Prologue
Anna Plowright trudged grimly along the country lane towards her cottage still two kilometres distant. She was soaked to the skin. The rain bucketed down and reduced her hair to a stringy ruin, and found every available gap in her clothing to trickle down her back and between her breasts.
When she had set out that morning for her daily ten-kilometre walk with the dog, the sun had been shining, the skies clear. Then apparently from out of nowhere clouds began to rapidly pile up, and down came the drenching rain. She had now walked four kilometres in the downpour.
The dog paid no heed to the watery environment and continued to race hither and thither in search of it knew not what. Anna, unlike the dog, was not happy. She splashed on cursing herself for not bringing an umbrella or waterproof coat and hat.
Rescue.
From behind Anna heard an approaching vehicle. There were only two residences along the lane, hers and the Seymour's place. She was not expecting anyone, so conjectured that it must be one of the Seymours or someone visiting them. An old utility truck passed her and pulled up. As she drew level with it a voice called out through the open window, "Like a lift, Mrs.Plowright?"
Anna observed that it was young Blake Seymour, a fairly recent arrival in the district. She readily assented to the lift, and heaving the dog into the back of the utility, she got in beside Blake.
They swished off along the lane and within a minute or two reached her cottage. The vehicle stopped, and Anna said to Blake, "I'd like to ask you in for a cup of tea or coffee, but I'm in such a mess I think we had better make it some other time." Blake smiled and said, "I'll keep you to that." Anna alighted, hauled the dog out of the back of the vehicle, and ran for the cottage door.
A Little Anna History.
Anna at the time of the downpour was fifty years old. She had been widowed twice and deserted by a lover once.
The lover whom she had met while at university had managed to get another girl pregnant at a drunken party, and being a gentleman, had deserted Anna and married the pregnant one.
Anna was distraught at this desertion. Despite the fact that she could have had the choice of many ardent young men, she deserted love and sex, and fell back on the teachings of her parents on the subject of security and safety, and married Mr.Bunting, an accountant and twenty years her senior. Mr.Bunting was amazed at his good fortune. Anna was young, tall, with dark blonde hair, brown eyes, and a figure of such excellence that, if she had been facially unattractive, no full blooded male would have noticed. As it happens, she was not facially unattractive, so she could be classified as one of those women that "had it all."
Mr.Bunting made certain his luck would continue by making sure Anna did indeed feel secure. I do not suggest that the marriage was the most passionate of unions, but Anna was happy and contented enough, until Mr.Bunting died at age fifty of a heart ailment.
Anna's security continued because Mr.Bunting left her very comfortably off financially. She also had continued a very attractive woman, her looks enhanced by maturity.
During the wind up of Mr.Bunting's accountancy affairs, she chanced to meet Mr.Plowright, one of Mr.Bunting's clients. Mr.Plowright was an orchardist in the nearby hills and only fifteen years Anna's senior. He owned an extensive property on which he grew a wide variety of fruit and profited well from his endeavors.
He courted and won the hand of Anna, and they married some fourteen months after Mr.Bunting's demise. He was a little more passionate than Mr.Bunting, but also a little more careless. Five years after their marriage, Mr.Plowright drove his tractor onto a hillside he knew he should not be attempting. The tractor rolled over crushing Mr.Plowright and thus ending his earthly life.
In addition to this act of carelessness, Anna discovered that the "Silly old fool," as she came to call him, freed from the accountancy restraints of Mr.Bunting, had taken financial affairs into his own hands. However worthy an orchardist he might have been, he had made a thorough mess of financial matters. This included some disastrous investments. In short, when all things were taken into account, Anna was heavily in debt.
To meet this situation Anna had to sell the property except for a cottage that had been part of the orchard. She also retained one acre of land around the cottage. In addition, the security conscious Anna, had retained the investments left to her by Mr.Bunting, and once married to Mr.Plowright, she left them to accumulate. Thus with Mr.Plowright's departure, she was not financially bereft. In fact, she was very comfortably off.
Having lost two husbands, Anna decided to call a halt to further marriages, although at thirty-eight she was still looking good. Some said she was at her best as far as looks were concerned, but sadly, as some people seem capable of doing, she shut up the sensual aspect of her nature.
She moved into the cottage, produced most of her own vegetables on the one acre, ran some chickens for eggs, and involved herself in church and charitable community affairs. This had been her lot for twelve years when she walked along the lane on the rainy day and was picked up by Blake.
Just a Little About Blake.
Blake Seymour was thirty the day he gave Anna a lift. He was the only son of Arthur and Sylvia Seymour who had bought the property from Anna.
At the time Anna moved into the cottage she was vaguely aware of a rather handsome teenager belonging to Arthur and Sylvia, but soon after he had disappeared from the scene. She was told that he had gone off to the State Agricultural College to study viticulture. He turned up at the Seymour's home from time to time, but this made no particular impression on Anna.
Over the years she heard that he had gone overseas to gain experience in his chosen field, and had taken in South Africa, France and California.
Eventually he had returned to what was now called, "The Seymour Place," and was filled with enthusiasm for his specialty. He was quite correct in this because South Australia had long been a producer of good wines, and was on the verge of entering the world markets with some outstanding vintages.
He persuaded Arthur and Sylvia to turn part of the property over to the growing of grapevines, and they let him have his head. The results eventually proved more profitable than their previous crops; so more and more land was turned over to vines.
Anna Considers.
During the brief ride with Blake, Anna, despite her physical discomfort, was aware of the nearness of a rather handsome man. Upon leaving him, and in the process of drying herself and the dog, and changing her clothes, Anna gave thoughtful consideration to Blake.
It was odd that he was not married, and as far as she knew, had no female attachments. Not, of course, that she knew him very well. She had barely spoken to him since he had returned to the district, and as she had decided to leave men out of her life, she had not registered him properly as an attractive man.
At fifty, she in any case considered herself beyond the interest of men, especially young men like Blake. "Who would want an old bird like me," she thought, when she occasionally caught herself looking at some virile youth. In this respect she was like many of us, she expected nothing, and got nothing.
It came as a surprise, therefore, when two days after the ride with Blake, he drove a tractor up to her cottage with a trailer full of logs.
Anna left her vegetable garden and went to greet him, and he said, "I noticed you have a wood fire in the cottage. I've seen the smoke from your chimney. We've been taking out the apple trees down by the south fence, so I had the contractors cut them up as I thought you might like them for firewood. Just leave them to dry out for next winter."
Anna expressed her gratitude for his thoughtfulness, and was just about to invite him in for a cup of coffee when he said, "I'll take you upon on that cup of coffee if that's all right." Anna confirmed that it would certainly be all right.
Blake had never been inside the cottage, so he took an interest in what he saw. It was furnished and decorated in a rather nostalgic style, with chintz-covered chairs and sofa, and with horse brasses and copper utensils, all highly polished, scattered around the room on shelves. In one corner of the room, he saw a computer that looked oddly astray in its environment. It was one of Anna's "Little indulgences."
Over coffee Blake talked about his plans for the Seymour Place, which consisted mostly of the pulling out of more trees to be replaced with vines. Anna asked if eventually there might be overproduction. Blake said he foresaw a growth in the market for locally produced olive oil, so he might consider planting an olive grove. "Hmm, a far seeing young man," thought Anna, who was starting to become aware of Blake's intelligence and, more dangerously, his charm.
It was this latter aspect of Blake's personality that slightly alarmed Anna, as she felt herself beginning to be more interested in him than she thought she ought. Hence, when the conversation got around to her life she proved very reticent in giving close details. She kept it very general and focused on her garden and the many local committees she served on.