

She told herself it was all part of her New Year’s resolution – to approach 1959 with a fresh pair of eyes and expectations – but there was a small internal voice that wondered whether she wasn’t rather tormenting her husband just a little with the sudden breach of protocol. The arrival of the thought, her own decisiveness, had been intoxicating. She’d walked across it when she was cutting flowers for the table earlier and been struck by the pretty westward view towards the mountains. Usually they sat beneath the walnut tree on the eastern lawn, but today she’d been drawn to the stretch of grass in the shade of Mr Wentworth’s cedar. Isabel had decided to set up in a different part of the garden this year.

Unthinkable that they would do otherwise: the Turners were big on tradition, and with Nora and Richard visiting from Sydney, neither frippery nor fan-fare was to be skipped. A small affair, just family, but Thomas would require all the trimmings. And, of course, there was to be a lunch party to mark the new year.
