Wednesday, July 26, 2023

Story retrieved, and here it is: My Name Is Ace.

My name is Ace.

I didn’t always have a name, so I am glad to have one now.  When I was a kitten, the others called me ‘Runt’ because I was so small.  I called myself ‘Lucky’ because I survived.  Humans called me hard names, and threw things, except the ‘Kind Hands’ who took me, and made me go to sleep with a needle, and when I woke up, they fed me.  My bottom was a bit sore but otherwise nothing seemed different.

The ‘Kind Hands’ humans fed us once a day in the street, when they let me go again, but I didn’t want to stay.  The other cats were big and scary.

I come from a town called Limassol.  It is on an island called Cyprus, where it is always warm or hot, but most of the people there don’t like cats, and sensible cats hide from them, and only talk to humans who come in the big metal birds to visit.

I was nearly a year old, and my life was about to change.

It had been a bad week.  Scraps were few, and in the heat they soon went rotten, and anyone who ate them got a bad tummy.  I caught a bird, but a big Tomcat took it off me, and scratched my eye.  Oh! How it hurt!  I ran away, towards a rubbish tip I knew where there were sometimes scraps.

And when I got there, I recognised a smell!

It was a kitten who smelled of my mother; a little brother of mine!  He looked terrible.  His eye, the one opposite my bad eye, so like a mirror, was swollen and seeping pus.  Yuk, it really smelled bad.  Did I look like that?  I thought.  Actually, yes, I probably did.

This little brother of mine had cuddled up to another kitten who was crying faintly.  Not surprising, for I could see where his tail had been bitten half off, probably by dogs, and it was swollen and definitely the wrong colour for a tail to be, and it was covered in flies. He was about the same age as my brother, half-grown kitten-cats.

There was no food.

There was no water.

There was no shade.

I was too weak to go any further.

I think that was the moment I decided I would adopt both kittens as my brothers and look after them while we all died.  Lucky’s luck has run out, I thought.  I curled around them as best I might, for they were almost as big as me, since I have always been so little.

 

I don’t know how long we lay there, half unconscious in the heat.  But suddenly there were ‘human hands.’ I stiffened; but they were ‘gentle hands’ and they came with a gentle voice.  I heard the gentle-voiced one called Anna.  The next few days are a blur in my memory, but we had food and water and a cool pen, and then we went to sleep with a needle again and when I woke up my eye was no longer throbbing, just a bit sore.  It didn’t smell the same bad smell any more either, but it smelled of place-with-needles smell. I know now this is a Vet smell, but I didn’t know much about vets then.

My brother, who is white with tabby spots like, me [though I have more spots than him] had his bad eye taken out too, and we had whiskery things across the hole, which I know now were stitches.  Our adopted stripy brother’s tail had been taken right off!  And I’m afraid we pointed and giggled.

When we were able to take in what was happening, Anna who found us told us we had names.  Stripy was now called Kelly, my little brother was Piper, and I was Ace.

“You are going to stay with a lady called Cynthia, and then you are going to England,” we were told.

“What’s an England?” squeaked Piper.

“I think it’s a ‘where’ not a ‘what’, I purred at him.  “I think it’s where the big metal birds live, who bring humans with food.”

 

It was quite nice with Cynthia, but we lived in a cage to sleep and had a room to play in.  We had lots of needles, which was not nice, smelly stuff put on our backs where we couldn’t get at it to wash off, and blood taken out of us.  But we got plenty of food and we were safe and Cynthia played with us, though Piper was too scared to play much.

And then Cynthia said,

“You are going to your human Mummy and Daddy, Sarah and Simon.  You will be in a crate for a very long time until you get to them.”

In a crate for a very long time?  What was that for?

We found out when they took us to a place in Cyprus where the metal birds roost.  We were going in a metal bird! We had to be in a plastic crate so the metal bird couldn’t really eat us, but it was so scary when Auntie Cynthia was making cross noises.  We clung together, frightened.

And then I was taken away from my brothers!  I shouted and shouted, and Auntie Cynthia cuddled me, and said I had to go in a separate crate, something about weight. 

I was sure I hadn’t got that fat for just eating every day.

I didn’t like being away from my brothers and I told the humans all about it, but I ran out of breath to shout, and we had to be inside the metal bird, which smelled peculiar. 

It was so very scary.  The bird lifted us up so fast my tummy stayed behind and I had to poop in the crate, and I could smell that my brothers had done so too.  At least we had water and some dried food, but no room for a litter box.  The bird’s tummy rumbled too, all the time, very badly.  I was scared that if it was so hungry it might eat us when we got to England.  I know it’s the only way to go to England, but it’s not pleasant!  However, we were desperate for a home so we had no choice.

When the metal bird landed it didn’t eat us and pretty soon we were smelling vet smells again who poked us about, and they were talking about problems with the paperwork of two other kittens who had travelled with us.  Really, the amount of paper humans seem to find necessary!  They’d do better to use it to wipe their bottoms, since they can’t wash properly.

Eventually [oh, how long it took!] we were put in a car with the other two kittens. It was so cold outside, and I didn’t have my brothers to snuggle up to!  And was it right to be with the other two?”

“Are we going to the right home?” Kelly shouted.

“We have to trust the nice humans!”  I shouted back.  The two female humans had been nice, but we were supposed to have a daddy.

However, we stopped after we’d been driven a while, and another couple of humans came and took our crates, and there was much hugging and kissing.  And it was ever so nice, because in the back of their car was a big, big cage with a litter box and an igloo house and blankets, as well as food and water.  I went and used the litter box right away, I was so pleased!

And we were all together again in there, and we were so relieved we curled up together.  And our new mummy sat in the back and put her hand in to stroke us and talk to us.  Piper was scared, but then he’d had worse from humans than Kelly and I had, he told us he had been booted into the air by a human once.  You can see the shape of the boot on the scar on his chest.  I rewarded our new mummy by climbing onto her lap for a cuddle, before going back to my brothers.   And then we drove through the night, and the car was warm and we slept, exhausted.  It wasn’t very nice going from the car to the house because the cage swung about a bit as they carried it between them, but we came at last into a warm room.  And we were finally properly warm again, and no more travelling.

There were lots of other cats looking at us curiously, but we were used to other cats.  So we curled up and went to sleep.

 

Next day Mummy and Daddy put us in a smaller cage but all together, and we had to travel again, but it was only to a vet.  We found out we needed ear drops, which sounded ominous, which is probably because it was ominous.

I would like to mention that I do not like ear drops, and nor do my brothers. Piper made a fine mess of Daddy’s hands clawing and biting him, but Daddy never stopped being gentle.

It was Kelly who gave us most drama though.

He wriggled clear out of Daddy’s arms, up onto his shoulder and tried to jump!

Silly idiot, how was he supposed to jump without a tail to balance him?  He landed heavily, too shocked to cry, having caught one paw on the way down on a stone step.

“Why do they always do these things at the weekend?” Daddy asked, as Mummy picked up Kelly for a cuddle.

To be fair to Kelly, he was having to put up with a lot of soothing creams and cleaning for his bottom as well as ear drops.  Losing your tail is a dreadful thing, because you don’t know when you are pooping, as well as not being able to jump. He was very brave. And with the cold journey he also got the runs. 

Anyway, off he went to the vet and came back with a pink bandage on his paw.

It took him overnight to get rid of it.

Meanwhile we were getting to know the other cats, who were very friendly, especially Rosie, who cuddled up with us like a mummy-cat.  Mummy Sarah laughed and said we all made a cuddle-puddle.

But I was the first one, when they left the cage door open overnight so we could come and go as we pleased, to find my way upstairs and onto Daddy’s feet.

Kelly was next, and that was when he shed his bandage.   His problem was that he couldn’t get downstairs without it.

Mummy did persevere.

She put it back on him four times.

It only took him six hours to get rid of it the second time, and when he shed it after just ten minutes, Mummy said,

“I give up; he’ll have to limp and let it heal naturally.

It did, and he strengthened it on the big running wheel Mummy and Daddy have for those of us who want to run.

 

We got used to it being colder than we were used to, we could cuddle each other, and Rosie, or curl up with one of our humans.  Not that Piper wanted to trust humans that much.  Kelly and I did. Piper discovered that longhaired Cecil and blind Leo were nice and warm and friendly so he cuddled them instead.

And gradually the winter went away, and we were allowed outside on warm days, in a nice, safe run, where nobody could get at us to hurt us. Piper learned that being stroked was nice, and he had special places where he allowed it.  The Stroking Chair was where he had made friends with Cecil and Leo, and first Daddy, and then Mummy, were allowed to stroke him there.

And when Piper showed mummy his tummy, she found the scar shaped like the welt of a boot, and she cried a lot, and understood why he didn’t much like humans.

Meanwhile, I’m afraid it was I who next provided some drama!  My sewn-up eye got uncomfortable, and then it burst open with horrid smelly stuff.  Mummy said it was probably because there was so much poison from the first wound, that it ate part of my little skull above my nose.  When the vets had sewn that up it made the little diamond shape which made Mummy call me ‘Ace’. 

Nice Dr. Jenny said my eye would be fine, but it should be left open to drain.  Mummy and Daddy bathed it with warm salt water, which wasn’t nice, but I was very, very good about it, and it healed up perfectly.

And we got to summer, and if it wasn’t as warm as Cyprus, we became used to that. The window is open most days through the summer, and we can come in if it rains.

Oh, and I help Mummy to write.  I scramble onto her lap, and one time I managed to pull off five of her keys on her keyboard.  She must have been so pleased, she said “Oh, ACE!” and she picked me up and hugged me.

My little brothers are a year old now, and almost grown up, and Kelly’s bottom only produces little nuts, not sticky goo except on really hot days.  Mummy says it saves a lot of washing!

We have a home and lots of love.  The only bad thing was when our mummy-sister, Rosie, died.  I cuddled her while she was dying.  She needed me, like I needed her when we first came.

But life goes on, and we have a good life and we will live it for ever and ever.

Somewhere a good angel was watching over us on that day when we all cuddled together to die on a rubbish tip.

Please send more angels to Cyprus.

 

Thursday, July 20, 2023

Finally got Chauvelin in England published!

 I'd done all the corrections, it took me a while to get the formatting for Kindle done, but now it's finally out after wrestling with the size of the cover despite using their template.  Life's fighting back right now.

Anyway, it's done.and now Firefox did an update and is making me re sign in to everything. It's driving me nuts.

https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B0CC9DD42B

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0CC9DD42B

Tuesday, July 11, 2023

Tranche 2 of fantasy morphing dress historical costume.

 


Regency lasses. 

I haven;t done any early victorian yet, most of these are 1870s on.




brown dress is 1893, coat is 1905

and into the belle epoch:

a dress from House of Worth 1905, done in 3 colourways

various dresses 1900-10


 


Tranche one of historical costumes for the fantasy morphing dress for Victoria in Poser.

 

 

This is the net of the Morphing Fantasy Dress, and morph it does - it can be wide or narrow, have a bustle and you can also add bits like a train, puff sleeves, and I've used ruffles from other sets of clothing on some of these.



half a dozen 17th century gowns above

Now on to 18th century, a broad field!








1775 vs 1790

blue polonaise gown 1770s, showing front and back




moving towards the silhouette of regency.




Regency and victorian next!


Tuesday, June 20, 2023

Friday, May 19, 2023

moorwick chronicles dramatis personae

 

 I'm afraid the text boxes which lined up prettily are now annoying extraneous boxes; they work fine on the template but not, apparently, here.

Dramatis Personae

 

Ellery Morecambe, 7th Earl Wroth

Anne Morecambe, Countess Wroth,  his wife.

 

Hortensia Maplin, cousin of Anne, brain damaged. Ellery’s pensioner.

 

Peacock, the butler at Wrotherhyde Hall

Mrs. Yorke, housekeepr at Wrotherhyde Hall.

Jagger, head groom at Wrotherhyde Hall, has flamboyant style in waistcoats.


Claudia Hyde, dowager Countess Wroth, relict of Charles Hyde, 5th Earl Wroth.

 

Lady Amanda Hyde

Lady Miranda Hyde      

                                                                The daughters of the dowager, collectively known as

                                                                   ‘the gerundives’ for their names.

Lady Lucenda Hyde

 

 

Larry [Laurence] Hyde, 6th Earl Wroth, deceased diseased.

 

Selena Johnson, illegitimate daughter of opera dancer, Celeste Johnson, and Fenton Harcourt, an uncle of Larry Hyde, Selena is a  friend of Drusilla/Tiffany, also charity girl in Mrs. Chorley’s school.

 

Jane Jefferson, parlour boarder in Mrs. Chorley’s school, friend of the charity girls

Amelie Dubois, daughter of a ci-devant vicomte, pupil at Mrs. Chorley’s school. Not a nice girl.

 

Francis Hyde, 4th Lord Wroxley, deceased.  Depraved waste of space.

 

Hugo Hyde, 5th Lord Wroxley, nephew of above, captain in the 7th hussars. – Marries Lady Amanda Hyde

Collins, his devoted valet and ex batman

 

Lord Robert Bradley, magistrate, widower.  A fair man.

The Hon. Thomas Bradley, his son.  Less of a pill than he used to be

The Hon. Amelia Bradley, his daughter. Still coltish

Miss Lydia Lawford, Amelia’s governess. A nervous lady

 

Sir Henry Bradley, brother of Lord Bradley, colonel of local militia.

Lady Sophia Bradley, his wife, motherly and sweet.

 

John Landry, wealthy industrialist, bully and voluptuary. Dead and unmourned.

Aurelia Landry, his trophy wife. Older daughter of a parson with unholy instincts.

Beatrice Clement, Aurelia’s sister, the daughter who was not favoured. Married Jack Mayhew qv

Susanna Gorringe, Aurelia’s maid/dresser/companion/crony. The real mother of small John Landry, b spring 1813, as Aurelia refuses sexual contact with her husband. ½ sister of Aurelia and Beatrice.

Ephraim Porkins, disobliging gardener/groom/coachman/handyman, soft spot for Aurelia.

3 maids, see Aggie Dinsdale

 

 

Luke Sanderville, owner of Kersey Abbey, late of the 7th Hussars, missing a hand

Ophelia Sanderville, his wife

Matthew Sanderville, their son

Lucy Sanderville, Luke’s daughter AKA the Queen’s Own Lucy



 

Sebastian/Seb Rackham

Philemon/ Phil Rackham

                                                Ophelia’s brothers who live with her and Luke

Eglamour/Egg Rackham

 

Mrs. Celia Rackham, mother of Ophelia and the Rackham boys, self-absorbed now in Bath.

 

Micklejohn, ex soldier, butler. Ex Sergeant, missing a leg, known to Jem Butler as Mr. Mouthfulman.

Mrs. Micklejohn, Housekeeper, fat and jolly.

Crawford, coachman, ex soldier, missing an arm; father to Maggie Butler. Late of the 95th rifles.

Davis footman, ex soldier, Methodist.

Jem Butler, poacher, now Luke’s Bailiff

Maggie Butler née Crawford, chose Jem for his good teeth and fitness over any younger men, she is a fine shot.

Jemima, b. Early 1813

Luke due late 1814

 

Bessie Porrit, aka Madame Bellescheveux.  Married daughter of Luke’s bailiff, Jem Butler.

Maggie, who married Jem. Children James and Eliza, 6 and 4

Andrew, Bessie’s husband

 

 

Jeffery Thorngate, son of factory owner, raised as a gentleman, quite erudite grey eyes, titian hair. Working on being less careless. Open handed and pleasant.

Sisters: Priscilla, b 1793, married; Penelope b1796, ginger

Brother, Miles, b 1797, scholarly, amiable, a bit slapdash, dark auburn hair.

 

 

Paul Fulkard, son of an old family of gentry folk, very musical which was denied to him by his parents.

Miriam Fulkard née Mayhew, his wife, oldest daughter of the Rev. Mayhew. Musical. Bright red ginger hair

 

 

Death Morville, son of old family of gentry, his first name is his mother’s maiden name but he refuses to pronounce it De’ath.  Had infantile paralysis and is left with a limp. 

Crumshawe, Morville’s devoted valet.

Tiffany Morville, née Drusilla Haversedge/Tiffany Hyde, illegitimate daughter of Larry Hyde, charity girl in Mrs. Chorley’s school. Mrs. Death Morville.

George, an infant, brother [half or full not known] to Tiffany, adopted by Death.

 

Jack Mayhew, the eldest son of the Reverend Mayhew. Has job as apprentice joiner to pay for his siblings’ education. Chestnut hair.

Beatrice Mayhew, née Clement, Aurelia’s sister, the daughter who was not favoured.

 

Miriam Mayhew, oldest daughter of the Rev. Mayhew. Musical. Bright red ginger hair married Paul Fulkard qv

Michael Mayhew, second son, already at university. Auburn.

James Mayhew, third son, aspires to university, musical. Bright red ginger hair

Ezekial/Zeke Mayhew fourth son, wants to work outside. Bright red ginger hair

Abigail Mayhew, second daughter. Strawberry blonde

Other Mayhew children:

Elizabeth and Esther. Sandy red hair.

Daniel/ Dan. Chestnut hair

Gabriel/ Gabe. Auburn hair.

Gabe, Dan, and Zeke are being reared by Luke and Ophelia

Jesca. Strawberry blonde.

Reuben, musical. Bright red ginger hair.

Adalia and Aziza, musical. Bright red ginger hair.

Priscilla. Chestnut hair.

Mark. Strawberry blonde hair.

The four youngest are being raised by Miriam and Paul

 

Tobias Smith, cornet in local militia, yeoman farmer’s son

Mr. and Mrs. Smith, Tobias’ parents

Polly [Mary], their daughter

 

Mr. Wickes, schoolmaster

Mrs. Wickes, schoolmistress of girls, née Catherine [Aunt Catty] Dawlish,  wife of Mr. Wickes and former companion to Mrs. Rackham

 

Harry [Henry] Tweedie, adoptive son of the Wickes, he and one sister being the sole survivors of typhus.  Sister Amy, b c1808

Towser, a dog, rescued by Harry at risk to his own life.  A faithful and intelligent hound.

 

Lionel Samms, an old school friend of both Ellery and Luke, a Corinthian and noted horseman

 

 

Maggie and Emmie Thwaite, village girls from Wrotherhyde, good at sewing; working for Selena in her shop.

 

Miss Jemima Thorrington, ageing teacher at Mrs. Chorley’s school happy to become a companion to Selena.

 

 

Aggie Dinsdale, wife of Dick Dinsdale the butcher

Patty [Martha] Lumley, née Dinsdale, relict of a drunken carter, son Robert b late 1812. Patty is cook/housekeeper to Aurelia and Susanna

Minnie [Mary] & Amy [Amelia] b 1797, twins, maids of all work to Aurelia and Susanna.

Fanny [Frances] b 1799, at school

Richie [Richard] b 1801, at school

Torquil b 1804, named for an uncle, known by his fellows as ‘Teapot.’

 

Jinny Goodchild, wife of Goodchild the baker

Joe, b 1794, works for his father

Charlie, b 1797, at school, wants to be a Royal Engineer

 

Thwaite, farrier, horse-doctor and sometime midwife

7 daughters; Doll and Moll married;

Ellie, 1798, Judy, 1800, Rosie, 1805, Hetty, 1807, Biddy, 1809.

 

Tom Kentworth, Blacksmith

Tommy, b 1795, works for father

Billie, b 1797, at school, wants to be a lawyer

 

Kenworth the saddler, offspring mostly stupid and willingly ignorant. Oldest boy b 1796. Once floored by Ophelia. 

Anne b 1803, in school, and has ambitions to escape her family. 

 

Reverend Jerome Blake, vicar in Wrotherhyde

Jerusha Blake, his daughter.

 

 

 

Miss Jane Sneddon, an incomer of genteel poverty and malicious disposition

 

Mrs. Merivale, wife of  yeoman farmer Merivale, husband beater and gossip

 

 

Captain Thomas Death Sanderville RN, cousin of both Luke and of Death Morville, bought The Place from Aurelia Landry and renamed it Fourwinds. Somewhat drawn to Miranda Hyde...

 

Jim Cooper, yeoman farmer

Andrew, b 1799

Alice, b 1801

Alexander, b1805

Arthur, b 1808

 

Rev. Edmund Baillie, new rector in Withersedge [where Aurelia et al came from], a bit of a squarson, chubby, but with lugubrious sandy muttonchops.

Lizzie, his wife, thin, but jolly, musical

Nicholas, b1797 a bit of a know it all and hearty and inclined to throw weight around. Handsome with golden brown hair.

Matthew, b1799, opinionated but squashable; mid brown hair.

Lydia, b 1801,musical, fine needlewoman, mousey hair, a bit clumsy

Stephen b 1803, very musical, charismatic, sandy curly hair, not very tall.

Susan, b 1806, golden brown

Philip, b 1808, nut brown.