We bought a cottage in a sleepy Yorkshire hamlet.
It was the young couple, Tom and Bethany, who sold it; they told us their mother had passed and the family no longer needed the retreat.
Since the old ladys death the place had been left untouchedno one came except the buyers.
Will you be taking any things? I asked.
Why bother? they replied indifferently. Its just junk. Weve taken the icons; you can toss the rest.
John stared at the walls where faint rectangles glowedempty frames where icons once hung.
And the photographs? he whispered. Why didnt you take those?
Faces stared back from the plastermen, women, children. An entire lineage frozen in time.
People used to dress their homes not with wallpaper but with memory.
I thought of my own grandmother, Mary, who always had a fresh picture in a gilt frameeither me or my sister, Elspeth.
Each morning I rise, bow to my parents, kiss my husband, smile at the children, wink at you, and the day begins, she used to say.
When Mary died we hung her portrait beside Grandfather Arthurs.
Now, whenever we drive into the villagenow affectionately called the retreatwe send Mary a breathsoft kiss each sunrise.
It feels as if the cottage instantly fills with the scent of fresh scones and warm milk, and her presence settles over us.
We never met the grandfather; he fell in the war. Yet his photograph hangs in the centre, and Mary spoke of him often.
We watched his face, felt him sit at the table with us. He stayed forever young, she grew old. Their pictures now sit side by side.
Those faded photographs are priceless to me.
If I had to choose what to take, I would only take them.
They called everything else junk. Everyone values differently, but not everyone sees what truly matters.
After the purchase we began clearing out the place. And, truth be told, I could not lift a hand to discard any of the ladys belongings.
It seemed she had lived solely for her children and grandchildren, and they had simply forgotten her.
How could I know? She used to write letters to them. At first she mailed them, receiving no reply. Then she stopped.
In the wardrobe lay three neat stacks of unsent letters, each tied with ribbon, brimming with love and tenderness.
I confesswe read them.
Then I understood why she never sent them: she feared they would be lost, hoping that after her death her children would discover and read them.
Within those pages lay an entire lifeher childhood, the war, the family saga, the memory of generations.
She wrote so that the past would not fade.
Tears streamed down my face.
Lets take these letters to her children, I told Tom. We cant just throw them away.
Do you think theyll care more than the grandchildren? he replied bitterly. None of them ever showed up.
Maybe theyre old, ill
Ill call them. Through a neighbour we got a number.
On the other end a bright, brisk female voice said, Just throw everything away! She kept sending us those letters in bundles. We stopped reading them ages ago. She was just making up excuses!
Tom didnt even listen; he hung up.
If she were here now, he muttered, I cant imagine what Id say in anger. He turned to me.
Youre a writer. Put her story down so it doesnt disappear.
And if the relatives get upset?
Those people dont read books, he sighed. But Ill handle the paperwork.
He didwent to the council, obtained written permission.
Meanwhile I descended into the cellar of the old thatched cottages. It was cool, smelling of earth and time. Shelves bore jars of preserves and pickles, each with a yellowed label: Vanyas favourite mushrooms, Sunnys chanterelles, Cucumbers for Albert, Raspberry jam for Sammy.
Vanya had died ten years ago. Sunny and Albert were gone too.
P.S. Annabelle Larkins had six children. All predeceased her except her youngest daughter the one who called everything junk.
Their mother waited, labelling jars with love. The last jars of mushrooms bore last years date. She was ninetythree.





