By Margaret S.
Hamilton
Betty Birdsall is one of the first characters I created while
populating the fictional college town of Jericho, Ohio. She is named for my
mother, Betty, an active garden club volunteer. Slender and energetic, her gray
curls crushed under a sun visor, my fictional Betty is usually found weeding
the public display beds and watering the hanging flower baskets on Main Street.
She drives a Prius station wagon loaded with gardening tools and yard bags.
Betty is a widowed schoolteacher who taught third grade
for forty years. In addition to the mandated public-school curriculum, Ms.
Birdsall took her students on nature walks every Friday. Her students and their
children acknowledge they can still identify fifty kinds of tree leaves, native
pollinators, and local wildflowers. Her classroom windowsills were lined with
seedlings and forced tulip and hyacinth bulbs. On Earth Day, her class traveled
to a local park to plant tree saplings.
Betty’s husband taught botany at the local college. They
welcomed visitors to their woodland gardens next to the bird sanctuary. Betty
still lives in the brick bungalow on the back college lane with Mabel, her feisty
terrier mix.
Betty is kind and willing to share her gardening knowledge
with novice gardeners, but she also has high standards. She doesn’t tolerate
wanna be gardeners who purchase coneflowers and daisies in five-gallon pots,
plant them in a new flower bed, and then announce that their garden is ready
for the annual house and garden tour. Betty believes gardens should blend into
the landscape, with perennials planted in a continuous bloom sequence, and
winter interest bushes like hollies and red-twigged dogwoods providing a year-round
dimension to the garden.
She supports and adheres to current Ohio law, allowing six
home-grown marijuana plants per adult in a household, grown inside or out of
sight from the street. Betty has known many chronic pain patients who have
benefited from marijuana and makes their locally sourced consumption possible.
In my recently published story, “With a Little Help From
Her Friends,” Betty readies her own gardens for the local House and Garden Tour
while supervising preparations for the other featured gardens. Deer and rabbits
have feasted on the daylilies and hostas. Snapping turtles are on the move,
laying eggs in the nearby green space. And there’s Hugo, a six-foot black rat
snake hunting for moles, chipmunks, and mice.
Assisted by her chemistry professor neighbor, Betty
identifies the culprit responsible for killing the annuals in public gardens
around town. Hugo and his slithery friends ensure that the perp doesn’t escape
before the police arrive.
Mystery
Short Story: With A Little Help From Her Friends | Kings River Life Magazine
Writers and readers, have you created characters based on a
real person or certain characteristics of a real person?
Margaret S. Hamilton’s debut amateur sleuth mystery, What
the Artist Left Behind, is on submission.
Home - The
Official Website of Margaret S. Hamilton
You've created a wonderful, well-rounded character.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the link to the fun story.
I had so much fun writing the snake and snapping turtle story! Glad you enjoyed it.
DeleteIn my Zoe Chambers series, Pete Adam's father, Harry, was very much inspired by my own father. Not really "based" on him, but definitely inspired by.
ReplyDeleteYes, exactly. Betty was inspired by my mother and shares Mom's opinions and values.
DeleteI go shopping among the people I know, picking a nose and mouth here, a personality trait there, annoying quirks, shoes. That's about the only shopping I enjoy.
ReplyDeleteSame here! I like the mention of shoes. I usually focus on hair and eyeglasses, and the contents of a handbag.
DeleteSo interesting, Margaret. Have you ever read the Miss Read Fairacre books about English village schoolteacher Miss Read? Her gentle stories always make me tear up with nostalgia.
ReplyDeleteNo, I haven't heard of this series but I'll check it out.
DeleteHow wonderful. Like Molly, I "shop" and see what comes up. So far malls have never failed me. My character, Cappy, in the Hayden Kent series was based on my real life dive captain Banny. Right down to the love of "rooty beer." When I asked permission, he said, "Just treat this old man kindly." Of course I did. He was a wonderful person, a great dive captain and quite a character.
ReplyDeleteI love learning the origin of your Cappy.
ReplyDeleteI'd kinda like some of the pain relief stuff, but I don't live close enough to her. I think every character has to come from what I know, and who I've known, right? I also enjoy using unpleasant real people as models for the killers, since everyone will end up disliking the killer.
ReplyDeleteI'm the same, usually nasty women.
ReplyDelete