Australian Women’s Weekly NZ

The fortunes of war

The dingoes had howled across the mountains, and the possum who ruled the ceiling and the lemon tree had indulged in his nightly growling battle with any intruder into his kingdom, but this morning Wombat Hills seemed peaceful, the only sound the thud of the wallabies once again failing to get through the fence to the rose garden. Mrs Douglas Mulberry (née Agnes Glock) opened her eyes in her late mother-in-law’s bed while across the room her late mother-in-law’s maid, Trout, added more wood to the bedroom fire. To Agnes’s relief her husband was not lying beside her. Douglas must have had a good night again.

The curtains were open, as usual, as were the windows. The air smelled of chilled gum tree from yesterday’s late spring snow. Douglas did not like closed windows, even in the mountain winters, nor closed curtains at night.

Across the room the two cherubs that supported her mother-in-law’s chaise longue stared at Agnes, unblinking. It was a perfectly good chaise longue. The bed was comfortable, and the linen sheets worn to an incomparable softness. The only fault Agnes could find with them – and the rest of the house furnishings – was that they had been

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Australian Women’s Weekly NZ

Australian Women’s Weekly NZ1 min read
Cooking Class
Where possible, aim for free-range eggs and good quality flour. ’00’ flour is a finely ground flour that helps create silky smooth doughs. You can also mix the pasta dough in a food processor until a dough forms; turn onto a lightly floured work sur
Australian Women’s Weekly NZ2 min read
Home Sweet Home
Designing kitchens is a passion of mine – what better way to understand how different people live and use their spaces than by crafting a room where they cook, gather with family and friends, and enjoy the best things in life? The family living in th
Australian Women’s Weekly NZ5 min read
Yes, Menopause Brain Does Exist
Along with sweating and poor sleep often comes something many menopausal women don’t anticipate: Brain fog. Few things are more disconcerting than when your brain feels like mush rather than the sharp and useful tool you’ve been used to, or when your

Related Books & Audiobooks