happened only three months ago, on the thirteenth of November. Jean was cycling back from the village after her Wednesday night choir practice; “The driver said she fell off in front of him! There was nothing he could do,” Margaret told everyone ... “Drunken fool!” She was so upset that she couldn’t contemplate replacing her. Jean had been more than just a housekeeper. Then, one morning soon after Christmas Edna, her daily woman, told her about Irma. “She could put you in touch with Miss Webb! I’ve had my old granny come back to me, through Irma, several times. A great comfort it is, and she is a very nice young woman – not weird or anything!” At first, Margaret turned down the suggestion very firmly. The idea shocked her. She did not believe in life after death ...except for the way the Bible treated the subject, of course. Ordinary people didn’t come back as ghosts – she was quite sure! But the more Edna told her, the less certain she became. The nagging thought that she might get in touch with Jean gradually began to intrigue her, and she finally agreed to meet Edna’s friend. When Irma arrived at the house, the following morning, Margaret was already regretting having invited her ...one heard that it was dangerous to tamper with ‘ouija boards’ and the like. Trying to contact the dead was ‘Courting the Devil’ but it was too late ...Irma was standing before her, hand outstretched. This in itself was enough to repel Margaret ...it was up to her, the senior, to decide whether or not to shake hands, but she took it anyway, lightly. 7