Rebecca Shaw
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Muriel Hipkin turned over in bed to look at her floral china bedside clock. It said a quarter to eight - another fifteen minutes before she needed to rise. It was Easter Sunday today, such a special day in the Christian calendar, and this particular Easter Sunday was extra special, for the new Rector would be taking his first service. The Reverend Peter Alexander Harris MA (Oxon) was young and full of vigour, so different from dear Mr Furbank. She'd always had hopes of dear Mr Furbank, but now he'd died and so suddenly, too, and it was too late. Too late for lots of things.

Her tiny bedroom caught the first shafts of sun each morning and she lay revelling in its warmth. The neat floral curtains with their tiny pattern matched the neat floral bedspread. The carpet was cream with a tiny pattern on it, too. This was the first house she'd ever lived in where the choice of colours and furniture had been her own, her very own. Before, it had always been Mother's choice - nice, sensible dark reds and browns, lifeless and 'practical'. That particular bondage had been laid to rest four years ago. Muriel had been a willing slave but it wasn't until her Mother passed over Jordan that she realised how she had been bound hand and foot. Her money kept the house and fed them, her money paid the bills for the special foods and the extra warmth, but she'd made none of the decisions.

Released from her chains, she'd returned to the village of Turnham Malpas where she had been born, and bought this 'starter home' - except that for her, it would be the starter and the finisher. No moving up to better things. This was it - till she needed constant care in a home, heaven forbid. The house was tiny. It had one living room out of which a square was taken to provide a minute kitchen. In the back corner of the living room was a spiral staircase which led to the small landing, hardly bigger than a doormat. Upstairs was one bedroom, and one miniscule bathroom. Not even a space for the vacuum cleaner, which had to live under the spiral stairs. Its compensation was that it was built alongside the churchyard. Glebe Cottages, the little row was called. No one else wanted Muriel's house, with its view of the ancient graves and the lych gate and the church, but it had a large garden which curved comfortably around the churchyard wall. Muriel loved gardening, and hers was the pride of the village. She'd won so many prizes at the annual Village Show the two years she'd been entering, it was becoming embarrassing. Maybe this year she wouldn't enter anything at all and give everyone else a chance.

Eight o' clock. As the church clock chimed the last stroke, Pericles came tip-tapping up the stairs. His bright brown eyes sparkled with delight as he flung himself on Muriel's bed. His snow-white fur contrasted sharply with his bright black nose.

'Off the bed, Perry, you naughty dog! Get off.' He leapt down and sprang about the bedroom, looking for slippers or shoes to race off downstairs with. Muriel got up and chased him out. Looking through her bedroom window, she could just see the back garden of the village store. Eight o' clock on Sundays, James Charter-Plackett - new owner of what was the village shop, but which now gave the appearance of being a miniature Harrods Food Hall - stood naked on the side of his brand-new pool and dived in, shallowly, for the pool was not really deep enough but it was the only way he could force himself to take his morning exercise.

Harriet Charter-Plackett, also naked, followed him in. Muriel could just glimpse them as they stood side by side on the pool edge. She'd once seen her father undressed when she was nursing him through his last illness and had been somewhat surprised, but James, or 'Jimbo' as he preferred to be called, was the first man she'd actually had a chance to take a good look at. This cavorting naked in the garden had caused a minor scandal when the couple first started doing it, but the locals now accepted it as one of the idiosyncrasies of a townie. Besides, they liked the revival of their village shop. Mrs Thornton's fly-blown cakes and tired lettuces and the cigarette ash dusting everything was no longer acceptable in 1990. After all, you had to move with the times, hadn't you? It was time for a change.

Muriel glanced at her slim figure shrouded in its long cotton nightgown - white, of course. In school photographs Mother had only to look for the palest blob of a face to find it was Muriel. She was still a pale blob. Pale skin, pale blue eyes, pale fair hair, and that was going paler still now it had white streaks in it. In strong sun she was almost obliterated. At boarding school (only a minor one - her parents couldn't afford one of the better ones) she had been taught to undress without the necessity of revealing any part of her anatomy. It was unseemly to expose oneself, the Anglican nuns had declared. Muriel often wondered how much their teaching had influenced her relationships in later years. They'd taught her embarrassment and shyness and modesty to such an extent that she had never been able to communicate properly with the opposite sex - except for dear Mr Furbank, of course. Some people might have sniggered that maybe he wasn't of the opposite sex, anyway, and that was why she got on with him so well. She straightened her shoulders; she must correct her habit of stooping.

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Turnham Malpas Books
The Village Green Affair
The New Rector
Talk of the Village
Village Matters
The Village Show
Village Secrets
Scandal in the Village
Village Gossip
Trouble in the Village
A Village Dilemma
Intrigue in the Village
Whispers in the Village
A Village Feud
Turnham Malpas Features
Turnham Malpas Map
Character Profiles
The Who Quiz
Forthcoming Titles
 
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