Strange Manors, Chapter 2

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Chapter Two: Reconnaissance in Farce
Lyddon Hall, University of Leeds, October 15, 1990 (Eight years later)

Heather was in my room again. I wasn’t sure how I felt about that.

“Come on, Weejie,” she coaxed. “You can’t possibly want to wander around some old pile of rocks. Could anything be more tedious? Do you have any idea how many castles are just lying around the countryside, taking up space and gathering dust?”

“I’m sure someone’s done a count.”

“We don’t have counts. Or we do, we just call them earls.”

“Why? You don’t have earlesses. You do have countesses.”

“Oh, don’t start! It’s because we’re English. It doesn’t have to make sense. In fact, it’s not supposed to.”

“Let me guess. If it made sense, the French could figure it out.”

“Quite possibly. And imagine what a disaster that would be.” She flounced onto my bed, since I was already sitting in the only chair in the room. “Aren’t you at least going to offer me a biscuit?”

Mi casa es su casa – near as I can tell, anyway.” It certainly seemed to be true, and I wasn’t quite sure how that had happened. “The tin’s on the shelf by your head.”

“And there you go with the Spanish again. Honestly, Weej! You are entirely capable of being good company when the mood takes you. Why are you being so difficult?”

I rolled my eyes. “Because you want to drag me down to the City for the weekend to chaperone you and Diana and Sarah. I’ll spend the entire time acting as a mobile coat-rack, hauling packages from store to store for three women.”

“Three stunning, beautiful, enchanting women . . . including moi. Really, Weejie dear. What’s not to like?”

“And there you go with the French. Though, seriously, I don’t think it’s supposed to rhyme with ‘boy.’”

“Are all Americans so pedantic?”

Now there was a question that didn’t require hours of research. “I’m gonna have to go with a big ‘no’ on that one.”

“You mean to tell me I caught the only pedant of the lot?”

“Wow, you make it sound dirty! But, yup, pretty close.” I started singing, “Don't know much about history. Don't know much biology.”

Her face assumed a pained expression and she let out a groan.

No reason to let her off that easy. “Don't know much about science book. Don't know much about the French I took.” I wiggled my eyebrows to make sure she got the connection to our conversation.

“At the risk of being rude, you don’t know much about singing, either.”

“No, no. You missed the point. As a nation – as a cultural grouping, if you will – Americans don’t know much about virtually any of those things. We are a determinedly, fiercely, and above all, proudly ignorant people. However, I am the exception.” I wagged my finger at her. “Plus, my singing could get me into the Cordon Bleu.”

“Tell me you know that’s a cooking school.”

“Yes. Of course I do. My singing is so farging amazing that they’d overlook my shortcomings in the cooking department.”

“I assume that means your cooking is execrable?”

“Oh, hell, yeah! Hey – that would make an amazing Scrabble word. Drop the “x” on a triple letter score —”

“It’s nine letters, Weej.”

“Yeah, but if you were to play ‘crab,’ or maybe ‘able’ —”

“Stop! Just stop! I will do no such thing. Now, will you get off your high horse and come with us to London?”

I chomped on a cookie. “Biscuit” my ass. These McVitties things are cookies, for crying out loud! They’re also really good. “Heather, I’m sorry. I really do want to go castle hunting this weekend.”

“Well then,” she said, “I suppose I shall have to go with, if only to make sure you don’t fall down a garderobe or something equally preposterous and fatal.” She got off the bed and stretched, looking for all the world like a martyr preparing to make the final sacrifice. “Diana and Sarah are going to be rather annoyed at you.”

I was about to say something . . . like, I don’t know, “Really, you don’t need to bother,” but she was already on her merry way.

“Ta-ta!” she said as she breezed out the door.

I shook my head. How does she do that? I really don’t understand Heather. Like, at all.

~o~O~o~

“Well . . . It’s certainly a fine example of a pile of old rocks,” Heather said, gazing at our destination. “Colorful, I suppose. If you’re fond of gray.”

“If you’re trying to tell me it’s not Harrod’s, you may rest assured that I got that.’”

“Don’t be absurd. I wouldn’t even think such a thing. But, really . . . .” she cast another practiced look at Castle Neuf before adding, “It’s not even Marks and Spencer.”

“Let’s have a look, anyhow.”

Heather threw me a doubtful glance and said, “Oh, very well. I expect they’ll have a car park by the entrance, these places always do.”

The one advantage to having Heather along was that she was generally accessorized in appropriate and useful ways, and today was no exception. One of her better accessories had five wheels, one of which was in the wrong place and allowed her to steer. She was currently using it to navigate a winding and difficult road up the small hill on which the castle was perched.

“A car park?” I asked. “How delightful! Will they have swings and teeter-totters so the cars can play while we’re out and about?”

“Behave, Weejie. It’s a long walk home.”

Sure enough, there was a parking lot by the front entrance, just as Heather had surmised. It appeared to have been designed with tourist buses in mind — the large, imposing kind that travel in flocks during the season, rather like Canadian Geese. Alas, however, this either wasn’t the season or the buses had found greener pastures. Or grayer pastures. There were only two other vehicles in the lot. At a guess, their owners worked here.

We decamped from Heather’s car – something that required a good bit of bending and twisting, on account of its, ehem, proportions. The entrance might have been imposing, I suppose, if the big drawbridge actually crossed something, but if the place had ever sported a moat, it had been filled in long since. A fussy looking woman, middle-middle in class, upper-middle in age, was sitting just inside what might once have been a guardroom. She waved us in. “It’s two pounds fifty for entrance, unless you can show student IDs. Oh, and five pounds will get you the tour.”

Heather looked dubious about the tour and I suppose I could see why. I mean, the whole place really didn’t look much larger than a decent-sized public library; it was hard to see how we might miss anything.

“Oh, the tour’s a must. An absolute must.”

I must have jumped half a foot; the voice came from behind me, and I hadn’t heard him come up. I spun around to see a young man; short and stocky with a mischievous smile and eyes that positively sparkled. “You’ll be the tour guide, won’t you, Mrs. Tibbets?”

“You will not be spoiling my tour, young man!” The woman behind the desk looked both incensed and affronted.

That decided me. “Well then, with this gentleman’s recommendation – and his company, of course – we’d be delighted to do the tour.”

“We might have a small difference of opinion,” Heather murmured in my ear, “about the meaning of ‘delighted.’”

“Oh, I shouldn’t think so,” the young man said, as if Heather’s aside had been offered up for general consumption and comment. “His accent notwithstanding, I’m certain your young man meant it in the classic British sense.”

“Insincerely, you mean?” Heather snarked.

“Exactly so, my dear! Oh, we’re going to have a splendid time together!”

Mrs. Tibbets crossed her formidably fleshly forearms under her well-supported and thoroughly suppressed breasts. “I will not give a tour with this . . . person in the group!”

“Oh, that’s such a pity,” he replied. “Then I shall have to give them the tour without you!”

“You will do No. Such. Thing!” No smoke came from her nose, but I half expected to see it.

“Dear Mrs. Tibbets,” he said soothingly, “If the three of us buy entrance tickets – well, if I do; they’re clearly students and will get in for free – you can scarcely keep us from wandering around together, can you? Or prevent me from making whatever observations come to my mind?”

This was nearly as much fun as baiting Father. Nothing really quite compares, of course, but the young man was tying Mrs. Bluff and Bluster into knots that would make a sailor proud. I wondered which way she would finally topple.

“All right! All right! I shall give the tour. I shall expect reasonable behavior from you, young man! No interruptions. No snide asides.”

He smiled slowly. Almost . . . dangerously. “But darling, what earthly fun would that be?”

She glowered, but in the end, she probably had no choice. She took our money, put it in the till, and gave each of us a wholly unnecessary paper ticket. “Follow me, please,” she said shortly.

Leaving the front gate area, she walked into a small courtyard. Castle yard? Whatever. Brown grass. Directly in front of us was the keep, such as it was. There really wasn’t anything else inside the walls.

“Welcome to CastleNoof,” she said woodenly, going into her spiel. The long and short of story was that it was the ninth castle built by some greedier-than-average follower of William the Bastard. It had gotten lots of upgrades in the centuries after it started as simple motte-and-bailey, but the last of them must have been around the time of Columbus.

“The lower floor of the keep is the only remaining part of the original structure,” Mrs. Tibbets explained.

“If by ‘lower floor,’ she literally means the floor itself – as in, the flagstones,” our young gentleman explained sotto voce, but it was loud enough to carry. Naturally.

Mrs. T chose to ignore the commentary. “The outer walls were built during the Second Baron’s War in the Thirteenth Century. The license to crenelate is recorded in the Patent Rolls, and was signed by King Henry III.”

“Who probably thought he was ordering an execution. Or quite possibly a bit of breckie. Not a very bright chap.”

“Mr. Deavers!” Mrs. Tibbets voice was low with menace.

He just smiled.

Heather decided it was time to do something other than simply watch tennis. “Is there any sort of view from the battlements?”

“I shouldn’t think so,” Mrs. Tibbets said repressively.

“You mean you haven’t looked?” Deavers asked, with open-eyed faux incredulity.

“As you are perfectly well aware, Mr. Deavers, the upper battlements are unsafe, and access is strictly prohibited!”

I couldn’t let Deavers have all the fun. “Are you quite sure it isn’t loosely prohibited? I mean, ‘strictly’ seems like the only adverb that’s ever attached to that word.”

“Strictly. Most strictly.” Mrs. Tibbets was both firm and severe on this point.

“I see.” I looked around. From where I was standing, there wasn’t much to see that wasn’t strictly prohibited wall. “Then it's the keep, I suppose.” It didn’t look very promising.

“The ground floor’s off limits,” Mrs. Tibbets warned, “On account of its extreme age.”

“It’s just that they haven’t gotten around to cleaning it,” Deavers supplied happily. “Good help is so hard to find.”

“Aren’t the upper floors supported by the ground floor?” I asked.

“Certainly, young man. How else would they be supported?”

“Um. Okay. Never mind.” I was looking for stairs. Perhaps around back? “How do you get to the upper floors?”

“From the battlements, naturally,” Mrs. Tibbets replied.

Heather weighed in. “But you said – “

“Strictly prohibited,” Mrs. Tibbets said triumphantly.

“But . . . .”

Strictly.”

I looked around again. “What do we, ah . . . you know? Tour?”

Deavers was happy to explain before Mrs. Tibbets put her spin on it. “This delightful plot of grass. You stand here – right here – and dear Mrs. Tibbets will talk. Expound. Declaim. Pretty endlessly, as it happens. It’s really a question of how much of it you can stand.”

“Doesn’t anyone live here?” I asked.

Three sets of eyes looked at me, bemused. Heather was first out the gate. “Whoever would want to?”

“The castle is owned by Viscount Chingleput,” Mrs. Tibbets explained. “But the family hasn’t lived here since the sixteenth century.”

“They pinched better digs when old King Harry stole all the church land,” Mr. Deavers added.

This straightforward explanation didn’t sit well with Mrs. Tibbets. “Acquisition of the abbey property was approved by Act of Parliament!”

“Making the theft entirely legal and proper,” Deavers replied, sounding pleased with the explanation.

“Stole it fair and square, eh?” I asked.

“It is not theft if it’s approved!” our guide hissed, scandalized.

“Mrs. Tibbets,” I asked diplomatically. “How long is this tour?”

“Oh, I could talk for hours about Castlenoof,” she said. It sounded like a threat. “History . . . architecture . . . legends. Even ghost stories!”

“How ‘delighted’ are you feeling, Weej?” Heather asked.

The thought of spending endless hours standing in the cold listening to Mrs. Tibbets tell ghost stories was acutely unappealing. “Actually, I was thinking I might be reaching my tolerance level for delight.”

“If you held on to your ticket, it will also get you into the family estate,” Deavers said helpfully. “It’s just three miles away. Shingles, they call it.”

It seemed like a strange choice for a name. “Like the virus?”

“A contraction of the title, I should think,” Mrs. Tibbets sniffed. “Chingleput . . . Singles. These things happen, over centuries.”

“Don’t you believe her,” Deavers said. “It’s the virus. The old man was riddled with it.”

“Mr. Deavers! That will be quite ENOUGH!”

But we decided that Shingles was likely to be the lesser of two evils, and opted to take our leave of the basilisk of Castle Neuf. Mr. Deavers invited himself along — something he managed with a smoothness and finesse that impressed even Heather.

Still, he had been good company, and quite useful for slaying dragons and such, so I wasn’t going to object. Even though somehow he got the passenger’s seat, and I ended up crammed into what was humorously called the “back seat.”

“You sorted back there?” Heather asked. “The car is grumpy when all the seatbelts aren’t fastened.”

I tried to move my arms to locate the device and failed. “I’m just exactly as ‘sorted’ as I’m going to get,” I said shortly. “Your Playmobile Car will just have to sulk for the five minutes it’s going to take us to go three miles.”

Deavers slid his seat back, neatly kneecapping me. “Ah! Much better!”

“Do you mind?” I asked, indignant.

“Not in the slightest,” he replied cheekily. “Oh — it’s three miles as the crow flies. A bit more of a trek for us, I’m afraid.”

I groaned, but Heather didn’t hear me as she got the engine to turn over and headed us down the hill.

It took seventeen and a half excruciating minutes to travel the three miles from Castle Neuf to Shingles. Between my captive knees and the contortions required to keep my head from hitting the roof, I was acutely uncomfortable the entire time. Heather and George were chatting merrily, but I just tuned them both out. Maybe being a portable clothes rack wouldn’t have been so bad.

But I’d had a hankering to see the “family estate,” even though I’d promised Father that I’d stay away. Well . . . especially because I’d made that promise, and I knew how deeply furious he would be when I cheerfully broke it. He had no sense of humor at all, and even less where his family was concerned. What better way to get his goat? So I endured the drive without groaning more than six or seven times.

“Well! Heather said suddenly. “Looks like the thieves and brigands did well for themselves!”

With several contortions of my back and neck, I managed to see what had caught her eye. Shingles — presumably it was Shingles — was certainly impressive enough, in a dark, gloomy, gothic sort of way. Much larger than Castle Neuf, with plenty of those deep, narrow windows that have pointy-arched tops and provide almost no light. The stone appeared to have come from a very different quarry than the castle. It had probably been a delightfully toasty golden brown originally, but was now the somewhat less appealing color of industrial sludge.

We parked by an ostentatious main entrance, smack in the middle of by far the largest structure in the complex. Although it looked like someone had gone to great lengths to disguise it, the main building had clearly begun its long life as a church of some sort before aging gracelessly into something a bit more tawdry.

Getting out of the car took even more work than getting in, but eventually I accomplished it to the accompaniment of groans and swear-words more common in the Bay Area of my youth than the North of England. I’m not saying Brits are more refined; their swear words are just weird. And they don’t seem to understand that simple, one-syllable synonyms for copulation and defecation can be employed endlessly and in virtually any situation.

The gate guardian of Shingles was a woman of around Mrs. Tibbet’s age, but considerably broader in the beam and far more cheerful. “Good morning, and welcome to Shingles!” she called out, as we stepped through the massive, dark door that must have been 12 feet tall.

We were in an antechamber of some sort – a decorative lump grafted onto the older main building, like a Gamay Beaujelais head on the rootstock of a Concord Grape. The stone in the ribbed vault over our heads had lots of fussy tracery and the side windows of the anteroom were large and colorful.

We got a big smile from the gate guardian, who came out from behind her high desk, positively beaming. “Such a lovely morning! Do come in! Let me give you the orientation, then you’re free to poke around, except in the areas marked ‘No Admittance.’”

I stepped forward, returning her smile. “I’m guessing that would be ‘strictly no admittance,’ right?”

“There’s no other sort, now is there?” she said, laughing. Spotting our companion, she said, “You’ve brought a personal guide with you, I see. Good morning, young George!”

“Mrs. Gee! So good to see you in such good humor,” he replied with a smile.

“Well, not that you need it, what with George and all, but we’ve just received these delightful pamphlets in full color, so you’ll have some idea what you’re looking at.” Seeing the tickets in our hands, she added, “Oh, and you’ve been to the castle, have you? Well, it won’t have taken you very long to figure out why no-one lives there anymore!”

And that was pretty much all the orientation we got. At the other end of the antechamber from where we entered, five shallow steps lead to a deep stone arch and very solid looking doors, one of which was open. Up we went, and entered a large, dark and forbidding great hall. According to the lovely brochure, it had originally been the nave of the monastery church.

“Holy ground, hmmm?” George said as we moved past the side aisle into the main area.

“Don’t they do a deconsecration or something, when they stop using it as a church?” I asked, looking around.

“Ostensibly. But surely . . . ground is holy or it isn’t, don’t you think?” There was, as usual, mischief in his voice – but something else, too.

And I’ll confess, I sure felt something. Maybe it was holy ground, or maybe it was just plain old spooky. The stone was dark and forbidding and the lancet windows were next to useless. Seven bays of tall arches and a simple cruciform ribbed vault, barely illuminated by clerestory windows. The flagstones were smooth with age.

The proportions were all wrong, naturally. The space was incredibly high relative to either the width or length of the hall – unsurprising, since the old church had been cut in half. The pamphlet explained that the transept and quire had been converted into living quarters for the family.

My family.

I hadn’t said anything to Heather – or to anyone else, for that matter – about my connection to the family that owned this heap of stone. The university had certain cliques, like any other education establishment, and the children of the aristocracy formed one of them. It was a small and obnoxious group, and I didn’t want anyone to think I belonged there. Even though it would have been a positively stupendous way of annoying Father. Some of life’s joys, great though they most certainly are, do not justify the sacrifice.

Although the stained glass windows all depicted scenes from the Gospels, the space was otherwise pretty secular. It had been set up as a feasting hall, I suppose – a long, narrow table running down what had been the length of the nave and a raised platform with an elevated table at the end in a “T” configuration. A monstrous big chair dominated the middle of the raised table, intricately carved, upholstered in red velvet. It even had a decorative canopy over it.

I shook my head. “Okay. Was the guy, like, morbidly obese? You could fit three normal humans in that thing!”

“Important to impress the masses, Weej,” Heather snarked.

“Impress? Any regular dude sitting in that chair is going to look like a five-year-old!”

“Ah,” said Deavers. “But he’ll look like a rich five-year-old, so age won’t matter! You should try it!”

“The sign says we’re not supposed to touch the furniture.”

“So, don’t touch it. Keep your hands to yourself. Just sit in it!” Deavers was, as usual, grinning wickedly.

“Go ahead,” I invited. “Let’s see how you look!”

He shrugged. “I shall look stunning, naturally. I always look stunning!” He hopped up onto the dais, sauntered over to the semi-throne thing, and sprawled gracefully on the seat. “As you see. Now, all you little people . . . bow and scrape, why don’t you?”

Heather laughed. “You’d like that, wouldn’t you?”

“Naturally,” he replied. “And, of course, nobles are irresistible to the lower sorts, aren’t they? Admit it . . . You want me to throw you on the table and have my naughty, aristocratic way with you!”

Heather only laughed harder.

For myself, though . . . Deavers actually did look pretty good sprawled on the throne. Powerful, even. As if sensing my thoughts, he gave me a sardonic look.

“Now, George!” Mrs. Gee stood in the entrance, sounding like a mildly exasperated nanny. “You know you aren’t supposed to be there. I’m going to have to ask you to leave.”

“By all means, ask away,” he said airily. “My lordship is in the mood for hearing petitions today.”

Despite herself, Mrs. Gee giggled girlishly. “All right, George. I’ll look the other way – this time – but for God’s sake don’t let the Colonel know!”

Deavers made little shooing motions with his hands, and Mrs. Gee vanished back the way she’d come.

“The Colonel?” I asked him. I had a very vivid memory of a Colonel.

Deavers confirmed it, as he rose gracefully from the oversized chair and came down off the dais. “My uncle Holweard. He looks after the place while the Viscount is off doing whatever it is he does.”

“The Viscount’s in the counting house,” Heather paraphrased, “Counting all his –”

“Vices,” I supplied.

“That should keep him occupied for a while,” Deavers said brightly. “Let’s finish looking around, while he’s tied up?”

We strolled around the courtyard, which had been a cloister back in the day. The Baptistry had been converted into a gazebo by the expedient of removing all non-load-bearing walls, and the former monks’ living quarters had been converted into guest accommodations that were, like the Viscount’s private quarters, off limits.

“The crypt is really the best part,” Deavers said.

“That’s something you don’t hear every day,” I snorted.

“Weej, it’s England,” Heather explained. “We always reserve the very best for dead people.”

“Certainly,” Deavers agreed. “It’s when they are at their finest, after all.”

The crypt was located where you would expect – under what had been the transept of the church – and was reached by a narrow stone stair to the side of the exit from the Great Hall. All of the former residents of the space, which presumably had been abbots and such, had been removed to literally greener pastures. The crypt was now reserved for Family.

Each of the Viscounts had his own niche and sarcophagus, as well as a portrait on the wall. All the portraits looked like Father, just with different facial hair and styles of dress. A dreary prospect indeed, from my perspective!

Deavers filled us in on all the gossip with respect to the former lords, and from his descriptions they were a sordid lot indeed. The first Viscount’s portrait depicted him in martial glory upon the battlements of some very foreign-looking fortress. “The battle of Chingleput,” Deavers said.

“I can’t say I’ve heard of that one,” Heather remarked.

“Why am I not surprised?” Deavers’ voice was dry. “A minor battle in the Second Carnatic War.”

I shook my head. “The second what?”

“Quite,” Deavers agreed.

“And, ah, what’s his name commanded the victorious British army?” Heather asked.

“Of course not,” Deavers said. “That was Robert Clive, and he commanded company troops.”

“Then why did . . .” She paused a moment to check the name, “Algernon Winthrop, here, get a title out of it?”

“He didn’t. He got a title out of forgiving a rather large gambling debt that embarrassed King George’s idiot brother, Cumberland. But he said he was present at Chingleput, and Clive got a nice round sum to confirm it, so it seemed like a good enough fit.” Deavers studied the picture critically. “He does look rather dashing up there on the battlement, don’t you think?”

“Moderately dashing,” I allowed.

“Positively irresistible,” Heather pronounced.

We made the circuit, with each Viscount looking less distinguished than the last. It must be a coincidence that they line up that way, I thought. Please let it be a coincidence! But the final niche was completely different.

“Weej, you’re gaping,” Heather scolded.

I ignored her. The woman in the full-sized painting almost leapt off the canvas. Long, raven-black hair, soft eyes, pale, perfect skin, a figure to die for in a dress that accentuated every curve – tight bodice showing full breasts and a trim waist, and an exuberant skirt that cascaded over wide hips like a fountain . . . .

“Weej! Wake up!”

I shook my head, as if to clear it of cobwebs. “Why would I want to?”

“Well, you do look a bit like an idiot, so there’s that.”

“Uh . . . right.” I looked at Deavers. “Who is she?”

“Well, you know what the nuns always say,” he responded.

I decided that I wanted to know who the woman in the painting was, even if I had to walk into his joke to find out. “No. I don’t really know any nuns. What do they say?”

“It’s a mystery.” He sounded smug.

“Seriously?”

“Quite. No one knows who she is, or what her painting is doing down here . . . other than livening the place up.”

“And attracting boys like honey attracts flies,” Heather added, acidly.

“Alright already,” I replied testily. “Can I help it? It’s by far the best piece of art in the whole place.”

“Your devotion to art history is an inspiration, Weej. Now, if I can pry you away from your girlfriend here, I don’t suppose you can be persuaded to find a place for lunch?”

I laughed and agreed, and we found the exit.

When we got back to the car, Deavers said his farewells. “If you want someplace local, the Victoria has a nice ploughman’s lunch and decent fish and chips. And, it’s right next to a really special shop for naughty underthings!”

Heather laughed and hopped in the driver’s seat. So she missed his broad wink and my ensuing scarlet blush.

To be continued . . . .

Author's note: Many thanks to RobertLouis and AlisonP for their help reviewing this story.

For information about my other stories, please check out my author's page.

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Comments

This is truly turning out to be……

D. Eden's picture

A rather strange story. I wasn’t sure that it was the same characters until the comments regarding the family manor. I can only wonder where this is headed.

D. Eden

Dum Vivimus, Vivamus

I’ll cop to that

Emma Anne Tate's picture

It is a strange little story. There are serious elements hiding among the ferns and the persiflage, and they will come out. :)

I hadn’t really thought about it, but I probably should have had Heather use the MC’s full first name up front, just for clarity’s sake. Though she wouldn’t have. Once your friends move from calling you “Luigi” to calling you “Weeji” or even “Weej,” there’s just no going back!

Emma

Could have gotten into Luigi's head

Patricia Marie Allen's picture

Luigi could have thought, "I wish she'd never started that, Luigi is a fine name and doesn't need shortening."

Hugs
Patricia

Happiness is being all dressed up and HAVING some place to go.
Semper in femineo gerunt

Probably not this story . . . .

Emma Anne Tate's picture

But I’ve got to work it into some story. Great hike!

Thanks, Catherd. :)

Emma

Hmm…

What did Jessica & Janet do last summer?

Wow!

joannebarbarella's picture

You have really been given a tutorial in Britspeak and in Brit mannerisms. Do I detect a hint of gayness in Deavers' performance?

Weejie is hiding his light under a bushel, not wanting to be recognized as the heir to Shingles, which was apparently acquired under some nefarious deal with that pirate Robert Clive, who ran India under license to the British government until his stench got too foul for even them to tolerate.

I'm sure Heather would be delighted to be a countess, but she's being kept in the dark. The two guardians of the gates are not caricatures. I'm sure I've encountered both of them.

The colonel is lurking in the background and Weejie has got to be more careful in his choice of underwear (and outerwear) as Deavers has him sussed.

And who is the lovely lady in the painting in the crypt?

So many conundrums need answering, but the ride is exhilarating.

Thanks, Joanne!

Emma Anne Tate's picture

So glad you are enjoying the ride! I don’t know why it is that places like castles tend to attract gate Gorgons, but my do they! I’ve met a few like Mrs. Tibbets, for sure! But I’ve also met some like Ms. Gee, and they do make up for it.

Yes, there are quite a few riddles and conundrums (conundra?) needing to be resolved. I’ve got answers, too — lots of them! Problem is, not all of the answers agree with each other yet . . . .

Emma

If one is frustrated or put out

Andrea Lena's picture

In this place? Take a deep breath and Viscount to ten.

Growing up Catholic, I remember the nuns AND my C.C.D. both using that explanation when asked anything for which they were instructed not to answer - It is a mystery. That pretty much is church speak that either says they're too embarrassed or had no clue.

The lady in the pic is intriguing. It takes an extremely good rendition in oils to cause someone to nearly lose it.... right there.

If wit and clever be the food of write? Then pen on!

  

To be alive is to be vulnerable. Madeleine L'Engle
Love, Andrea Lena

Ha . . . Ha . . . Ha!

Emma Anne Tate's picture

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Viscount with me, little girl! Why is two plus two four? Ha . . . ha! It’s a mystery! All the nuns say it. They say it when they fall for my charms, too! How could I have allowed myself to become a vampire, they ask, as they gaze into my perfect eyes and run their hands along my noble . . . ah, cape. “It’s a mystery,” they sigh. Ha, ha ha!

Actually, I always figured “it’s a mystery” was just nunspeak for “beats me.” Not that there aren’t mysteries, of course. But it’s discouraging when it’s also the answer to “why would Jesus save me, Sister Agatha?”

Emma

Also likely

Patricia Marie Allen's picture

church speak that either says they're too embarrassed or had no clue.

That or they think that lay people are to ignorant or lack the wit to understand. That's why for centuries the Catholic Church discouraged the masses from reading the Bible. "Just let the priest tell you what it says."

Hugs
Patricia

Happiness is being all dressed up and HAVING some place to go.
Semper in femineo gerunt

To be fair . . .

Emma Anne Tate's picture

. . . we had a millennium or so there where only priests had the time to learn to read, and all the books were in a language that regular people didn’t speak. Not conducive to developing good habits . . . but very effective for creating an authoritarian culture.

Emma

Five wheel contraption

That comment about a five wheel contraption almost tipped me out of my chair to roll on the floor making a certain type of noise.

Scooooore!

Emma Anne Tate's picture

Got one!

Thanks, Jessica!

Emma

a lot of surprises

Methinks a lot of surprises to come: Mrs 'Jobsworth' Tibbets when she learns who she was looking down her nose at; Heather when she realises that if she plays her cards right she could become a viscountess; Luigi when he realises who the mystery lady really is: and Deavers when he explains the games everyone is playing. A real murder mystery whodunuit without the murder of course. An enjoyable story, please drag it out for a few more chapters yet.

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Gill xx

Yeah, how about that?

Emma Anne Tate's picture

A murder mystery and no one even has to get murdered? That sounds positively civilized! I’m zeroing in on the end of the story now, and I think it’ll be six chapters. Enjoy!

Emma

Ponderous

Erisian's picture

Very ponderous chapter as the possibilities for the story widen amidst the wonderfully written and witty repartee. Methinks there's a decent chance that our protagonist will desire to hear those ghost tales after all! At least, strictly speaking as it were, I want to hear them! ;)

Thank you, Seraph!

Emma Anne Tate's picture

Very glad you are enjoying it so far. I’ll admit I have fun writing this kind of dialogue, and it’s possible I get carried away. What is next? Will Luigi be lured by the lands of the Littons? Stay tuned!

Emma

Dialogue?

Damn, I wish I could fling off zingers like that in real life. My wife is slightly annoyed by my overloud laughter.

Me, too, Ricky!

Emma Anne Tate's picture

I always have exactly the right retort! It’s just that it usually comes to me three hours later. :(

My apologies to your lovely and understanding wife!

Emma

Me 2

Been there. Done That. But refuse to get the t-shirt!

The promise inherent in part 1 is developing nicely

Though after reading the first paragraph I had to return to part1 to reacquaint myself with what had transpired therein. After all, this part is commenced with a "ten years later" statement. So, prior to starting this part (2), I should have made sure that I had not missed something essential -- I had! Lots of things, too many to enumuerate here.You are almost certainly younger than I am and the act of putting pen(?) to paper also helps to reinforce your recollections! Maybe at my age, I can raise the false excuse of reduced short-term memory!. I believe that I am now sufficiently involved with the story to not need any more recaps!
In short, while I still can remember what I have read, I must tell you that I have loved every step, and eagerly look forward to more in the same style.

Dave

Certainly younger?

Emma Anne Tate's picture

Oh, I don’t know about certainly. Possibly? I mean, my picture cleans up nicely and all, but . . . modern software programs are so very versatile!

Thanks for the comment, Dave — I’ll shoot you another helping on Friday. ;-)

Emma

Looney Tunes indeed!

Emma Anne Tate's picture

If only I could write as well as that crew!

Emma

You had me rolling!

Sunflowerchan's picture

Since returning to the Episcopal Church, I've rediscovered my love for british humor. And you Ms. Emma Anna Tate have graced the site with another amzing piece of fiction! Your had me rolling on the floor, laughing so hard I was afraid I might trigger my astima! You have a fine sense of words, and you know use them. Your humor is quick witted and sharp and oh so British! You ma'am are a true treasure, thank you for sharing this wonderful story with us.

Thanks Rebecca!

Emma Anne Tate's picture

I’m delighted I was able to give you a smile. I have always thought that John Cleese was the world’s funniest person. And after the Flying Circus, Fawlty Towers, A Fish Called Wanda and all the classic Python movies, my brain is fully pickled. It doesn’t work for everyone, lord knows, but I’m very glad it works for you!

Emma

You are are so bad

Humor, wit, enticing story, what more could anyone want. The fact that I had to go back and make sure of things happening earlier in the story added to this wonderful zany story. Six more chapters of this, utter bedlam, looking forward to every bit.
Hugs Francesca

- Formerly Turnabout Girl

Bacon

Emma Anne Tate's picture

One could always ask for bacon. It makes all things better, though I’m a dissenter when it comes to ice cream. Still, it would certainly make any story better. I wonder . . . .

Thanks, Francesca — I hope you continue to enjoy it. Six chapters total, though — just four more. Pretty sure, anyway. Not quite finished yet. Which means — you guessed it — yep, it’s half-baked!

Emma

Mind wrapped...

RachelMnM's picture

In the visuals so well written and what you're happily dragging us into. That's twice now Luigi's had someone think lingerie is a tell for him. Great pace and so digging the BritBox mystery you've got going.

XOXOXO

Rachel M. Moore...

In a comment on A Legal Trap . . . .

Emma Anne Tate's picture

I referenced a useful saying. Once is an accident, twice, a coincidence. It’s only happened twice, right? Must be Gucci. ;-)

Thanks, Rachel — love ya!

Emma

Slow build up

and a very strange journey indeed. Can't wait to find out the final destination...

Alison

I’m conflicted

Emma Anne Tate's picture

I’ve got two endings. Maybe I’ll write them both and ask you and RobertLouis to tell me which one you like better. :)

Thanks for all your help on this, Alison!

Emma

My chief footman said

"Gorblimey your ladyship - that Missus Tate is turning all the readers into wannabe comedy writers ain't she?" I fear Ponsonby is right, the British sense of humour is alive and well.

May it never fade!

Emma Anne Tate's picture

If all the world were only filled with comedy writers, it would be such an amazing, wonderful. . .

Okay, it would be bedlam. The apocalypse, probably. But, you know? Maybe that wouldn’t be the worst way to go?

Diolch, Bronwen o Cymru!

Emma

OMG Woman!

Dee Sylvan's picture

“A car park?” I asked. “How delightful!"

"This was nearly as much fun as baiting Father."

"Heather decided it was time to do something other than simply watch tennis."

Your droll humor elicited some rather boisterous belly laughs that even woke my dog. I have to agree with Joanne, Emma, your Britspeak is quite impressive. I don't know if the brits in the audience are taking offense or laughing along with the rest of us, but this is some of your best work. Thank you for sharing. :DD TAF

DeeDee

Thanks, Dee!

Emma Anne Tate's picture

And please give your dog a few belly scritches for me, by way of apology. :)

Emma

A common nickname for Luigi...

Iolanthe Portmanteaux's picture

In Italy, as you may or may not be aware, a common nickname for Luigi is Gigi, which of course causes some embarrassment to young Italian men visiting the US, where you say "Gigi" and picture a young Leslie Caron or a contemporary Gigi Hadid. Much like the name Andrea... (I remember my surprise on learning that Andrea Doria wasn't a female character in a gothic novel, but a prince, a statesman, and an admiral.)

Anywho, the plot does thicken, doesn't it? With a castle, a license to crenellate, and a manor house, it's rather like a fairy tale, isn't it. Mysteries abound -- who is the woman? why is dad swilling moonshine in the Colonies?

And how on earth do so many men catch on to Luigi's choice of undergarments?

Interesting...

- iolanthe

Gigi?

Emma Anne Tate's picture

I did not know that, or I might have found a use for that particular piece of information. Because, yup, this is what I immediately thought of as soon as I saw the name:

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I mean, who could resist?

And yeah, you raise a very good point: Why are so many guys looking at Luigi’s ass, anyway? :)

Emma

Ah yes...

Andrea Lena's picture

You wore a skirt

I WORE A DRESS

It was in Spring

IT WAS AUTUMN I MUST CONFESS

Ah yes...I remember it well

You wrote a song

I WROTE A VERSE

You brought your Clutch

I BROUGHT MY PURSE

Ah Yes...I remember it well

It was grey and it was drear

IT WAS SUNNY ALL DAY MY DEAR

Ah yes... I remember it well

You wanted to whisper

I WANTED TO SHOUT

WHAT THE??? I GOT SIGNED OUT

Ah yes...I remember it well

But it's still fun

Oh yes it is

I MUST AGREE

WHAT? BOOTED AGAIN

GEE WHIZ!

AH YES (Ah yes)

We remember it well!

I imagine if there's a long mirror around, even Luigi might want to look at his ass?

  

To be alive is to be vulnerable. Madeleine L'Engle
Love, Andrea Lena

Giggles!

Emma Anne Tate's picture

Good one, 'Drea! I've always loved that song. :)

And yeah, that's what Weej needs -- one more guy staring at his tush!

Emma

A Bit of a Disconnect

I really had a difficult time jumping the time gap here. I had no idea what was happening in the beginning. But this is Emma Anne Tate, so I kept going, and I am glad that I did.

Thanks, Avidreader!

Emma Anne Tate's picture

Thank you for persevering!

Emma

Weejie !!

SuziAuchentiber's picture

Did RobertLouis suggest the nickname for Louigi? In Scotland that is the name for people who are Glaswegian - ie native to the city of Glasgow - Weegies !
This tale is wonderfully written - I know many North American readers will find the format and humour slightly strange but to those of us brought up with Derek Nimmo, Brian Rix,Keeping Up Appearances and To The Manor Born the aristocracy have always been ripe targets for parody and ridicule.
I visited Donington Hall in the idlands when it was the HQ for the airline British Midland and it had a sunken fence in the gardens that gave a false perspective suggesting rolling open space. The feature has a spendid name which fits very well with your writing Emma - its a Ha-Ha !!
Hugs&Kudos!!

Suzi

Weejie

Emma Anne Tate's picture

Since you’ve already gotten to Chapter 3, you probably know now why I used that particular nickname. I’m embarrassed to confess that I was unaware it was a term used to describe Glaswegians — almost all my time in Scotland was spent on the East Coast. But Robert did point it out to me in his review!

I am so glad you are enjoying this, Suzi — I kind of thought you might. ;-)

Emma

Wild Goose, Brother Goose, Which Is Best

Canada Geese.

Birders will pluck your feathers for calling Canadian.

Holden or Portnoy?

Jill

Angela Rasch (Jill M I)

Fascinating

Emma Anne Tate's picture

I have always heard them called Canadian Geese . . . but, I’m not a birder!

A wanderin' fool or a heart at rest? Well, I think you and I come out in the same place on that one. :)

Emma

Down from an elephant

Iolanthe Portmanteaux's picture

They are called "Canadian" geese because that's where Canadian bacon comes from. (They carry it in their beaks from afar.)

- iolanthe