Janet and I had been friends and neighbours for years, long before her husband and my wife died.
Now we were both in our late seventies yet still very active. Apart from our competitive love of gardening, we served on several village committees together. We met two or three times a week at some function or other.
The village had expected us to marry, in order to merge the estates or some such silly notion. Our children and grandchildren would inherit whatever we left. We had enough grandchildren to half populate the village. Perhaps I exaggerate but the total must be over twenty grandchildren. I can keep track of my own but I'm lost when it comes to counting Janet's. We seem to have visiting small fry all summer in and out of both houses indiscriminately.
This spring I nearly asked Janet to marry me. Then we fell out over our gardens. Both of us used organic methods of pest control. We planted to minimise greenfly, encouraged toads and grassnakes, and cared for our hedgehogs. We had built hedgehog houses to let them hibernate in peace. Janet had a hedgehog. I had another. Mine was larger and darker.
When we saw and heard the first signs that the hedgehogs were up and about we both put out food to encourage them to stay. That caused the rift between us.
"Alan!" Janet shrieked at me across the hedge, "My hedgehog's in YOUR garden. What have you been doing?"
I was surprised at the attack.
"Me, Janet? I've done nothing."
"You must have. My hedgehog always stayed in my garden. It's big enough."
That was true. Her garden was about one and a half acres. Mine was marginally smaller.
I had noticed that I had more slugs than normal. I had assumed the hedgehogs had hibernated longer. I hadn't seen evidence of two hedgehogs at work in my garden.
I made a mistake.
"Are you sure it was your hedgehog? I've got too many slugs."
"Are you suggesting I'd lie?"
"No, but..."