There were two Misses Coles: Miss Lynette and Miss Lorraine. According to Sidney, who was their gardener before me, Miss Lynette was briefly Mrs Haysham. But the marriage was rather short lived. It seems that Mr Haysham, an up-and-coming solicitor, preferred the company of handsome young men. 'I reckon he just had his eye on Miss Lynette's money,' Sidney said. 'Probably thought that he could have it both ways. But apparently not.' Less than a year after their (local) society wedding, Miss Lynette was back living with Miss Lorraine and back to being Miss Coles.
The Misses Coles' father, Henry Longman Coles, had once owned most of the land on which Staverly Park is now built. I remember my grandfather muttering that it was perhaps the poorest land in all of southern England. 'Not even good for growing asparagus,' he said. 'What with the stones in the ground and the salt in the air ....' But it turned out to be just perfect for about three-and-a-half thousand houses, two schools, an industrial estate, and a major shopping centre.
After Henry Coles sold 'the poorest land in all of southern England', he took some of the proceeds and built an appropriately-impressive mansion on a three acre plot on a small rise overlooking the river. Unfortunately, he and his family had only lived in their new house for a couple of years when Mr and Mrs Coles took a trip to Florida. It was there that they had the misfortune to be killed when a high-speed boat which they had chartered slammed into a partly submerge shipping container. At the time of their parents' untimely demise, the Misses Coles were in their early 20s. By the time I became the Misses Coles' gardener, Miss Lynette must have been about 40, and Miss Lorraine a couple of years younger.
Why the unmarried sisters had continued to live in a house big enough for a family of 12 was something that I never quite understood. But they did. Miss Lorraine attended to the house and supervised my care of the gardens; and Miss Lynette produced a seemingly-endless stream of highly-saleable artworks, mainly paintings.
Even though Miss Lorraine was the younger of the two sisters, it was she who kept the family and the estate connected to the local community. Miss Lorraine had what my mother called 'a sweet demeanour'. Miss Lynette, on the other hand, was quite distant, quite standoffish, and you always got the feeling that she was just slightly irritated. Although what she had to be irritated about was something else that was beyond me. With the income from their father's investments, and the revenue from the sale of Miss Lynette's artworks, the ladies seemed to enjoy a pretty enviable lifestyle.
I was clipping the box hedge that separates the vegetable garden from the upper lawn when Miss Lorraine came to tell me that she was going out to Australia for three weeks. 'My aunt -- who is also my godmother -- is turning 70,' she said. 'Three score years and ten. Even in this day and age, quite an achievement. It's certainly a milestone that deserves to be celebrated.'
'And Miss Lynette?'
'She has a solo show up in London. At the Pickbourne Gallery. She may or may not actually go to the opening, but she likes to be "on hand", as it were. So, no, she will not be coming on this occasion.' Miss Lorraine handed me a folded piece of paper. 'I have drawn up a list of things that you might like to consider attending to in my absence. But it's just a suggestion, you understand. I think that we are fast reaching the point where you know the garden and its needs almost as well as I do. Perhaps better.' And she smiled.
When I arrived for work the next morning, the Misses Coles were just leaving for the airport, Miss Lynette driving Miss Lorraine in her Volvo Estate. Miss Lorraine smiled and waved; Miss Lynette frowned and concentrated on the road ahead.
I finished off trimming the box hedge and, as I started to rake up the clippings, it began to rain. At first, the rain was quite light, just drizzle really. It was not even worth getting my jacket out. But by the time I had finished tidying up it had turned into proper rain. Fortunately, there were plenty of things for me to do inside the greenhouse.
I was still working in the greenhouse when, shortly before three o'clock, Miss Lynette arrived carrying two mugs of tea. 'My sister said that I should bring you tea. Milk and one sugar.'
'The sugar's optional,' I said. 'But thank you.'
'She will be on her way by now,' Miss Lynette said, looking up towards the sky. 'It's quite a long way to Australia.'
'Yes. Any further, and you start coming back again.'
She frowned and then nodded. 'Yes. I suppose so.' And she made a little circling movement with her out-stretched forefinger as though she was tracing a path around an imaginary globe.
Technically, I suppose that both Misses Coles were my employer; but because Miss Lorraine managed the house and gardens, I seldom exchanged more than a few words with Miss Lynette. In the two years that I had been working for them, I don't suppose that we had exchanged more than a couple of hundred words.
'Have you been to Australia?' Miss Lynette asked.
I said that I hadn't. I told her that I had been to France and to Spain, but that was about it.
'A lot of young people do go though,' she said in a tone of voice that suggested that she didn't entirely approve. 'I wonder why. The prospect of an endless summer? Do you think that's the attraction?'
'I suppose so. The weather. The beaches. The sport.'
'Our aunt lives in a place called Gold Coast.' (She pronounced Gold Coast with equal emphasis on each of the two words.) 'I'm not sure whether it is named Gold Coast because it is a source of gold, or as an evocation of golden weather, that endless summer thing again. I hope that my sister won't find it too hot.'
An old school friend had moved to the Gold Coast where he was the concierge for a multi-storied apartment building. He said that the heat could be very trying during the summer months. But I didn't mention this to Miss Lynette. 'I gather it's a little like the Costas,' I said.
Again, she nodded. 'Fish and chips and English beer.'
'Well, maybe fish and chips. But the beer's probably Australian. They make quite a lot of their own.'
'And what will you be doing tomorrow,' Miss Lynette asked.
'Depends a bit on the weather. This rain looks as if it might have set in. But that's OK. There are still lots of things that I can be doing in here.'
She frowned slightly and looked me up and down. 'Hmm. Well, if you don't have anything urgent to do, I think I would like to paint you.'
My first reaction was to ask: What colour? But I didn't. I just sort of laughed. Nervously. 'Me?'
'Yes. But don't worry; you won't have to do anything. Just sit there. Stand there. I haven't really decided yet.'
A couple of weeks after I had started working for the Misses Coles, Miss Lynette had an exhibition at the local library. There must have been about 25 paintings and I thought that they were very good -- not that I really know too much about art.
Mostly they were paintings of the countryside. Fields of stubble. Trees. Snow drifts. And lots of interesting clouds. There were also several paintings of the river, and some of the sea shore. Some of the paintings had people in them -- farmers, fishermen, kids, that sort of thing. But when you looked closely, the people were just dabs and splodges of paint. It was very clever the way that she could just make a mark and when you looked at it you thought that you were looking at a scarf or a jumper or someone's hair blowing in the wind.
When I arrived at the greenhouse the next morning, Miss Lynette was already there. She had set up an easel and beside it there was a small folding table with paints and an earthenware pot with brushes and some other stuff.