Read the First Chapter of The Last Garden in England
Prologue
January 1908
Her steps in sturdy walking boots are steady on the stone path despite the ice that crunches underfoot. All around her, snow-covered branches bend and bow, threatening to break. All is quiet.
She walks deeper into this winter garden. Stark and beautiful, with its clusters of silver birches broken by dogwood, bloodred stems violent against mournful grasses bending in the wind. Pure white hellebores—the Christmas rose—dot the border. It pains her to think that in a month, the first green heads of snowdrops will burst forth through the snow in elegant white blooms before purple crocuses with vibrant yellow stamen follow. She will not see these heralds of spring. Others will have to read the signs that this garden is ready to relinquish its crown.
She stops at the edge of the stone path, sorrow clawing at her like a feral beast desperate to break free. She wipes away a half-frozen tear. She should not be here, yet she could not leave without once again seeing this place of love and loss.
No. She won’t stay long. Only the length of a goodbye.
Emma
February 2021
Even if Emma hadn’t been looking for the turnoff, Highbury House would have been hard to miss. Two brick pillars topped with a pair of stone lions rose up from a gap in the hedgerow, harkening to a time of carriages and riding to hounds, hunt balls and elaborate house parties.
She turned into the gravel drive, steeling herself to meet her clients. Normally she wouldn’t take a job sight unseen, but she’d been too wrapped up in the restoration project at Mallow Glen to travel down from Scotland for a site survey. Instead, Emma’s best friend and the head of her crew at Turning Back Thyme, Charlie, had gone ahead and done the measurements, while Sydney Wilcox, Highbury House’s owner, had arranged a series of video chats to explain the project: to return the once-spectacular gardens to their former glory.
The short drive opened up into a courtyard, around which the U-shaped house was built, but its elegance was marred by piles of construction debris.
Emma parked behind a steel-gray Range Rover and climbed out, slinging her heavy canvas workbag over her shoulder. The high-pitched whine of power tools filled the air, followed by a volley of barks. Out of the corner of her eye, she caught a flash of red. A pair of Irish setters bounded through the front door, straight for her.
She threw up her hands to fend off the smaller of the two dogs, who still managed to rear up on its hind legs, planting its paws on her shoulders and licking her face. The other danced around her feet, barking encouragement.
She tried to push the dogs away as Sydney burst out of the doorway, half jogging across the courtyard. “Bonnie, get down! Clyde, let Emma through!”
“They’re fine,” said Emma, hoping she sounded at least a little convincing as Bonnie managed another lick. “You’d be surprised how many of my jobs start like this, especially in the country. Everyone keeps dogs.”
“I really am so sorry. We spent so much time and money training them, and we still ended up with two of the most ill-behaved dogs in all of Warwickshire.” Sydney grabbed Bonnie’s collar and hauled her away while Clyde went to sit obediently at his owner’s feet.
“Don’t pretend you aren’t as bad as her,” Sydney chided Clyde, her voice reminiscent of good schools, lessons at the local riding club, and Saturday cricket on the village green.
Straightening, Sydney reached up to reclip her curly red hair.
“I’m sorry about that. These two follow the builders around all day long. Someone must have left the door open. Did you have any trouble getting up here? Was there traffic on the M40? Sometimes it’s a nightmare. Did you find the turnoff okay?”
Emma blinked, wondering which question to answer first. A cheery chaos seemed to swirl around the owner of Highbury House. Emma had noticed it on their calls, but in person, surrounded by a pair of dogs, in the shadow of a house under construction, it was an entirely different experience. Finally, she said, “I didn’t have any problems finding the house.”
“I’m so glad you arrived when you did. It rained this morning, and I told Andrew that it wouldn’t do for your first real look at the garden to be in the middle of a rainstorm. But then it cleared, and now here you are!” Sydney turned toward the house, gesturing for Emma to follow. “You’ll have to forgive the noise.”
“Are you living here through the construction?” Emma raised her voice to ask as she peered around the entryway draped in drop cloths. A ladder stood next to a grand staircase bracketed by a hand-carved banister, and the scent of fresh paint hung in the air, although the walls looked as though they had only just been stripped of wallpaper.
“We are,” a man’s voice came from over Emma’s shoulder. “I’m Andrew. It’s a pleasure to meet you in person.”
Emma shook Andrew’s hand, letting her eyes slide between the husband and wife. He towered over sprightly Sydney, his Clark Kent glasses sitting on the bridge of his nose and his short brown hair combed neatly to the side. He wrapped his arm around his wife’s waist as though it was the most natural thing in the world, looking down at her with a healthy mixture of amusement and adoration.
Even standing amid the dust of a half-finished house, the Wilcoxes exuded polish, education, class. They were a golden couple, which— experience had taught her—made them all the more likely to be huge pains. However, they were paying customers who wanted a restoration project, not a brand-new garden, and they hadn’t even flinched when Emma had given them a quote.
“Andrew let me convince him that we should be on-site through the restoration work.” Sydney bit her full lower lip. “It’s been a bigger project than even we expected.”
Andrew shook his head. “Six months they said.”
“How long has it been going on now?” Emma asked.
“Eighteen months, and we’ve only done up one wing of the house.
There’s so much still left,” said Sydney. “Darling, I was just going to take Emma for a tour of the garden.”
“I don’t want to bother you,” Emma said quickly. “I’ve been working off Charlie’s specs. I’m sure I can find my own way.”
“I insist,” said Sydney. “I’d love to hear your first impressions, and I have a few ideas.”
Ideas. All of her clients had ideas, but so few of them were good. Like the man outside of Glasgow who insisted he wanted a tropical garden in the middle of Scotland despite her warnings that it would require intensive work to maintain. He’d called her six months after Turning Back Thyme had packed up and moved on to another job, complaining that every single one of his banana plants had died over the winter and wanting them replaced for free. She’d politely pointed to her contract, which stated she was not responsible for neglect on the part of the owner.
At least Highbury House would be different in that regard—a respite from all of the contemporary design projects she took on to keep the business afloat. A historic garden of some importance that had lain virtually abandoned for years, the Wilcoxes wanted to see it bloom again just as it had when it had been created in 1907.
Although they took up time and research well beyond her modern projects, Emma loved nothing more than sinking her spade into a restoration. She’d done battle against poured-concrete patios and cursed stretches of lawn previous owners had laid down because it was “easier” than doing any real gardening. In one particularly egregious instance, she’d ripped out a half acre of artificial lawn installed in the 1970s and re-created the eighteenth-century French knot garden through which ladies in powdered wigs had once strolled. She could make long-forgotten gardens bloom out of pastures and paddocks. She could rewind the clock. Make things right again.
Still, she couldn’t live on challenge alone, and since Sydney would be paying her bills for nearly a year, she would humor Sydney’s ideas. Within reason.
“I’d be glad of the company,” she said, putting as much enthusiasm as she could into her voice.
“Are you coming, darling?” Sydney asked Andrew.
“I would, but Greg said something about floor joists earlier,” he said. “What about them?” Sydney asked.
Andrew gave a half laugh and pushed his glasses up. “Apparently we don’t have any in the music room. They’ve rotted straight through.” Emma’s brows rose as Sydney’s mouth formed an O.
Andrew waved a goodbye, darted around the ladder, and disappeared through one of the doors off the entryway.
“I’m afraid that’s been happening a lot recently.” Sydney pointed to a pair of French doors that had been stripped of their paint and looked like they were waiting for a good sanding. “The easiest access to the garden is just through here.”
Emma followed her employer out onto a wide veranda. Some of the huge slabs of slate were cracked underfoot and weeds pushed up through the gaps, but there was no denying the view’s beauty. A long lawn rolled down a gentle hill to trees lining a calm lake. She squinted, conjuring up the old photograph she’d found in the Warwick Archives showing the garden during a party in the 1920s. There had once been a short set of stairs down to a reflecting pool surrounded by two quarter circles of box as well as a long border that ran the eastern length of the property. Now there was nothing but a stretch of uninterrupted lawn that held none of the charm that surely would have imbued Venetia Smith’s original design.
Excitement pricked the back of her neck. Despite Turning Back Thyme’s hard-earned reputation for conservation work, she had yet to restore a Venetia Smith garden. Long before she’d become famous in America, the Edwardian garden designer had designed a handful of gardens here in Britain. Emma owed her career to a BBC program about the restoration of Venetia’s garden at Longmarsh House. At seventeen, she’d insisted that her parents take her to Longmarsh House on holiday. While most of her friends were thinking about where they might go to university, she stood in that restored garden and knew what she wanted to do with her life.
As they descended the veranda steps, Sydney gestured to the eastern edge of the lawn. “There isn’t much of the shade border left.”
Emma walked to one of the gnarled trunks that made up the long straight path down the east side of the great lawn. The cold, rough bark felt comfortingly familiar under her hand. “The trees along the lime walk look as though they’ve been well maintained.”
“That would be the garden service. Dad kept on the same company that Granddad employed. They do what they can to keep things tidy,” said Sydney.
Tidy but nothing more.
“This whole stretch would have been much more vibrant when it was first created,” said Emma.
“Even in the shade?”
Emma smiled. “It’s a common misconception that shade gardens are dull. I haven’t found an archival photograph of how it looked when Venetia planted it, but she loved color, so we can assume she used it.”
“I bought a couple of collections of her books and diaries after our last call,” Sydney said. “She wrote so much, I almost didn’t know where to start.” “Her diaries are my favorite. She published a few between the wars, but about twenty years ago someone bought her old house in Wimbledon and found two from her very first projects,” said Emma.
“But not Highbury.”
She shook her head. “If they had, we’d have a built-in project plan.
The tea garden is through there?” she asked, nodding to a gated passageway between the lime trees.
“Yes,” said Sydney.
The neatness of the lime walk dropped away as soon as they crossed into the tea garden. An enclosed room, it would have been created as a sanctuary for ladies to gossip among soft pastels of whimsical flowers. Now it was chaos.
“The gardeners don’t make it into the garden rooms much,” said Sydney, a touch of apology in her voice. “Dad said it was expensive enough to do the lawn and the parts you can see from the house.”
It showed. A stand of dead gaura twined with dead Queen Anne’s lace, all dried-up and falling over itself. Several sad clumps of roses heavy with hips had become scraggly from too many winters gone without a good hard pruning, and Emma doubted they threw off more than a dozen blooms in June. Everything else was an indiscriminate mix of long-dead flowers and weeds.
“I can help you find a crew to maintain the gardens when I’m done here,” she said.
“That bad, is it?” Sydney asked with a laugh.
“If I were your dad, I’d ask for my money back. That entire patch looks like it’s just weeds,” she said, pointing to an odd gap of packed earth where a single bindweed-covered teak bench sat forgotten. “There was probably once a gazebo or a pergola of some sort there.”
“It was one of the casualties of the Great Storm of ’87. I know we lost some trees on the edge of the lake and in the ramble. I found receipts for the tree surgeons in Granddad’s records,” said Sydney.
“Did you have any luck finding anything from 1907 when the garden was created?” she asked.
“Not yet, but don’t worry. Granddad never threw anything out. I’m still pulling boxes of papers out of the study, and I haven’t even tackled the attics yet. If there’s something there, I’ll find it,” said Sydney.
Emma followed Sydney through a yew hedge into the lovers’ garden, which featured bare clumps of ground and struggling tropicals Emma was certain Venetia wouldn’t have had access to in her time. Beyond that, the children’s garden was little more than a collection of wildflowers and four large cherry trees in desperate need of pruning, and the lavender walk was wildly overgrown but thriving. The sculpture garden was now mostly lawn and a few broken, weather-scarred statues. Next was a mismatched garden Emma still couldn’t place the purpose of, despite her research, and what was supposed to be a white garden that had self-seeded into what she was certain would be a multitude of colors come spring. Down they walked into what Emma guessed was a long-defunct water garden, the long low trough in the middle of it now choked with nonaquatic weeds. It all struck her as . . . sad, an indistinct mess of sprawling neglect.
“And that,” said Sydney, as they walked down a path between the water garden and the white garden, “brings us to this.”
At first, all Emma saw above the tall brick wall were the reaching tops of trees and long canes of a climbing rose fighting for supremacy and sunlight. However, as they walked around the gently curving wall that formed a circle of brick, they came to an iron gate rusted brown and orange. Vines twined around its bars, and stems shot out rudely, giving Emma the distinct impression that everything in this garden was desperate to escape.
“This must be the one Charlie warned me about,” she said.
“The winter garden. When I was little, we only came up to the house two times a year—for Granddad’s birthday and on Boxing Day—but I remember Dad walking me around the gardens every time. In the depths of December, this would be the only bit that seemed alive,” said Sydney.
“You’ve been inside?” Emma asked, wrapping her hands around the iron bars and trying in vain to see beyond the thick foliage.
“No, it’s been locked for as long as I can remember.”
Emma ran her finger over the huge keyhole cut into the iron. “And I take it there’s no key to the gate, then.”
Sydney shook her head. “Another thing I’m hunting for. Andrew suggested getting a locksmith in for the gate, but I’ve called two and they both said that the condition and age of the gate means they might have to cut through it off its hinges to get it open. Doing that just feels . . . wrong.”
“Wrong?” Emma asked, pulling back.
“I couldn’t in good conscience destroy part of the garden’s history while I’m working so hard to restore the house. And . . .” Sydney paused. “There’s just something about the winter garden. It feels so abandoned.”
The entire garden was a living example of neglect, but Emma saw her point. She guessed Sydney was around her age, and the idea that someone could leave this garden untouched and untended for thirty-five years made her shiver. It was so . . . sinister? Solemn?
Secretive.
Nothing about this job was going to be easy. There were no plans, there was little archive material, and much of the original structure of the garden had been lost to time. But while that might have scared off some of her competitors who preferred the ease of designing a contemporary garden to their clients’ exact specifications, Emma couldn’t help the hint of excitement that fizzed through her when she looked at the hopeless mess. A project like this was what made slogging through payroll and ordering and appointments with her accountant worth it. Highbury House was the sort of project she loved.
“Well, we could get a ladder and try to scale the wall,” Emma suggested.
“Andrew had a go at that,” Sydney said. “He got up there and realized that there was nowhere to safely put a ladder down the other side.”
“When was this?” she asked.
“Right after we sold our company. We offered to buy the house from Mum and Dad. Granddad had left them some money, but most of it went to fixing leaks in the roof and trying to heat the place so the damp didn’t set in. It had become a bit of a millstone over the years, but Dad never had the heart to sell it,” Sydney said.
Emma offered her a small smile. “And now you’ve decided to put it back together again.”
“That’s right. We’re Sydney and Andrew Wilcox, saviors of old houses.”
“And their gardens,” Emma said.
“I hope that the scale of the project hasn’t scared you off,” Sydney said.
Even if the size of the Highbury House project had been intimidating, Emma still would have taken it. Mallow Glen had run over by a month because of three different issues with suppliers, forcing her to sacrifice a smaller job doing up a cottage garden in Leicestershire while prepping for Highbury House. Losing that additional injection of money into the business hurt, but Highbury would be a much bigger prize.
“It is tricky,” she admitted. “We just don’t have that much to go on in the way of original documentation or photos, so I’ve drawn up plans based on Venetia’s other designs from the same era,” she said.
“I’ll work on those boxes, I promise,” said Sydney. “Now, what happens next?”
“The crew arrives. You’ve already met Charlie, but there’s Jessa, Zack, and Vishal, too. They’ll start by clearing away the overgrown vegetation so we can really see what we’re working with. I should be able to show you final plans this week.”
Sydney clasped her hands in front of her, looking for all the world as though she was about to break out into song like the heroine in a musical. Instead she said, “I cannot wait.”
Neither, Emma thought, can I.
Emma shifted the groceries she’d picked up from one arm to another and pulled the keys out of her pocket. The letting agent had offered to walk her through Bow Cottage, but she had politely declined. After a day of following Sydney around, she was craving the peace and quiet of her rental.
After just two attempts, she managed to open the red front door and switch the hall light on. She let the door swing shut behind her and let out a sigh of relief before setting about searching for the kitchen in her home for the next nine months. She would deal with the luggage crammed into the back of her car later. First she needed a cup of tea and to charge her mobile.
She found a good-sized sitting room right off the entryway and a small study next to it. Across the hall was a dining room with a big plank-topped table that she would use for drafting rather than entertaining. Next door was the kitchen: basic but pretty, with gauze curtains hanging in the wide windows that looked out over a brick patio and lawn of dwarf ryegrass with a mature Magnolia grandiflora at the back. She slid her grocery bags onto the counter, plugged in her dead phone, filled the electric kettle that stood ready, and began stocking her temporary refrigerator.
She’d just put yogurt and milk away when a message chimed through. She winced when she saw how many texts she’d missed, including several from Charlie asking her if she wanted him to bring anything the next morning when they met on-site and then teasing her for letting her phone run down yet again.
As she kept scrolling, she saw she’d missed a call from Dad. She dialed him back and put the phone on speaker so she could continue to unload her provisions.
“You all right, Emma?” came her dad’s voice, his South London accent out in full force.
“You sound chipper,” she said with a smile.
“I’ve been waiting by the phone all day to hear how your first day went.”
“Hello, love!” called her mother, somewhere in the background. “I’m glad to see you aren’t neglecting your loving parents.”
“Your mother says hello,” said Dad, tempering her mother’s greeting. She sighed. “Sorry I didn’t call earlier. My phone died.”
He laughed. “Your phone is always dying. How was the garden?” She placed bread out on the counter. “Sad. The current owners, Sydney and Andrew, bought it off Sydney’s parents, who inherited it from her grandfather. It sounds like Sydney’s parents did what they could to keep the place standing, but anything else was beyond their reach. You can imagine the state of the garden.”
“That bad?” he asked.
“In some places it’s been dug over entirely, but others are just wild. There are four Morello cherry trees that look as though they haven’t been properly dealt with in thirty years. And then there’s the bottom of the garden. It’s all a mess, and there’s one garden room I can’t even figure out the theme of.”
“Sounds as though you’ve got your work cut out for you,” he said.
“I do. The place must have looked beautiful even just five years after Venetia finished it.” Except she doubted Venetia Smith ever saw her work come to fruition. As far as Emma knew, she’d never come back to Britain once she left.
“I’m sure it was.” The line went muffled, and she could tell Dad had done his best to cover the microphone on his mobile. She braced herself for the moment he came on again and said, “Your mum wants to speak to you.”
Before she could give some excuse—she was tired, she needed to get dinner on—she heard the shifting of the phone from one hand to another and Mum came on. “Have you heard anything from the foundation?”
“Hello, Mum. I’m doing well, thanks for asking.”
“We’re waiting on pins and needles here, Emma. You need that head of conservation job,” said her mother, ignoring her.
“Need” wasn’t the way Emma would put it, but she tried her best to shove her annoyance aside. Mum wanted the best for her, and to Mum a stable job at the prestigious Royal Botanical Heritage Society was the best a girl from Croydon without a university degree could hope for.
“I don’t know yet. They said they’d call if I progressed into the next round of interviews,” she said.
“Of course they’ll want to bring you in again. They couldn’t find anyone better to head up their conservancy efforts. And you could have a steady paycheck for once in your life.”
“I have a steady paycheck,” she said. Most of the time.
“Didn’t you spend last summer chasing down that horrible couple who refused to pay you?” her mother asked.
It would have been more accurate to say that her solicitor chased the couple who’d refused to pay the last half of her fees and tried to stick her with a bill of £10,000 for rare plants and hardscaping they’d insisted she work into their garden’s design.
“They paid in the end,” she said with a sigh, remembering the legal fees that had cut into the money she’d recovered.
“After you threatened legal action.”
“That doesn’t happen that often,” she said.
“Admit it, love. Turning Back Thyme is a good little business, but it isn’t exactly paving the streets with gold.” “Mum—”
“If you took the foundation job, you could finally buy a house. Prices aren’t so bad if you go far enough south of the Thames. You could have your own garden, and you could be so much closer to your father and me instead of roving all over the place,” said Mum.
“I like moving around,” she said.
“Your father and I didn’t pay all of those school fees for you to be homeless,” her mother pushed.
“Mum! I’m not homeless. I live where I work. Besides, if the foundation offered me the job—which they haven’t even done second interviews for—I’d still have to figure out what to do with my company. That isn’t an easy decision.”
“You could sell it.”
“Mum.”
“Would that be such a bad thing?”
She paused, the denial not coming as fast as it should have. She loved
Turning Back Thyme, but owing her own business alone was hard. She lived with the near-constant stress of wondering if this was going to be the year things came crashing down. A few bad jobs—or a stretch of no work—and it wouldn’t just be her livelihood on the line, but her entire crew’s.
If all she had to do was design, it would be heaven, but it was so much more than that. She was also accounting, HR, payroll, marketing, sales all rolled into one. Some days she’d stumble from working on a site to a night spent over her laptop, processing the piles of digital paperwork that came with running a small business. Then she’d fall into bed, only to wake up with a gasp from the recurring nightmare of logging in to the business’s bank account only to find a £75,000 overdraft.
It was days like that—and conversations like this—where she wondered if she was kidding herself that she could do this for the rest of her life.
Clearing her throat, she said, “I need to make dinner and get ready for tomorrow.”
“You have so much potential, Emma.”
I didn’t raise you to dig around in the dirt all day. You were supposed to be better than this.
You threw everything away, Emma.
What a disappointment.
Emma couldn’t unhear those words thrown at her during every single fight they’d had when Emma had turned her back on university and chosen this life. A life that Mum, who had striven to rise above her working-class roots, hadn’t wanted for her.
“I need to go, Mum,” she said lamely.
“Send us photos of the house you’re staying in,” her mother said, her tone shifting to cheerfulness now that she’d gotten her shots in.
“And the garden, too!” her father shouted in the background.
“I will,” she promised. She hung up and turned back to her groceries, trying to shake off the creeping doubt that Mum was right.