Annie and her Granny
By Susannah Donim
Chapter 6 - Maid of All Work
Steve moves in with his girlfriend, but not at all as he would have wanted.
I now moved in with Annie full time. Under better circumstances that would
have been great, but she said she would need to call me 'Granny' all the
time, even when we were alone, because of the danger of giving the game
away if she forgot and called me Steve in public. Also she said it was
hard not to call me Granny seeing that I looked, and increasingly acted,
exactly like her. I assumed she was teasing, but I still had to get used
to answering to 'Granny'.
I grudgingly accepted this, only insisting on not being Granny in bed,
which sadly was still a chaste affair because of my glued-on prosthesis.
At least she wasn't suggesting we sleep in separate bedrooms, which would
have really got me worried. Nevertheless we had to maintain the illusion
that we slept apart, in case Treacher was parked outside. We kept the
curtains at the front of the house closed all the time - nothing suspicious
in that? - and switched the bedroom lights on and off realistically.
Granny went to bed before ten o'clock most nights, after which I padded
next door (in my nightie and bonnet) for a cuddle.
Our morning routine was similar to how it had been when I was Ingrid.
Annie particularly enjoyed watching me squeeze myself into Dolly's stiff
shapewear, and was always keen to help.
We reviewed my new wardrobe together. Dolly's clothes were respectable and
economical; that is, dowdy. If she had ever tried to be fashionable, she
had given up long ago. I saw skirts and dresses, all falling to well below
the knee; blouses and sweaters, all with long sleeves; but no trousers at
all.
"I don't think I've ever seen Granny wearing slacks," Annie said. "I
remember her saying something about pants not suiting her because of her...
er, large hindquarters."
"Huh! Tell me about it," I said, looking over my shoulder and studying my
duplicate of her backside in the wardrobe mirror. "It's like sitting on a
cushion."
"So - extra comfy then?" she grinned. I snorted. "Oh, come on, I know
that's not really you, silly! Steve has a lovely, sexy little butt. Mind
you, there's something even sexier about seeing you like that..."
I was a little mollified, though a bit puzzled about her last statement.
Was my transformation turning my gorgeous girlfriend kinky? I remembered
her insistence on watching me put on my lingerie in the mornings when I was
my mother...
I changed into one of Dolly's - my - least frumpy dresses and went
downstairs to start supper, an elderly lady in floral housedress and pinny,
cooking for her herself and her beloved granddaughter.
* * *
We travelled to and from work together, usually in Annie's car. I did
drive Dolly's old mini occasionally but I didn't like it much, and wasn't
comfortable driving in my heels and tight women's clothes. Whichever car
we used, we were soon being followed by the blue Fiesta. We noted his
registration number. We also got a good look at Treacher himself over the
next few days, hopefully still without him realising we knew he was
following us. We became quite used to him dogging our footsteps. I
wondered how he had discovered our place of business in the first place.
Harriet certainly wouldn't know it. But it would have been easy enough for
him to find out where Dolly lived, so he must have followed Annie and me
from Dolly's house the morning after the Ladies' Pairs Final.
It soon became clear he wasn't at all interested in Annie. Whenever we
separated - for instance, if Annie dropped me at the shops while she went
off somewhere else - he invariably followed me. This was good, in that it
meant Annie could visit the real Dolly in hospital, but bad because I was
under even more pressure to make my impersonation flawless. That meant
doing everything Dolly usually did.
It also made me paranoid. What if Treacher intercepted one of the kitchen
staff on their way home and bribed or cajoled them into watching me
carefully and reporting back to him? Like any small business we suffered
frequent turnover of support staff in catering and housekeeping. We
stressed the importance of discretion for our clients, but we couldn't
expect the same loyalty from people who had only been with us briefly as we
could from the likes of Vera, Sharon, and of course, Dolly.
My paranoia included worrying that Treacher might have broken into Dolly's
house and planted listening devices, despite the burglar alarm which we
used rigorously whenever we went out. I asked Fred if he could get hold of
a device to 'sweep' a building for bugs. He chuckled but obliged, and I
used the detector every day when we got home before I allowed myself to
break character. I suggested Fred do the same for the company offices, but
he didn't take me seriously.
Annie, Vera, Sharon, Fred and my mother told me everything they knew about
Dolly's life, and Annie quizzed the real Dolly further when she visited
her. Between them they managed to put together her weekly routine. She
actually led a busier life than I had expected. On Tuesdays I would have
to drive myself to the Winter Gardens to play bingo. Wednesday was Bridge
with either Ingrid or Fred. Thursday was Dolly's day off and in the
morning she went to a Seniors Swim at the local leisure centre. On Friday
evenings she had a Ballroom Dancing class, which was a bit of a surprise,
given what I knew of her knees. Perhaps Vera was right and she had been
exaggerating. Also once a month she did the flowers for the Sunday
services at St Marks with her friend, Betty - that was coming up soon, I
noted.
None of these appealed much, but at least Annie volunteered to come with me
if I wanted. I was concerned that Dolly would have friends at both bingo
and dancing. I asked her to pump her real grandmother for information
about the people she knew - with photos, if possible.
Worst of all, I had to learn to knit. One of the waitresses mentioned that
she hadn't seen me knitting lately. Had I given it up? I muttered
something about arthritis in my fingers but realised I was going to have to
learn if I wanted to keep my impersonation convincing. Fortunately Vera
was a near expert. She said it was ironic because Dolly had taught her how
to knit a while ago and now she had to teach Dolly back. I suppose irony
doesn't actually have to be funny, or maybe I was just finding it hard to
see any humour in my situation.
I had to learn a whole new vocabulary: how to cast on and off; plain and
purl stitching; how to switch between two balls of wool to make knitwear
with patterns of more than one colour; and different kinds of stitch. I
found it all much harder than it looked. Maintaining a constant tension in
my yarn was particularly difficult. An early exercise was to knit a six
inches square of material. The first row was almost exactly six inches,
but the last row was less than four, because I had tightened up. I would
have to spend every spare moment with my wool and needles. Annie found it
hilarious.
At work Dolly enjoyed a privileged position as the boss's friend as well as
employee, but she was determined not to take advantage, so she had put
herself under the orders of the catering manageress, Mrs Parker, and the
housekeeper, Mrs Venables. Morning coffee and afternoon tea were her - my
- responsibilities exclusively. In between, I had to fill in wherever I
was needed, although the ladies, kindly souls, were careful not to overload
such an elderly employee. I was therefore never asked to clean the ovens,
which required elbow grease as well as awkward bending down, but I did take
my turn in cleaning lavatories, which was definitely not what I had
expected my first paid job to entail.
After a week of this new life, I was beginning to settle into Dolly's
routine. I got used to strapping myself into tight shapewear to force my
flabby, droopy flesh into the shape of a respectable matron; I got used to
making up my craggy face into something I could stand to look at in the
mirror; and I got used to spending my days in stockings, high heels, and a
maid's uniform, at the beck and call of housekeeping staff - dusting,
vacuuming, serving in the cafeteria, washing-up, and helping the girls to
make up the rooms when we had clients staying in the overnight
accommodation. No one outside our little circle seemed to suspect
anything, presumably putting any unusual behaviour on my part down to my
recent illness.
I began to relax a little and honestly didn't find being a tea lady and
housemaid so bad, but when five o'clock came round I was generally too
tired to go down to the Bunker and start working on the computers, so Fred
had to manage by himself for the moment. In any case, Treacher would be
waiting somewhere until I left and was bound to be suspicious if I seemed
to be working twelve-hour days.
* * *
The following Tuesday I went to bingo with Annie. She won ten pounds and
got quite excited at times, but I can't say I understood the appeal. There
were several old dears who knew Dolly by sight, and well enough to exchange
a few words with, but fortunately nobody there was a close friend. So we
survived the evening well enough. The main problem - at least for me - was
boredom. At a mid-session break I looked out into the car park, and there
was the blue Fiesta.
I played Bridge with Fred on the Wednesday and quite enjoyed myself. A lot
of people came up to congratulate me on our success in the Ladies Pairs
Final, which was nice. Harriet was conspicuous by her absence. That was a
shame in a way because I'd hoped a little friendly conversation with her
might have persuaded her to call off her hound. When I got up to hobble to
the Ladies half-way through the evening, I saw that he was outside in his
damn Fiesta as usual.
When the evening's results were announced, we had come top of the pairs
sitting North-South. Fred hugged me and kissed me on the cheek to
celebrate. I couldn't really object. I suppose he would have done that
with the real Dolly, and to do less might have seemed suspicious. Or maybe
he'd just forgotten who was under the old lady fa?ade. I was often in
danger of forgetting myself.
* * *
On Thursday morning I really didn't fancy showing off my old lady body at
the swimming pool in nothing but a swimsuit, but I came under a lot of
pressure from both Annie and my mother to go through with it.
"The trouble is, we don't know how much of Granny's routine Treacher has
found out," said Annie. "So if you start doing something she doesn't, or
don't do something she usually does, you might raise his suspicions."
My mother weighed in with a completely different argument.
"This will be an excellent test of how effective your 'old lady' disguise
is," she argued. "See if anybody notices anything odd about you."
"But I'll have to go in the women's changing rooms. If it isn't effective,
I could be arrested!"
Neither of them seemed to be impressed. I changed tack.
"Can't you come with me?" I asked Annie.
"It's for seniors, isn't it?" she said. "I'm about fifty years too young."
"We could easily do something about that," I said eagerly. "This is
Transformations. You could see for yourself what it's like having a flabby
tummy, cellulite, and droopy boobs."
"Hmm, tempting..." she said, "...but I'll have to pass, I'm afraid. You're
on your own, Granny dear."
I turned to my mother. "You would have two 'old lady' test subjects
showing themselves off in public."
"Sorry, Dolly, we've got three clients coming in that morning. I need
Annie. Have a nice swim."
The class was at ten o'clock and I turned up at the leisure centre half an
hour early. The women's changing rooms weren't busy and I soon found an
empty cubicle. I undressed and stepped into Dolly's swimsuit, a black one-
piece with a little skirt down to mid-thigh. It had blue flashes forming a
trendy abstract design. I pulled the straps up over my shoulders and
tugged the back of the costume down to encase my wobbly buttocks properly.
I tucked my droopy boobs into the push-up bra. This had a neck hook
closure and seemed to lift my breasts up nicely, preventing spillage.
I realised I was showing quite a bit of cleavage - not necessarily a good
thing for a woman of my apparent age - but I felt well supported. So far,
so good then; the suit seemed to be as effective at keeping me 'respectable
old lady-shaped' as the stiff shapewear I had just taken off.
I took off my wig and wig cap and stuffed them in the bottom of my bag. I
tucked Steve's unruly mop into an old-fashioned yellow ladies' bathing cap,
checking carefully that no strands of brown hair were visible where only
grey should be seen. I stepped apprehensively out of the cubicle.
There were a couple of other old ladies chatting over by the washbasins.
They had obviously finished their swim and were now restoring their hair
and make-up at the mirrors. They smiled at me as I passed but showed no
particular interest. I smiled back and padded through the footbath at the
exit to the pool.
It was nearly empty. There were three or four people sedately doing
lengths. Both sexes were represented. I put on my goggles and slipped
into the water. For someone recently used to the chilly waters off
Newquay, the pool was very warm. Fred had assured me that my padding was
waterproof and would help me with my buoyancy rather than dragging me down,
and so it proved. My generous boobs and buttocks actually helped me stay
afloat. I joined the lengths swimmers, confining myself to a dignified old
lady breast stroke. Steve's energetic freestyle would have looked
seriously out of place.
At ten o'clock one of the centre staff came out and blew her whistle. I
noticed more elderly people had materialised since I had got in the water.
Most of them were still shivering at the edge of the pool, but now gingerly
made their way down the steps and into the shallow end.
The class began. There were about a dozen of us. It was a mix of
aerobics, physical jerks, and help to improve our strokes, with water
safety advice thrown in. There was plenty of opportunity to chat to our
neighbours. The jolly lady next to me confided that she was only doing
this because her grandchildren were now old enough to learn to swim, and
this would give her the opportunity to spend more time with them. I smiled
and sympathised.
I glanced up at the viewing gallery, which was a huge glass panel all the
way along one wall of the restaurant upstairs. There was Treacher, sitting
at a table by the window, drinking coffee and watching all us old ladies
carefully. I suspected he wouldn't be able to work out which of them was
me, but I tried to stay in character. Blast the man! How much longer
would I have to put up with this?
* * *
On Friday evening I was back at the leisure centre, but now in the sports
hall for Ballroom Dancing. Annie helped me get ready. I needed a long
dress and evening make-up, both of which were a challenge for me in my
present guise, but when she'd finished I didn't look too bad. I managed to
persuade her to come too. We couldn't dance together, of course, and I was
very glad to see there was no man there less than twice her age.
I'm completely tone deaf and knew little about waltzes, foxtrots,
quicksteps or tangoes, but Rachel had dragged me along to a couple of
Ballroom Dancing classes at Cambridge. I'd quite enjoyed it, despite my
ignorance. Mind you, I had never done it in high heels, and I was used to
leading, but I found I had learned enough to fake it.
I had several keen partners, all elderly gentlemen. Most of them seemed to
know Dolly quite well, and that she couldn't do any of the more vigorous
dances because of her back and knees. The real Dolly had described all the
gentlemen she could remember to Annie, and I'd spent ages memorising
everything I was supposed to know about them. She particularly warned me
of a couple of old rogues with wandering hands, and when I was on the dance
floor with them, I spent most of the dance pulling their mitts off my
corseted butt and back up to my waist.
One old fool tried to dip me. He soon found that I was heavier than I
looked and his back went. We spent several embarrassing minutes locked in
position with me nearly horizontal, screaming at him not to let go, until
someone came to support me and pull me back up to my feet.
Because of the known average age of the dancers, there was always a St
John's Ambulance crew at the hall, and they took my partner, still locked
in position, to Accident and Emergency. Apparently this was a regular
occurrence and all in a day's work for them.
I spent the rest of the evening shuffling backwards round the dance floor
to the slower dances, supported by tall, strong men. No one else tried to
dip me, and it was all very pleasant.
I thought I caught a glimpse of Treacher in the crowd, but I wasn't sure.
Annie didn't see him. But the blue Fiesta was in the car park when we left
and it followed us home through the town, keeping a few cars back.
* * *
So I found I could survive life as Dolly; more than that, it was actually
becoming comfortable. At first, I had to concentrate hard to slow down my
movements and reactions to emulate a septuagenarian of the opposite sex. I
had to restrain the twenty-year-old male who would otherwise react too
quickly and move too fast. Now, moving slowly like an old lady was
becoming instinctive. When I first started trying to act like Dolly, I
always had to pause and think 'what would Dolly do?' in any situation, but
increasingly the right reaction was becoming natural.
My knitting was getting better too, and I reached for it whenever I sat
down for a rest. I even got it out in the car to and from work, to Annie's
amusement. It improved quickly when I set myself a project. Dolly had a
huge collection of wool with a preponderance of pink, so I decided to knit
a cardigan in that colour. I thought I might try a pattern of red and
yellow roses on it too, and went to Vera for help. She was surprised and
asked whether I wanted to learn to sew as well. I think she was being
sarcastic, but it reminded me that there was an old sewing machine in our
spare bedroom, and I made a mental note to check it out that evening.
I began to look forward to dancing on Fridays. Some of the old gentlemen
were truly charming and two of them asked me out to dinner. For a moment I
was tempted, but sanity prevailed. I didn't need any more complications in
my weird life just at the moment, and besides, what would Dolly say when
she came out of hospital to find she was in a relationship with an elderly
Lothario?
Thinking about that brought me up short. Was I actually starting to adapt
to the life of an old lady? At times it seemed like Steve had left and the
spirit of Dolly had moved in. Was I actually becoming her? That would
hardly be surprising, given my current form and the need to impersonate her
completely. Was I in danger of losing myself?
Still didn't like bingo though.
* * *
These sinister thoughts started me worrying about my relationship with
Annie.
One night I was sitting at the dressing table in my nightie, sponging off
my make-up, and staring sadly at my wrinkled old lady face. Annie was
lying on the bed. She had a magazine open in front of her, but she was
watching me carefully.
"Are you all right, babe?" she said, anxiety evident in her voice.
I sighed. "What happened to that nice boy you used to go out with, dear?"
I asked her in my Dolly voice. "He hasn't been around for a while, has he?
What was his name? Steve? I thought you liked him."
"I did," she said, earnestly. "I mean, I do!"
I don't think she knew whether I was being serious. Maybe she thought
Dolly had taken me over completely.
"He's away for a while doing a really important job," she rushed on to say,
"but he'll be back soon, and I'll be waiting for him - however long it
takes."
"That's nice, dear," I said, rubbing cold cream into my face. I put on my
sleep bonnet and got up to join her on the bed. "Now move over and make
room for Granny."
* * *
It was now three weeks since I had first been glued into my prosthesis and
the adhesive was finally working loose. I arranged with Vera to take it
off so that she could clean and disinfect it, and I could do the same to
myself.
That all went smoothly but I knew I would have to put the horrid thing back
on again before I could leave that night as the faithful Treacher would be
waiting outside. Surely he must be getting fed up by now? But I supposed
he was on a nice little earner from Harriet and would be in no hurry to
give it up. I wondered what he had told her about me. I hoped George
would tell my mother if Treacher found out anything significant.
This time I made Vera promise not to glue the body prosthesis back on me.
She sympathised and showed me that it could actually be separated into two
parts. I allowed her to use adhesive for the chest piece, so I was still
stuck with my bulbous, droopy breasts, but I insisted on being able to
remove the abdominal section. It was a struggle to get on and off, but
that meant it was tight enough to stay up by itself.
That decision turned out to be fully justified that night, and our
resumption of normal(ish) relations was a double celebration. Annie had
been to see her real grandmother while Vera was wrestling with the fake one
and 'her' prosthesis. Dolly was feeling much better. She was starting to
get restless stuck in a hospital bed and was keen to get back to her own
home, though probably no keener than I was.
"When I saw her today, Granny said she was very grateful for what you're
doing," said Annie in bed that night. "She would never have asked you to
do it if she had known what would happen."
"And I wouldn't have agreed, believe me."
"She just didn't want to let Ingrid down. She reckons she owes you a big
favour. When she gets out of hospital, she'll look for a way to
reciprocate."
"She said that? 'Reciprocate'?"
Annie nodded.
"That means 'to go up and down', doesn't it?"
Annie giggled.
"Well perhaps you'd like to go up and down on her behalf?"
Nodding enthusiastically, she pulled up my nightie and reciprocated. A
lot.
* * *
With the prospect of no longer being Dolly in sight, albeit in the
distance, I finally got round to holding my mother to her promise. She
hadn't mentioned it, obviously hoping I'd forgotten.
"I strongly advise you not to do this, Dolly; I mean, Steven," she said.
"I'm sorry," she smiled. "Your disguise is so good, it's easy to forget."
We were alone in her office, but she too had gotten into the habit of only
calling me Dolly, to minimise the risk of mistakes.
"It's all right," I said bitterly and, I noticed, in my Dolly voice, "I'm
used to it now."
I was becoming more and more concerned that changing my appearance was
changing my persona too. I found myself humming as I hoovered the carpets
and polished the furniture and poured the tea. I smiled sweetly and called
everyone 'Dear'. I wasn't sure I could walk far in Dolly's shoes without
my stick now. I swear I was starting to find it difficult to get up off my
knees after cleaning a toilet. So it was quite a shock to be addressed as
'Steven' again after three weeks of only answering to 'Dolly' or 'Granny'.
"I promise you really have nothing to gain by meeting him," my mother
continued, "and you might find it upsetting."
"I'll take that risk," I said. "I'm twenty years old, mother."
At that point I happened to catch sight of the elderly maid in the mirror
and realised that my words sounded ridiculous coming from her, but I
ploughed on.
"I think I can handle a conversation with my father, even if we haven't
seen each other for more than a decade."
"Wouldn't you prefer to meet him when you're back to being Steve?" she
said.
"Maybe, but I need you to give me the details now. I may not be able to
wait. It will soon be time for me to go back to college - assuming this
Treacher thing is over with by October. If Dad asks about my disguise, I
can tell him I'm testing your latest products. Presumably he knows what we
do here, so he shouldn't be surprised."
"Well, don't say I didn't warn you." She sighed. "You will need to
contact him through a waitress at the Little Caf? in Royston. It's
opposite the station. Her name is Rita Johnson." I remembered that was
the woman that Nuttall, the Bank Manager, mentioned. "That's all I can
tell you."
I was pretty sure it wasn't all she could tell me, but it would be enough,
at least for now.
* * *
So that Saturday Annie drove us to Royston. We parked in the station 'Pay
& Display' car park and Annie paid for a one hour ticket.
"Here, Granny, hold onto my arm," Annie said. "I'll help you up the
steps."
"Thank you, dear," I said, gratefully.
I struggled up the steep staircase from the car park to the street. My
walking stick helped a little, but even in only one-inch heels the ascent
was a challenge.
"Is he watching?" I asked, in a softer voice, trying not to move my lips.
My spectacles were plain glass but they were still thick and they inhibited
my distance vision. Annie took a surreptitious look back over my shoulder.
"Afraid so," she confirmed. "You need to stay in character."
This still felt very strange as only last night I had been making love to
Annie with a vigour quite incompatible with the elderly lady I appeared to
be. The weight of my portly figure (at least the upper half) had meant she
had to go on top, which I found a little humiliating, but there was no
doubting her enthusiasm, or her agility. It was the best lovemaking
session we'd had in the two months we had been together. I had hoped we
were getting serious, but my current circumstances had definitely thrown a
spanner in the works. How could I talk of our future together when I was
living as a seventy-year-old woman, and her grandmother into the bargain?
We made our way toward the little diner. I pretended to lean on her arm.
"Are you sure you want to do this?" she said. "You've only just found out
about him. Why not wait till you're you again?"
"But who knows when that will be?"
We had reached the door of the diner. I looked inside.
"Come on, there's a table free at the far end," I said. "I'll sit with my
back to the window, so you can keep an eye out for our friend."
Annie helped me off with my overcoat. I sat down, glad to get my extra
weight off my feet. I leaned my stick against the wall and hung my handbag
over the arm of my chair.
"I'm still amazed at how convincing you are!" Annie said softly, taking the
seat opposite me. "You'd have to know my Granny really well to be able to
tell that you're not her."
"Thank you, dear," I said, trying to stay in character. "Any sign of you-
know-who?"
"I can't see him at the moment, but I expect he's watching us from
somewhere."
The tubby waitress with the short, fake-looking ginger hair was approaching
with a smile and two menus.
"Morning, ladies," she said brightly. "How are you today?"
I stared at her closely. Her name badge said 'Rita'. She looked puzzled
at my scrutiny, then nervous. I looked around. There was no one nearby to
overhear me.
"We're fine," I said in my normal voice. "How are you, Dad?"
* * *
It was seven o'clock that evening. We had spent the day pottering around
Royston, which is at least as interesting as Peterborough, waiting for Rita
to get off duty. Now we were at her little one-bedroom flat. She - he -
was passing out tea and biscuits.
"I recognised you as Dolly immediately," he said, "though I hadn't seen her
for years. Your disguise is brilliant! It's impossible to see a twenty-
year-old man under all that. How on earth do you do it?"
"The technology is just an extension of what we've been doing for the last
four years. Presumably you know about that?"
He nodded. "I do still see Ingrid from time to time. We have to meet at
the bank for me to sign documents occasionally. But there must be more to
it than that?"
"There is, but the formulation of the skin texture for the flesh pieces -
my wrinkles, the bags under my eyes, the dewlap and so on - that's all down
to Annie. She's a genius with facial prosthetics."
My girlfriend blushed prettily but didn't bother with any false modesty.
"When I recognised you, I wondered why you were here, of course," he said,
"but when a young male voice came out of Dolly's mouth, I nearly fainted.
How did you know who I was? Did Ingrid tell you everything?"
"No, she just said that if I wanted to meet my father, I had to see Rita
Johnson first. It wasn't hard to work out."
"I'd love to see what you really look like."
"Oh, here!" said Annie, reaching into her handbag.
She took out a picture we'd had taken at Newquay. We were in our
swimsuits. She looked fantastic in her bikini; I looked a little smug to
be with her. My father studied it with a strange, lost expression on his
face.
"What a great picture!" he said, with a sniff. "You both look so... happy.
You do look a lot like me when I was young."
He fell silent. After a minute, I cleared my throat.
"I assume Mum used to help you dress before you moved out, did she? And
that's how she got started in the business?"
He pulled himself together and returned the picture to Annie.
"Yes, she was working in the theatre when we first met. She'd learned a
lot about make-up, costumes, and so on. Although I was - am - completely
hetero, I've never been able to resist the urge to cross-dress. She knew I
was active in the gay/trans community, but we were in love, and we told
ourselves it didn't matter. After we married, I suggested we use the house
as a place where my friends could dress, and she volunteered to help. I
think she saw it as a way of keeping us together. We never did anything
nasty; no bondage, sado-masochism, or anything. We just helped guys play
out their cross-dressing fantasies - being schoolgirls or maids or
whatever. All in complete secrecy."
"So what went wrong?"
"We both changed over time, I suppose." He sighed. "I realised I couldn't
carry on as a Lord of the Manor who just had an odd hobby. This..." He
gestured towards his face and boobs, and swept his hands down his skirt and
stockings. "...is who I really am."
It was ironic. I had no wish to cross-dress, let alone adopt a feminine
identity, but somehow I was following in his footsteps anyway, just not in
quite so high heels.
"So, are those..." I hesitated. I realised he might not want to answer my
impending question in front of Annie.
"Are my breasts real, you mean?" he smiled, apparently not in the least
embarrassed. "They're certainly real to me, but, no. They're just top-
quality forms, and glued on. I haven't undergone any procedures apart from
electrolysis to remove all my body hair. I do take a very mild female
hormone - your mother provides it - but it's only enough to smooth my skin,
not to make any major physical changes."
"But you needed to live as a woman?"
"Not just any woman - I couldn't be the Lady of the Manor either. There
was something else in me. I needed to be a servant - a maid or a waitress,
all the time. Ingrid did what she could to help me, and persuaded me to
stay. I lived as her maid for six months. Then you were born and she
needed me even more. It was wonderful for a while. I wore a Nanny's
uniform! That was when I was happiest, I think. I loved taking you to the
park in your pram and chatting to the other ladies there about our babies."
He sighed, a euphoric look on his face. I was impressed at how completely
feminine he was, but I suppose I shouldn't be surprised. He'd been living
a totally female life for more than twenty years.
"But in the end I had to move out," he continued sadly. "I couldn't let
myself get attached to you, or you to me. There was no way I could be a
proper father to you, and I was terrified that knowing what I was would
damage you for life. I left Ingrid with everything - the house, the
estate, all our money, and you. She deserved it all. None of this was her
fault."
I was beginning to see what my mother had meant when she said that I had
nothing to gain by meeting him. This was a sad story, and it was serving
no purpose but to satisfy my curiosity and depress my poor father all over
again.
"I found a bedsit in town and used my contacts to find jobs as a cleaner,
maid, whatever," he continued. "I came back every month or so for a while,
dressed as a man, but I couldn't keep doing that. As you grew, became a
toddler, I found it too hard to play with you and then leave. When you
started to talk, you would ask about me when I wasn't there, wanting to
know where I was, when I would next be coming. I was starting to become
too important to you. We both agreed a clean break was necessary. I
didn't want you to have a pervert in your life, especially not as your
father..."
We both protested at this description of himself.
"Maybe attitudes have changed," he admitted, "but we're talking about
nearly twenty years ago, remember. That's how even I thought of myself
back then."
Silence fell again.
"So is that still how you live?" I asked.
"Yes, I work two jobs now, as a cleaning lady in the mornings and waitress
at lunchtime and dinner time. I'm off this evening, by the way."
He realised that we were looking around the flat. It was clean and well
decorated; very feminine; but very small.
"Ingrid sends me little gifts of money from time to time," he smiled. "At
first I sent them back, then the flat needed a new boiler, then I had a
huge bill on my car. I think Ingrid has always felt guilty that she
couldn't tolerate my... urges. I always try to reassure her that none of
it is her fault; that it's all down to me, and I'm sorry I hurt her,
but..." He trailed off. "I'm just glad Fred was around. He was one of my
best friends. I knew I could rely on him to keep an eye on you both. You
know he's gay, I suppose?"
"Yes, though he's not 'out', as such."
"Silly boy," said my father, shaking his curly red head.
"Don't you get lonely?" Annie asked.
"I have an on-off partner, a woman who has just the right sort of kinks to
enjoy my company, in bed and out. I'm lucky to have found her, but...
well, let's just say there are reasons why we can't be together all the
time." We must have been looking sympathetic. "It's fine, really. We're
not in love or anything."
He reached for the teapot to give us refills.
"But you haven't told me why you came as Dolly?" His plump, feminine
features darkened. "Are you... like me? Was this Ingrid's idea, to show
me what I had done to our son?"
"Yes, it's her fault, but no, that's not why. Actually I had no choice."
I went on to explain that I wasn't a cross-dresser, and how my mother had
got me involved in testing the technology. It hadn't occurred to me before
that perhaps she was also testing to see if I had inherited transvestism
from my father...
I explained my current predicament. He tutted when I got to the part where
my mother used emotional blackmail to get me to play in the Ladies' Pairs.
Towards the end of the story, when I mentioned we were now under
surveillance, he gasped. He stood up and went to the window. Opening the
curtains a tiny crack, he peered through.
"Yes, I can see a blue Fiesta out there. It's on the other side of the
street, about thirty yards down. We'll need to be careful when you leave."
"You realise he'll try and investigate you too now?" I said.
"Let him," he smiled. "He won't find anything. Rita's back story is bomb-
proof - birth certificate, National Insurance number, driving licence, even
a passport, though I haven't been abroad since becoming her. Ingrid spent
quite a bit of money with her contacts to make sure I'm legit."
"He may wonder why we've come to see you though," said Annie, "what our
relationship could be?"
My father gave that a little thought.
"Well, Dolly and I knew each other well once. She knows all about me. We
were close when I was pretending to be my son's Nanny and she was your
mother's cleaner. So Dolly and Rita were friends. We don't see each other
anymore, but we've kept in touch - Christmas cards, birthdays, and so on."
"That's all right then," I said, "but I may have to come again to make it
realistic."
He smiled. "Fine by me... Dolly."
We got up to leave.
"Keep the picture, Rita," said Annie, pushing it across the table to him.
"We have the digital version on our computer."
* * *
When we got home I reported back to my mother for her side of the story.
"Your father's... compulsions... did make me angry at first," she said. "I
hated pretending to treat him as my maid. I am physically bigger and
stronger than him, and he was - is - clearly submissive, but I'm no
dominatrix. I loved him. I wanted him to hold me, and comfort me, but he
just wanted to wash and iron my clothes and clean the toilets. I don't
know when he stopped loving me, but I eventually stopped loving him. I
wouldn't be the mistress to his housemaid any longer, so he moved out to
find someone else who would. I'm happy that he has."
Her version of the sad story wasn't exactly the same as his, but I suppose
it was close. I could see that she felt guilty that her love wasn't strong
enough to tolerate his sexuality.
"What about the house, and the business?" I said.
"Everything is in our joint names - his original name. We still have a
joint bank account - separate from the Transformations business account -
but he never takes any money from it. I assume he has a personal account
in his new name. I don't know how that works, how he pays tax, deals with
the Revenue, and so on. I'm sure he's not cheating them or anything, but I
suspect what he does isn't strictly legal."
"So, was making me a test subject for all your transformation techniques
anything to do with him?"
"Only insofar as you take after him physically, rather than me, and are
therefore an ideal test subject." I must have looked sceptical. "All
right," she admitted, "maybe I needed to find out whether you had inherited
any of his proclivities as well. For my own peace of mind, and because if
you did, perhaps I could help you."
* * *
When Annie and I turned up for work on Monday morning Fred met us inside
the front door.
"Ah, there you are, Dolly," he said. "Mrs Jones and I are out on the
patio. When you've changed, would you bring us some coffee, please?"
I was about to ask what the hell, when he put a finger to his lips and
winked. I choked back my protest. We must have visitors, I assumed.
"Would you like a cup too, Annie?" he said. Without waiting for an answer,
he continued, "Bring a cup for Miss Rogers too then, please."
He turned and walked away. Annie shrugged and grimaced at me, then
followed him. Feeling more like a skivvy than ever, I went to the kitchen.
I put on my maid uniform and made coffee for three.
When I got out to the patio the three of them were sitting at one of the
wrought iron picnic tables arguing quietly but fiercely. Annie looked
particularly upset. I put the tray down on the table and reached for the
fourth chair.
"Don't sit down, Dolly," my mother hissed. "We may be being watched."
So I stood there, like a maid, with my hands clasped in front of my apron.
"Do you want me to curtsey as well, madam?" I said icily. "Only I don't
know how."
"Don't get all huffy, for heaven's sake, Steve," said Annie. I looked at
her incredulously. "Please! They have good reason to be cautious."
"Thank you, Annie," said Fred. He turned to me. "Steve, when you asked me
to get you a bug detector, I laughed, but I actually got two. I gave you
one and kept the other. I've been sweeping the ground floor areas most
mornings, feeling a bit silly, but today I found three listening devices.
I apologise; you were right and I was wrong."
"Where were they?"
"One's in the hallway, which is why I had to act as if you were the actual
maid this morning. Sorry about that," Fred said. "Another was in Vera's
office, presumably because he noticed it's the biggest consulting room,
with the most equipment. The third was in the staff common room. He
probably couldn't get into the photography suite or the Bunker. We keep
them both locked, and there's no sign of tampering. After that, I went
through the whole building, but I didn't find any more bugs."
"How the hell did he get in?" I asked.
"We don't know," Fred said. "I've been round the building but I can't see
any sign of tampering with any of the doors or windows. Mind you, there
were a couple of upstairs windows open round the back."
"And I'm afraid we may have forgotten to set the security system..." said
my mother.
That seemed quite likely. I had taken responsibility for doing it since
coming back home in May but now I was living at Dolly's place. Mum might
easily have forgotten to set the burglar alarm.
"Or he may have an accomplice," suggested Annie.
The others obviously hadn't thought of that.
"I'm going to move Vera to another office," said my mother. "It's not just
that we can't afford for Treacher to hear anything that suggests Dolly
might not actually be Dolly, we can't have him listening in while she's
working with a client either. We'll have to do something about the other
bugs too."
"You could put a radio close up to the one in the common room," I
suggested. "That should be enough to make sure he can't make out anything
we're saying."
"Good idea," said my mother, "and maybe we could pile some boxes up against
the one in the hall. Oh, this is a damn nuisance!"
"On the bright side, it's a pretty desperate move by Treacher," said Fred.
"It's not illegal to follow someone, as long as you don't harass them, but
this is breaking and entering. Hopefully it means he hasn't been able to
find anything useful about you, and this is his last throw of the dice."
"You need to tell Dolly here the really bad part," said my mother.
Fred looked embarrassed, but ploughed on. "Unfortunately the bug detectors
I got are cheapo kit from Amazon. They're commercially available gadgets,
and we can't be sure they're good enough to find the most modern listening
devices. It's an arms race; someone comes up with a more sophisticated
bug, then someone else has to develop a better detector. The most recent
ones are incredibly expensive and hard to source. I'm working on it, but
in the short term we just need to assume he can hear everything we say
inside this building, and at Dolly's place too."
"That's why we're having coffee outside," said my mother. "And we can't
have you sitting down and joining us as an equal because he may be watching
from beyond the fence over there..." I turned to scan the horizon. "Don't
look, you idiot!"
"He wouldn't be able to see us from over there," I said. "It must be two
hundred yards away."
It seemed to me they had gone from not taking the problem seriously enough
to utterly paranoid.
"If he can afford bugs, he can probably afford a pair of binoculars,"
mother countered.
"I just hope he can't lip read," said Annie. "That's why we're sitting
with our backs to the fence. You'd better keep to 'Yes, Madam' and 'No,
Madam', if you're going to stand there."
"I'm not calling any of you 'Madam'!" I said through gritted teeth.
"Anyway I can't believe a second-rate dick like him can afford such
expensive kit."
"Probably not," my mother agreed, "but Harriet can - easily."
I poured their coffees in silence and reached to take the tray back to the
kitchen.
"OK, look," said Fred, as I turned to go, "I agree we may be over-reacting.
But we don't know what he can see or hear. We'll figure something out, but
for the moment you have to be a hundred per cent Dolly. Everywhere, all
the time. Even in the car to and from work. I'll sweep Annie's car before
you leave tonight, but a car is even easier to bug than a house. You
should find somewhere he can't see you and sweep yours too; I mean Dolly's
mini."
"I'm sorry about all this, Steven," said my mother.
"Yeah, well that doesn't do me a lot of good, does it?"
"It gets worse," said Annie. "The same applies at home, doesn't it? He
may have planted bugs we can't detect there too. You know what that means.
I'm so sorry."
"Seems there's a lot of 'sorry' going around, but I'm the one who really
has cause to be sorry."
Annie started to say something, but I stormed back to the kitchen and my
new life as a cleaner and tea lady, twenty-four-seven. Suddenly I was a
lot less comfortable having to live Dolly's life without respite, and being
treated as her by all my nearest and dearest.
That evening I swept the house again and still didn't find any bugs, but
according to Fred that didn't mean anything.
* * *
It was a horrible week. I wasn't able to be myself at any moment, not even
at home. Not only did Annie now treat me as her Granny all the time, but I
had to sleep alone too, in case Treacher had bugged our bedrooms without us
knowing. I didn't bother taking my lower half prosthesis off at all now.
What would be the point?
I still didn't think he could have gotten into our house. I had been
diligent about locking up and setting the burglar alarm. So I rather
resented not being able to sleep with Annie. I would be going back to
Cambridge in about three weeks, assuming this ludicrous situation was
resolved by then somehow. I might not see her again until nearly
Christmas, so I wanted to make the most of the remaining time we had. My
mother's reasoning was that if Treacher had planted listening devices we
didn't know about, he presumably had done it at the same time as the ones
Fred had found. He wouldn't take the risk of breaking into either of the
buildings twice. So we probably hadn't been bugged before, but we might
have been now.
Whatever. I was now a full-time maid and cleaning lady. With that, I
realised I was well on the road to becoming my father: we were both male,
heterosexual, and living and behaving as lowly servants of the opposite
sex. The only difference between us was that he wanted that, and I didn't.
Yet.
* * *
Having left early for the summer, I had to be back in Cambridge by the
first day of Full Term, or make arrangements to defer for a year. So as
the weekend approached, I was more and more desperate to find some way of
bringing my ghastly situation to an end. I was close to giving up, and
begging Vera to remove all my prostheses and let me return to being Steve,
even if it meant Harriet would win, and even if it meant losing the
business.
Another problem was, where could we hold a council of war, given that I was
a maidservant and couldn't be seen sitting down and chatting with my
employer and her senior staff? In the end Annie came up with the answer.
This was the week when Betty and I were supposed to be doing the flowers at
the church for the Sunday services, but she called to say that her husband
had booked them a last-minute holiday - a week in Malaga. So Annie
volunteered to help me. (That was just as well, as I didn't know Betty,
and knew even less about arranging flowers.)
She checked the routine with Dolly. On Saturday afternoon we would go to
the florist in the High Street at about five o'clock just before it closed,
and collect several baskets of flowers which the owner would have put aside
for us. We would take them to church and put them out in various strategic
places - the altar, round the lectern, under the big stained-glass windows,
etc. We didn't actually need to do much flower arranging. The
proprietress of the flower shop would have done most of the hard work by
packing the baskets tastefully.
The plan was that Annie and I would collect the flowers in her car and
drive to the church, presumably with Treacher following. We would leave
the car in the church's tiny car park, go in, and start flower arranging.
Fred and my mother would park in town and walk to the church, making sure
they got there before we and our shadow arrived. They would find a dark,
quiet corner inside and try to stay unobserved. It might be a little more
complicated if there were other worshippers present, but we thought this
would be unlikely, given the size of the Church of England congregation
these days. There was choir practice in the evening but there were no
services on Saturday afternoon, so the place was usually empty.
When we were sure that the detective was staying outside, the four of us
would find a quiet spot - perhaps in the vestry if the vicar wasn't around
- to have a proper planning session. I looked forward to making my
increasingly desperate opinions known. I was not going to become my
father!
Saturday came and everything went like clockwork. We picked up the flowers
and our tail, and parked in the church precinct, as planned. It took us
three trips each to get all the baskets inside, me hobbling painfully as
usual. I rather resented Treacher sitting watching and not volunteering to
help an old lady.
When we got inside, Fred and Mum were sitting in a pew in a dark corner at
the back. You wouldn't have noticed them if you weren't looking for them.
Annie and I got the flowers out in record time. She checked the vestry,
which was devoid of priests and lay persons. She waved and beckoned us
from the door.
"We don't have long," Fred began. "Treacher will get suspicious if you
spend hours arranging a few flowers, and it's not as if there's anything
else to do in a church."
"Praying, maybe?" suggested Annie.
"Never mind all that," I interrupted angrily. "I cannot - will not - stay
as Dolly any longer. I need an escape plan, and if you can't help me, I'll
just go and break into Vera's cupboard for the solvent and rip all this
crap off myself, and hang the consequences!"
"Sorry, Steve, I should have led with the good news," said Fred. "Dolly
called Ingrid from the hospital this afternoon. She tried to reach you,
Annie, but couldn't get through."
"They're talking about her coming home soon," my mother said. "So we need
to discuss how you can 'hand over' to her, as it were."
"I think you'll have to have an accident," Fred said, "so that we have a
reason to take you to hospital. Presumably Treacher will follow. As far
as the staff on Reception are concerned we'll all be there to visit Dolly,
but..."
"...but when we get there, you can duck into the Ladies," said my mother.
"While Ingrid, Fred and I go to Granny's room," said Annie. "You disappear
and she's back to being my only grandmother."
She smiled at me, almost as she used to when I had been Steve.
"It could work, I suppose," I nodded. "But how do I get out of the
building without him seeing me? I don't think I'll be able to get to the
back door or the goods entrance or whatever."
"Well, it won't be practical to get all your prosthetics off and turn you
back to Steve at the hospital, even if we could find a private room," said
my mother. "But you can take another wig and a change of clothes, maybe
some dark glasses. Then you can change in the bathroom and leave by the
front door as a completely different old lady."
Everyone approved of that idea.
"We'll have to make sure the hospital doesn't let Treacher in or give him
any information - like how long Granny has really been there," said Annie.
"They won't usually give out any information of that kind to anyone other
than family," said Fred. "To make sure, we can warn the staff on Reception
that Dolly is being stalked by an ambulance-chasing lawyer or something,
and not to be fooled by anyone pretending to be a friend or relation."
"Or emergency services," I suggested. "He might have some kind of fake
documentation.".
There were still some details to thrash out, not least what sort of
accident I was going to have, but we were all satisfied the plan was
workable; a bit desperate, but workable. We would put it into operation
two days before Dolly was due to be released. Any less wouldn't be
realistic for a sudden accident that required hospitalisation. Any sooner
- like going ahead right now, for instance - risked giving Treacher time to
find a way around hospital security and discover how long Dolly had
actually been there. That meant I would have to be Dolly the maid for at
least another week.
"Do you think Treacher is looking tired, by the way?" said Annie. "When I
came back from the hospital yesterday, I drove past his car and I'm sure he
was asleep."
"Good," I said. "I hope he drops dead from exhaustion."
The others looked a little embarrassed at my lack of charity. They clearly
hadn't appreciated how much I was hating my new life as an old lady. Fred
cleared his throat.
"I'm not surprised he's knackered," he said. "He has to watch you all day,
then listen to the bugs' recordings all night."
"He probably falls asleep doing that," said Annie. "He won't hear anything
interesting there, will he?" All agreed.
"Time we went," said my mother, looking at her watch.
"There is one other thing," I said, as the others were getting ready to go.
"I know you have a hidden camera in Vera's room."
Annie looked surprised.
"How on earth did you...?" Fred began.
"It's just to protect ourselves in case a client causes... problems," my
mother interrupted.
No doubt she was concerned that I would be angry that they had filmed my
various transformations, and she was right, but that wasn't what was on my
mind right now.
"I don't suppose it was running over last weekend, was it?" I asked.
"It's triggered by a motion sensor, but Vera sometimes turns it off when
she's alone." Fred had seen my point of course, and was getting excited.
"She did have a client last thing on Friday, so she might not have switched
it off before she left. It sends the images to a 2 Terabyte hard disk on
the network. I'll check it out as soon as we get back. Shit! Why didn't
I think of this?"
"I don't understand," said Annie. "What's so important?"
"Fred's nasty little spy camera just might have caught Treacher planting
the bugs over the weekend," I said. "This could give us leverage if we
need it."
* * *
When our planning session was over, Annie ran me back home, then rushed off
to the hospital. As usual I watched her go, ready to text her mobile and
warn her if Treacher followed her for a change. I opened the sitting room
curtains to give Treacher a good view of the little old lady doing little
old lady things. I settled down with my knitting while she was out. I was
determined to finish my cardy before going back to being Steve.
When Annie got back she was full of news and dragged me into the little
back garden to pass it on without being overheard. In case we were being
watched she pretended to do some weeding while I hung out some of my
underwear and stockings on the washing line.
Jubilantly she announced that after nearly four weeks Dolly's doctor judged
that her heartbeat was strong and regular; her blood pressure was normal;
and her sternum was sufficiently healed that they could remove the cast and
the wire.
The bad news was that it was likely to be ten days to a fortnight before
she could go home. She still needed constant monitoring after such a
serious operation, and would need physiotherapy to rebuild her strength.
Also, when she did finally come home, she would be under strict
instructions to spend most of her time lying down or propped up in an
armchair. No heavy lifting; in fact, she wasn't allowed to raise her arms
above her head, as this would put pressure on the knitting breastbone which
could open the break up again. This would mean she would need help getting
dressed, or even to put her nightie on, so Annie would need to be back home
with her. I had an open invitation to join them until it was time for me
to go back to college.
"It'll be nice to have a man about the house for a change," said Annie,
with an ironic smile. "By the way, Fred called me on my mobile. He has
some very clear video of Treacher entering Vera's office at two o'clock on
Sunday morning, and planting his listening device behind one of the
photographs on her wall."
* * *
Of course I was disappointed that I would be Dolly for at least another
week, but with a definite end in sight, I decided I could stick it out. It
would be stupid to ruin everything at the last minute after all I had
already put up with and the hard work I had done on my impersonation.
Besides I still hadn't finished the cardigan, and I had to sew the buttons
on.
So we were back to the bingo on Tuesday. Annie still seemed to love this
night out with the elderly women. She warned our neighbours when their
numbers were called out and they didn't notice. She ran round helping the
other old dears get their barley wines and halves of cider. Not being
young and mobile, I had to sit and watch her, bored out of my mind. There
were a couple of other young women doing similar for their elderly
relatives. I mused that if I'd been Millie instead of Dolly I could have
helped too. It wasn't the sort of thing that Steve would have done, so
where did that thought come from?
I played with my mother at the Bridge Club on the Wednesday. We were early
and took our usual seats, North-South at Table One, so that poor old Dolly
didn't have to move. We were horrified when Jane Campanella joined us,
sitting in the East seat. We had nothing against her. We hardly knew her,
and liked what we knew, but it meant that Harriet would occupy the West
seat when she arrived.
"I never got the chance to congratulate you on your result in the Ladies'
pairs," she said with a smile. "Harriet said that was the first time you'd
qualified for the Final. Well done indeed!"
That was nice of her, I thought. My mother obviously thought so too and
'reciprocated'. They had a friendly chat while we waited. I kept glancing
out of the window into the car park, but there was no sign of a blue
Fiesta. Had Treacher given up, or was he assuming he could take a three-
hour break while we were here playing Bridge?
I dragged my attention back to their conversation. Mum couldn't stop
herself from suggesting that Jane would have done even better in the
Ladies' Pairs Final if she hadn't been in harness with Harriet. Jane
smiled thinly but was much too diplomatic to comment. Professionals who
spoke ill of their clients soon ran out of paying customers.
"You seem to be very interested in the car park," Jane said to me suddenly.
"Are you expecting someone?"
I must have been looking out of the window too much. While I struggled to
come up with an answer, my mother weighed in crossly.
"We're being followed," she said. "There's a man in a blue Fiesta. He
makes Dolly nervous."
Too right he did. He - and bloody Harriet - were responsible for me
spending my summer as an old lady.
"You mean you're being stalked?"
She sounded sceptical, as well she might. Neither my mother nor I were
typical stalking material, not being young and beautiful.
"No, he's a private detective. Not a very good one either as we spotted
him three weeks ago."
Jane was incredulous. "Why...?" she spluttered. "What...?"
My mother looked at me. I shrugged. I couldn't see any reason not to tell
her. What's the worst that could happen? She might tell Harriet we're on
to him, but that would surely bring this farce to an end one way or
another.
"Harriet hired him," my mother said. "She couldn't see how Dolly and I
could beat her at the Ladies' Pairs, and take the third spot in the England
Trials. She's sure we must have been cheating somehow, and she hired that
man to follow us to find out how."
"Follow me, actually," I said, in my best, croaky whisper. "Ingrid's a
good player, but Harriet thinks I played above myself, and she's
suspicious. We don't have a hope in the Trials, by the way."
"He also broke in and bugged my offices," added my mother.
"What! Did you go to the police?"
"We don't really have any proof. We found the listening devices, but we
can't prove who put them there."
We both knew that was a lie, but there was no way my mother wanted Plod
wandering around our place. We'd never see some of our clients again.
Also, there might be some advantage in Treacher thinking he had got away
with it.
"Well..." Jane was clearly at a loss. "I've never heard of such a thing!
I thought you were all friends."
My mother had the grace to look embarrassed.
"'Friendly rivals' would be a better description," I said. "Like Federer
and Nadal...?"
Actually that was a bad example. By all accounts Rafa and The Fed were
good mates off the court.
"Probably best not to say anything to Harriet," my mother said. "I'm sure
she'll stop it all soon. There's nothing for him to find... obviously."
"Understood," Jane said, "but I'm not at all happy about this."
Harriet arrived at that point. She gave us a curt nod, clearly not pleased
with Jane's choice of first-round opponents. She immediately engaged her
professional partner in a discussion of a complex area of their bidding
system and the friendly conversation came to an end.
It wasn't a great evening for us. We didn't do much wrong but neither did
most of our opponents. Jane played one hand against us brilliantly; I
didn't expect to get many match points on that board. We finished a little
above average. Harriet and Jane came top of the East-West pairs. Perhaps
that would satisfy her, and persuade her to call off her hound.
But he and that flaming blue Fiesta were back when we left and followed us
home.
* * *
Friday was Ballroom Dancing again. I still looked forward to this, despite
my continuing misgivings that Annie would find a new partner she preferred.
I had raided Dolly's wardrobe and found a pretty wrap dress she obviously
hadn't worn for years. It was white cotton with a swirly black pattern.
Annie said it was quite 'art nouveau', but I doubt she really knew what
that meant. I certainly didn't.
Anyway it covered up what it needed to, while making interesting (and
misleading) suggestions about what might be underneath. I had bought a new
extra-uplifting longline bra for my big droopy breasts, and I carried my
enhanced embonpoint proudly before me onto the dance floor.
When we arrived we were both quickly snapped up by mature gentlemen, my
partner being considerably more mature than Annie's. His name was Gregory.
He was tall, at least six inches taller than me, even though I was wearing
my highest heels.
"What do you like about Ballroom?" I asked him, by way of making
conversation as we swirled around the dance floor.
He considered thoughtfully.
"It's a wonderful way to get to know someone," he began. "Dancing closely
together is the ultimate expression of romance, forging a human connection.
I'm not that good with words, you see, so I take it to the dance floor and
get swept away by the music..."
He suited the action to the words and executed a complicated double turn,
sweeping me around as if I weighed nothing, which I absolutely didn't. He
was clearly stronger than he looked. As Dolly, with bad knees and a stiff
back, I couldn't cooperate properly, so he was actually lifting me clear of
the floor for most of this manoeuvre.
"Not bad for someone who's not very good with words!" I panted, getting my
high heels firmly back on the ground before he - or I - got any more swept
away.
"So does that mean you'll have dinner with me at last?" he asked.
I tried an enigmatic smile. "I wouldn't rule it out," I said. "Ask me
again next time."
After all it wouldn't be me next Friday, and Dolly might like him.
"I certainly will," he said, with what he thought was a sexy twinkle, but
it just looked like there was something wrong with his eye.
When we got back I checked my voicemail. There was a message from my
mother. George Bairstow had called her to tell her that Jane Campanella
had resigned as Harriet's partner. That meant that we could withdraw from
the England Ladies Trials without letting Harriet in!
So Mum had told him that she and I were going to withdraw from the trials
too, citing my age and state of health. I quickly deleted the voicemail in
case Treacher found a way to hack it. Presumably my two friends from
Cambridge would take the third spot. If Sheila could control her wilder
urges, they should do well.
It felt like things were finally going my way...