Saturday, August 31, 2019

Lord Wyndell's Bride chapter 1


Yes, I know you want more of Rev Chaz, but it isn't happening; I guess that's what you get for an entirely 'pantsed' story without a shape or form.  This one has been fermenting away in my brain since a throwaway remark gave me the plot bunny. Warning; initial sexual abuse of a minor, and the subsequent story covers the victim dealing with it.  I will be going on to Bess, the 7 stepsisters and possibly another standalone.




Chapter 1

“Goodbye, Miss Fotherington-Thomas,” said Gareth, with a sneer. “Your plans hatched with my mother to trap me are, I’m afraid, going to fail.”
He stepped through the broken conservatory window, relying on his heavy jacket to protect him from any shards of glass, and jumped the eight feet or so to the ground.  Miss Fotherington-Thomas was just going to have to wait to be let out; Gareth was not feeling chivalrous. This last scheme of forcing him to become leg-shackled was too much.
He made a brief stop at the stables to order his phaeton set up, and then climbed the ivy to his bedroom window with the ease of long practise.  Although he had inherited the earldom of Wynddell, Gareth Wynd did not use the master bedroom.  His mother still occupied the adjoining room and Gareth had no desire to endure the hysterics if he asked her to move to a room suitable to the status of a dowager.  Moreover, his own room was more comfortable.
Gareth’s valet, Moss, jumped as his master came in the window.
“Strewth! You startled me, milord, what’s toward?  I thought you were at dinner with the latest muffin-faced moralist.”
“I was, and I let my mother talk me into showing her the conservatory; which conveniently locked itself.”
“Your mother locked you in?”
“I believe so.  She wants me to settle down.  Honestly, does she think I would settle down with a feeble creature like Jane Fotherington-Thomas? There’s no greater incentive to abandon the creature in the country and go to kick up a few larks in town with as many blowsy opera-dancers as I could fit into the room.”
“Yes, sir, I can see that.  Was this lady party to the deception?”
“Let me put it this way, Moss, she did not seem surprised and kept going on about the beauties of nature, and what a romantic place this was with the fountain and all.  I told her the fountain gave me overwhelming urges, and started to undo my trouser fall.  I swear she got excited, even if she did say ‘Oh! My lord, please do not...’.  I believe she was disappointed when she found out that my overwhelming urges were to take a piss in Mama’s favourite geraniums. I then broke a window and left.”
Moss laughed.
“So what now? You turn up and confound the dowager?”
“No, Moss, I’m leaving. I am heading out in a random direction.  Every cross roads I will toss a coin. If it is tails, I go left; heads, right. And when Mama goes to let us out in the morning she will find her dupe hungry and cross.  I doubt she can leap through the window, but she will not freeze.  The heating may not be sufficient to save the plants from the winter’s blast but it will be enough if she huddles close to the hot air outlet to preserve her life. Her comfort I do not care about.”
“No, sir, and why should you!” said Moss.
“What I want to do is to pack a couple of valises and throw out of the window; you can pack one for yourself and join me in the phaeton,” said Gareth. “Nobody is likely to stop you.”
“No, sir; I am invisible to milady,” said Moss.

Five hours later, they were in an inn, somewhere off the main North Road. Gareth had drunk more than was wise, and was nursing a hangover.  He had left orders not to be disturbed, and was therefore not happy when there was a sharp rap on the door.  This was followed by the door opening, and a girl entering.  Gareth was about to issue a blistering oath when he took in that the girl was no tavern wench, but was indeed dressed as a lady.  Her gown, pelisse and bonnet were out of date, dowdy, and had seen better days, but were unquestionably clothes belonging to a lady.  A strand of red hair escaped from the bonnet, and the eyes were big, luminous and scared in a peaked little face.
“I do apologise for disturbing you, my lord,” she said, in a voice which also unquestionably belonged to a lady, “But they tell me that you are a rake.  Are you?”
“What, the vicar’s daughter come to moralise?” he sneered.
“Oh! No,” she said. “But if you are a rake you will not mind running away with a girl like me.”
He blinked.
She did not look old enough even to be out.
“I am not a cradle snatcher,” he said.
“Would it ease your conscience to know that I have already been ... used?” she asked, bitterly.
He sat up properly.
“A chit your age?  How old are you?”
“Almost sixteen, sir,” she said.  “I ... I suppose I had better explain.” She looked down, knitting her fingers together.  “My name is Emily Elphinstone, and my father is the local squire and magistrate.”
“Have you not asked him to seek redress for your ... predicament?”
A bitter twist to her mouth made him open his eyes in sudden horror.
“Ah, I see you have divined it,” said Emily. “That makes it easier; I feared you might be naive enough not to recognise that incest is a common enough country crime, though less often amongst our class.  My mother died when I was twelve, and on my fourteenth birthday, my father informed me that I should fulfil all her duties.  We had already lost every maid and my governess, since they feared to stay where he would make advances.  I am unmarriagable, but I hoped you might find a space for me as your mistress for a while, since you have not brought one with you. I thought that a real rake who has to seduce people not just force himself on them might manage to make the act less painful, or his mistresses would not stay with him.”
“I ... I am not often left speechless,” said Gareth.  “Listen, chit!  I will go and speak to your father.”
Her shoulders slumped.
“I knew you would not take my distress seriously,” she said.
He held up a hand.
“Hear me out,” he said.  “If I take a child your age with me, even if I don’t lay a hand on you, I can be charged with abducting a minor.  However!” he added as she looked dismayed, “I plan to threaten your father into giving me permission to marry you.”
“But you can’t marry me; I’m spoiled, Father said nobody would want me, so I might as well resign myself.”
“Well, he’s wrong,” said Gareth.  “Because I’d rather be leg-shackled to a brat who at least knows her own mind, doesn’t care about my reputation and is prepared to have the bottom to run away than to one of what my man calls the muffin-faced moralists my mother keeps trying to pair me with.  I fled from her machinations when she locked me in the conservatory with one tedious wench. I have a passing sympathy for the poor girl, who must be touched in the upper works to agree to such a scheme, and had not managed conversation past ‘look at the pretty flowers’.”
“Dear me! If your mother wants you married so badly you would think she would manage to find someone of personality,” said Emily.  “Are you sure you want to marry me?  I ... he made me take herbs, and when they failed he had a man in to .... to kill the baby,” her voice shrank to a whisper. “And I don’t know if he damaged anything.”
“We’ll cross that bridge when you are old enough to take to bed and consider babies,” said Gareth. “Because I’m not going to lay a finger on you, my betrothed wife, until you ask me to do so.”
“Truly?” she brightened. “But then, what is in it for you?”
“Slighting my mother,” said Gareth, “And a quixotic  whimsy that wishes to rescue you from a most horrible fate.  I had a little sister once,” he added. “She didn’t live to grow up, but I’m sure Mama would have arranged an advantageous marriage for her to someone suitable, whether Lils liked the idea or not, and though I am head of the family it would have been deucedly awkward.  I’m planning on treating you as I would Lils, and if you want it, I will arrange for a governess for you to take up your education where it was so cruelly broken off.  I will have mistresses, of course,” he added.
“Of course,” she nodded. “If you are not taking your pleasure with me, you will need to do so elsewhere.  Am I supposed to be friends with them?”
He laughed.
“No, chit, you are not supposed to know about them, and certainly not to mention them.”
“Oh, I hoped you would tell me about them so I knew you were happy, and I would try to be friendly as they were on good terms with you.”
“You are an extraordinary chit, you know?”
“Papa says I am ugly and boring.”
“I have no very great opinion of your father’s intellect,” said Gareth, dryly.  “You ain’t dressed the way you ought to be, and you don’t eat enough, but when you fill out a bit and lose the pallor which is not a fashionable paleness but a lack of good health, you’ll be uncommonly pretty.  Besides, I have a weakness for redheads; my first mistress was a redhead, and she was kind to me and taught me a lot.”
“I am glad of that,” said Emily. “I think it must make a lot of difference if one’s first encounter with intimacy is kindly.”
“My poor child!” Gareth found his hangover dissipated in anger.  “You will stay here and I will go and see your father and I will obtain written permission from him for you to wed. He will not like the alternatives,” he said. “And then we will go on to York to find a convenient bishop for a special licence.”
“You look awfully dangerous when you are angry,” said Emily, beaming at him.
“And that is a matter of pleasure to you, chit?”
“Oh yes.  It makes me feel very safe,” said Emily.
“I will look after you,” said Gareth, flicking her cheek gently with a careless finger, ere he strode out.


“You are a loathsome, disgusting lecher, and to add incest of your young daughter to your crimes is the lowest thing I have ever heard,” said Gareth.
“Is that what she told you?  Poor child, she has these delusions.  I fear she may end up in Bedlam if she has taken to telling her lies to stranger...AWK!” he broke off perforce with Gareth’s hand at his throat.
“Just when I think nothing can be lower than what you did, you manage to lower the bar of your perfidy,” said Gareth. “Now, there will be the testimony of the maids you drove out, Miss Elphinstone’s governess, the abortioner you had in, and the male servants, who cannot be in ignorance of your actions.  I could smear your name quite thoroughly as well as proving that your daughter is not insane.  It does sit at variance with my personal desires though.” He smiled, nastily.  “If you were a man I would consider calling you out. As you are a cur, my current thoughts run to cutting off everything which has caused Miss Elphinstone any trouble, and making you eat it all, fried.” 
Elphinstone paled and swayed.  He did not doubt that the athletic young man in front of him was capable of carrying out such a threat.  And even if he then prosecuted for assault, the deed would have been done.
“You are a monster!” he croaked.
“No; you are a monster,” said Gareth.  “However, you can escape all the consequences of my ire if you write a letter which I dictate to you, confessing your crimes. This I will send to my solicitor, sealed, to be opened in the case of anything untoward happening to me.  Then you will write another letter to whom it may concern giving permission for your daughter to wed Gareth, Lord Wynddell.  That’s me, by the way.”
“M...marry?  why on earth would you want to marry a whey-faced chit, who won’t even scream when you beat her before bedding her?” said Elphinstone.
Gareth snarled.
“No wonder your poor wife died; I’m amazed she lived as long as she did. Probably to try to keep her daughter safe.  You disgust me, but I will not go back on my word. You may go and sit at your desk and write to my dictation.”
He dictated a full confession to Elphinstone and made the man seal it, and appended his own seal.  And then he dictated the letter of permission, to make sure that Elphinstone did not get any ideas about adding clauses which might be questioned.
“Good,” said Gareth.  “Do not seek out me or my bride for any reason.  Just learn to exercise your right hand, and if you must beat someone to get in the mood, learn self-flagellation.  You never know; you might enjoy it.”  And on that sneering note, he left.

Moss had made himself known to Emily when Gareth returned.
“I’ve put miss’s bandbox up with the other valises, my lord,” he said.  “But miss will be wanting a maid.”
“Are there any of your former maids who would be likely to come along, chit?” asked Gareth.
“I think they will be afraid of your reputation,” said Emily, frankly.  “But there’s Dinah, who was ruined by a gentleman some years ago, whom my father paid to come to him, up until he tried beating her and she would not come again.  I think that was when he decided I would do.  Dinah had a baby boy who died, and I think she would like the city.  She only sold her services because she couldn’t marry, and she had to do something.”
“I’m not about to be shocked, but my wife’s maid must not be promiscuous,” said Gareth.
“I don’t suppose she would want to be if she had a steady salary and somewhere to live,” said Emily.  “Do you think Moss would step round with a note if I wrote one?”
“I am sure he would,” said Gareth.

Dinah came in response to the note with her own bandbox, dressed in her best, dark brown, Sunday frock, and a linen cap.
“You’ll want me looking respectable, dearie,” she said.
“Oh, Dinah, thank you,” said Emily.  “You are good to come at the drop of a hat, and to accept what is, after all, a most unusual situation.”
“Well it has to be better than the old bastard and his odd ideas of what the two-backed mule is about,” said Dinah. “It’ll be an adventure.”

oOoOo


“The Black Swan,
York
November 2nd.1800

Mother:

Your schemes notwithstanding, I am now able to return to town in safety from them, since I have just got married.  The appropriate notices have been sent to the newspapers, so you are unable to repudiate my choice. I am, after all, of age.
I will not be bringing my bride to meet you until you have got over the inevitable temper-tantrum you are going to throw over this matter.  The new countess will be travelling on to Wynd Garth, and if you should happen to write anything disparaging to her there, you will not like the consequences.
Your son,
Wynddell.

Thursday, August 29, 2019

Release of Regency Miss's Survival Guide to Bath

Although I wrote this as a writer's resource, it could be a helpful handbook to a Regency reader as well...




It is for those who love the romance of Bath. It is not a history of Bath, nor its famous sons, it is a book about the everyday things a Regency Heroine might get up to, and what entertainments were available for her delight.
I laboured long and hard to put hyperlinks in the kindle version, I hope I have covered every link needed!

Paperback


Kindle

Sunday, August 18, 2019

Chaz, chapter 8


 Well, I am sort of back.  Managed this, anyway.


Chapter 8 – Through the Valley of the Shadow of Death

Joe Taylor, the man from the bell foundry had suggested recasting the smallest bell as cheaper than repairing it.
“By the time I’ve sorted that treble out, it’ll run to the price of a new bell,” he said.  “T’others ... well I can make an improvement.”
“Anything is better than ‘dung clang pip’,” said Chaz, dryly. 
“If you were looking to increase your range, we’ve a bell at the foundry as would fit in with your three, which was ordered and then they couldn’t raise the wind,” said Taylor. “We could let you have it for five thousand on top of the six to fix yours; I’ll talk to the boss, see if we can do you ten grand all in.”
“That I could manage,” said Chaz.  “It would give us plain bob minimus to ring, at least.”
“That’s what I thought,” said the bell founder. “One or two bells call to worship, three bells is neither flesh nor fowl nor good red herring.  You want five, really.”
“I know, but that will have to wait,” said Chaz.  “I also need bell-ringers.”
“Old Tom rings,” said the foundry man. “If he’s still alive.”
“He’s still alive,” said Chaz. “You know our bells?”
“Yes, the previous vicar wanted us to fix one of them but the price was too steep,” said the foundry man cynically.
“I suppose we can’t all have independent means and a frugal lifestyle,” said Chaz. “Bellringing has always been a hobby of mine, and to be honest, I can think of plenty of sports which would cost more in the long run.  And once you have the bells, you have the long run.”
“Well, o’ course when you start getting the larger bells, it’ll be a pretty penny, but then, a new car’d set you back more’n a couple of bells,” said the foundry man.  “Or a good set of clubs and membership at a prestigious golf club.”
“Indeed,” said Chaz.  “Are you good to dismount and take them away to work on? They are not especially large.”
“Well, I have the boy with me, so we should do just fine,” said the man. “Hello, you have company.”
Mrs. Hadley had just barrelled in the door.
“Vicar! Tell me it isn’t true!” she cried.
“Tell you what isn’t true?” asked Chaz.
“That you are having the bells taken away, and replacing them with electronic bells!” cried Mrs. Hadley.  “ I saw  the ‘Nine Taylors’ truck. [1]My dear grandfather bought the tenor bell, I couldn’t bear it if you did not keep them!” she struck a dramatic attitude.
“You silly piece, the vicar is paying out of his own pocket to have them tuned, and to add another bell,” said Taylor. “You don’t think a campanologist like the Reverend Cunningham would give up having bells do you?  He’s been part of a prize-winning team he has.”
“He has?  But then why haven’t you been ringing the bells?” Mrs. Hadley turned to Chaz.
“Madam, no musician would like playing an ill-tuned piano and an artist does not enjoy painting with lumpy playschool powder paint,” said Chaz. “The bells offended my sensibilities.  I am rectifying the problems, and adding a bell so we can ring some basic changes.  Of course, if you wish to emulate your illustrious grandsire, and add a fifth bell, we can celebrate him with Grandsire Doubles.  Five bells gives us a lot more choice then Hunting and Plain Bob Minimus. Stedman described nine cross-peals on five bells, and I am partial to Stedman doubles.”
“Oh, I don’t know anything about it,” said Mrs. Hadley, “But I always felt that it was something to remember him by. My grandparents brought me up.”
Chaz thought that this explained a lot.
“Well, ma’am, Joe here will have your grandfather’s bell sorted out in no time.  I saw it had ‘Big Will’ on it; was that his name?”
“Yes, and he was a ringer,” said Mrs. Hadley, proudly.
“Aye, but he was a cheapskate, which is why ‘Big Willy’ is a bit more of a ‘Big Dick’,” said Taylor.
“Joe!” said Chaz.
The foundry-man had the grace to blush.
“Oh, no, Mr. Taylor, his name was William, not Richard, and it was always Will, not Willy,” assured Mrs. Hadley, who missed the coarseness entirely, to Chaz’s relief. A co-operative Mrs. Hadley was easier to deal with than an upset Mrs. Hadley.  “I ... I believe I might consider adding a bell; but not yet, I ... there is no point if there is no interest in ringing.”
“Indeed, as I won’t be able to ring on a Sunday,” said Chaz.  “Unless I get a locum in start things off.”
“I can’t see that being a problem,” said Mrs. Hadley. “The churchwardens could announce a text and the opening hymn.  I am a churchwarden so I think I speak for all.”
“Oh! And speaking of which, Mrs. Hadley, do you have the key to the little vestibule to the ringing room?” asked Chaz.  “I tried to get into there to see if there were things like new ropes, but it was locked and did not respond to any of my keys.”
“Yes, indeed; I will go and get my keys,” said Mrs. Hadley. “Dear me, I disremember when it was last open.  I believe it was locked up by Amos Barrow before he absconded, a piece of sheer spite, if you ask me, a disobliging old man who lived alone and kept everyone at arms’ length.”

Mrs. Hadley soon returned with a chatelaine of keys, and a disapproving look on her face at the youngest Taylor, who wore slit jeans, a Khorne T-shirt and whose ears and eyebrows sported a number of rings and other metalwork.
Introduced as ‘my boy Josh’ by Mr. Taylor, he was grinning shyly at Chaz’s jocular comment that he had enough eyebrow rings to hang a ring of seven.
“You couldn’t make them have the right sound,” said Josh.
“No, and right is right,” agreed Chaz.
Mrs. Hadley at least waited until Josh had vanished up the stair before saying,
“Should you encourage such monstrous fashions, vicar?”
“Certainly; he’ll grow out of it,” said Chaz. “I grew out of wearing a safety pin through my nose to irritate my father, and I expect you grew out of seeing how short a skirt you could get away with by leaning forward when they measured the distance from the ground as you kneeled for that purpose at school.”
“Reverend! However did you know? Dear me, I have not thought of such rebellion for years!” said Mrs. Hadley, flustered.  “I used to wear the skirt Grandma sent me off to school in over my mini skirt, and took it off in the bus.”
“All generations rebel,” said Chaz.  “And the more older folk complain, the more they rebel.  I wager that Shakespeare’s father hit the roof when young Will first started wearing an earring.”
“Dear me, I  ... I had not thought of that,” said Mrs. Hadley.  “This is the key ... dear me, it does not seem to be going in.”
“May I?” said Chaz.  She gave him the chatelaine, and Chaz tried.
“What can be wrong?” she wondered, petulantly.
“You say this Amos Barrow disappeared?” said Chaz.
“Yes, without a word to anyone,” said Mrs. Hadley.
Chaz got out his mobile phone and punched in the number of  Collingham police station.
“Superintendant Smythe?  This is Chaz Cunningham, vicar of  Lingley,” said Chaz.  “Now I could be wrong, but I think I might have a DB in my church ... one which is irregular as you might say.  Eh?  Oh, a locked room, locked from the inside with the key still in it.  Well,  before my time ... a moment.” He cupped his hand over the phone.  “Mrs. Hadley, when did Barrow disappear?”
“Goodness!  It must be ... nearly forty years ago,” said Mrs. Hadley. “Yes, I was in my teens.”
“Forty years, superintendant,” said Chaz.  “Yes, I know; I understand he was believed to have absconded.  No, the previous vicar left no intimation that he was concerned; I doubt he would have entered the little room in any case, it’s little more than a cupboard.  Thank you, I appreciate that.” He rang off.
“What is it, vicar? Why did you phone the police?” asked Mrs. Hadley.
“Well, Mrs. Hadley, this is the only door to that room, isn’t it?” said Chaz.
“Yes, it’s no more than a glory hole for keeping spare ropes in,” said Mrs. Hadley.
“And it is locked on the inside, with the key still in the lock,” said Chaz.
Colour drained from Mrs. Hadley’s face as the implication of this hit her.
“So ... you mean the poor man got shut in and could not make anyone hear?” she whispered.
“Whatever happened, I think he’s still in there, not absconded at all,” said Chaz. “No spite, just ... circumstance.”
Mrs. Hadley fainted.

The police have tools for turning keys on the other sides of locks, amongst their many tools which would get any other member of the public arrested for carrying tools for breaking and entering.  Pete Noakes and Timothy Cotton, who were assigned to the village, soon had the door open.
Mrs. Hadley was by now resting on a chaise longue in the vestry with a nice cup of tea, and Chaz raised an eyebrow.
“Suicide,” said Pete. “There’s a note and all; he hanged himself with a bell-ringing rope over one of the beams.  Chair kicked over, classic.”
“May I enquire what, in broad, the note said?” asked Chaz.
“Basically that nobody cared, that he was dying of cancer but nobody passed the time of day with him to ask how he was feeling, and that he believed it would be Christmas before anyone missed him and found the body. It was dated September, almost exactly 40 years ago.”
Chaz whistled.
“I think I need to do a sermon on loneliness,” he said.


“I’ve got two pop songs for the congregation today,” said Chaz in church.  “First one, I suspect most of the older members will know; and I wonder if some of the younger ones will know the second.  I’ve hired a big screen to show the official video for it.”
The first track he played was by the Beatles, “Eleanor Rigby.” 
“That spells it out, without equivocation, what it is like to be lonely; especially poor, old and lonely,” said Chaz.  “That was in 1966.  Do you think things have got better, or worse?  Please watch the video and then think about it.”
He played ‘Numb’ by Linkin’ Park.
“This is the oldest video next to ‘Bohemian Rhapsody’ to break one million views on YouTube. It was released in 2003,” Chaz told the congregation.  “You don’t have to be old or even particularly poor to feel alone, isolated, alienated.  It can happen to anyone who finds themselves feeling at odds with what is perceived as the mainstream.  It happened to Amos Barrow, who was forty. That’s not old, though some of you old enough to recall him may describe him as old, because he was a loner, irascible, and not able to reach out.  As most of you doubtless know, Amos’ body was found here in the church, where he came, first to pray and then to commit suicide. He had cancer. Nobody knew because nobody ever asked him how he was, despite the fact that he was a churchwarden and a bellringer.  Not even the vicar.  Now, Reverent Shaw was a young man then, and new in the district and perhaps he felt a little shy.  Many of the folks here were only children and perhaps felt that it would be an intrusion.  But now you are the adults, and other generations have grown up.  And I want you to ask yourselves, have you ever shunned anyone because they were a bit different?  I know that Maggie Beales has welcomed Annie Shaw into her flower arranging class.  Annie suffers from Down’s Syndrome, and Annie, I love this bright arrangement you have made for me out of Dahlias.”
Annie crowed happily from the congregation, and signed her thanks in Makaton.
Chaz smiled back.  Maggie had introduced him to Annie, saying that the W.I. had not permitted Annie to come along, meaning that her mother was unable to join the W.I.
“Annie understands that her flower arrangements praise God,” said Chaz.  “That makes her a better Christian than those who exclude her and her mother from activities.  Fortunately Annie knows she has friends, and is not lonely; but she might be in the future.  And how much support does Mrs. Shaw have?  How many of you drop in to give her an hour to herself by sitting with Annie?  It’s more than it was a week or two ago.  But why did I have to ask some of the more generous souls who did not know the Shaws? Why weren’t there offers from those people who live nearer?” He swept the congregation with a stern eye. “Being different is not something to be punished by being ostracised.  Being different is a blessing; a unique gift. Our Saviour was ‘different’.  He did not toe the line, nor do what society wanted of Him.  He went out onto the highways and byeways to preach and to teach.  He healed the sick.  He questioned the Old Testament’s harsh laws.  He did not despise publicans and sinners, and nor did he despise the men of Samaria.  You all know the story of the Good Samaritan, but none of you apply it in real life!” he was thundering now, eyes blazing.  “You look on a kid with piercings, or on a refugee from another country, and you treat them the same way as the Jews treated the men of Samaria, and if you receive any blessings from them, then you treat them like a dancing dog, a spectacle to be wondered at like a token single good Samaritan!  Now we have the odd recluse in the village, and I have not butted in before because I wanted to see what the village does for its own.  And I discover that what it does is nothing!”
“Please, Rev. Chaz, I talk to the man in Rose Cottage!” Piped up Summer Grey.  Chaz smiled at her.
“Of course you do, Summer; you are a breath of fresh air.  Does he talk to you?”
“Well, sometimes,” said Summer.  “He doesn’t tell me to and find something else to do like he used to.”
“Excellent,” said Chaz.  “I did knock on his door but he didn’t feel like opening it.  You might tell him I don’t bite and that I make good biscuits.”
Summer nodded solemnly.
“I shall,” she said.
“And there we have a little child leading us all,” said Chaz. “Children have no preconceptions; they learn those from their parents as they grow older.  I would love to see the children of today growing up without preconceptions about other village folk who are not quite the same.  Which does not mean not warning them about dangerous people; but then, if you know someone is dangerous, you should be telling the police to go visit instead of telling your children to stay away.”






[1] There is a Bell Foundry called Tailors, whom I am referencing; they fixed the ring of five Wolsey bells in one of my local churches which now ring sweet and clear.  Nine Taylors, as anyone who reads Lord Peter Whimsey will know, refers to the nine tolls to mark the passing of a man. [6 for a woman, 3 for a child].