The Earl Maid
By Susannah Donim
The Earl and Countess move into their new home, but Rob is still too
shy and tongue-tied to be comfortable. Then Susie suggests a new game
to relax him, using the old clothes they find in the attic.
Chapter 2
When we arrived at the Hall on Saturday morning, Martha answered the
door.
"Good morning, My Lord, My Lady, My Lady," she said smiling.
She was wearing a traditional housemaid's uniform, a below-the-knee
black dress with rounded white collar and cuffs, and a bib apron with
frills on the hem and shoulder straps. On her head she wore a neat
white crochet cap, not much more than a headband. I assumed my father
had insisted on the uniform, which was distinctly old-fashioned. She
was just taking hold of her skirt to go into a curtsey when my mother
stepped forward and threw her arms around her.
"Oh it's so good to see you again, Martha," she said.
"You only saw her on Monday, Mum," I said. "Let the poor woman
breathe."
"It's just that it's so nice to be back," my mother explained.
"Martha and I were great friends when I lived here, but Perry banned
us from ever getting together again after he threw us out. He didn't
want her passing me information about his activities. Presumably he
was afraid it would give me ammunition for divorce proceedings, maybe
even getting around the pre-nup."
"It's true, My Lord," Martha said to me. "He said if I ever met up
with Her Ladyship, it would mean instant dismissal."
"It was always lovely to receive your letters though," Mum said. "You
understood why I couldn't write back, didn't you?"
"Of course, ma'am. His Lordship knew your handwriting and I could
never be sure he wouldn't see the incoming post before I could get to
it."
They both smiled, a little sadly.
"So are you still living in?" Mum asked. "You used to have a little
room at the back on the second floor, didn't you?"
"Not any more, no, ma'am," Martha said. "I got engaged a few months
ago, and I moved in with my fianc?. We have a little cottage in the
village." She smiled, embarrassed.
"Oh congratulations!" my mother said. Susie and I joined in.
"But it's lovely to have you back here, My Lady," Martha said. "Would
you all like to follow me? Mr Smythe is waiting for you in the
library."
My mother followed confidently. She knew the way well. No doubt some
redecoration had been done in twenty years, but the basic layout of
the Hall couldn't have changed. Susie followed wonderingly, goggle-
eyed at the mansion of which she was now the undisputed mistress. For
me, there was an eerie sense of d?j? vu. I had been four years old
when I was last here, but I remembered pedalling my toy racing car
along the long corridor from the entrance hall to the library on the
ground floor of the East wing. I wondered what had happened to the
little car. There was no room in Granny's house for most of my baby
toys.
I had never been allowed in my father's library, so the huge book-
lined room was new to me as well as Susie. My mother saw us gawking
at the rows and rows of shelves and endless leather-bound volumes.
"Your father never read any of them, by the way," said my mother
wryly.
"Quite a few first editions too," said Smythe. He was sitting at a
big conference table in the centre of the room, surrounded by papers
and box files, as he had been at the reading of the will. "Worth a
fortune, I'd say, though I don't think they've ever been valued."
He got up and made his way over to us.
"Welcome to your new home, Lord Marsham," he said to me, smiling.
We shook hands. Apparently no one bows or scrapes to an Earl these
days, which came as a huge relief. He turned to the ladies.
"And welcome to Your Ladyships too, of course. May I suggest an order
of business for this morning?"
Martha was edging to the door.
"Yes of course," said my mother, "but I'd like Martha to stay, please.
I think we'll be relying on her a lot for the next few days."
"No problem, Ma'am."
Martha poured us all cups of coffee and we took our seats around the
table.
"To summarise, the Hall and the Estate are all in good repair," Smythe
began, crunching a chocolate digestive. "Mr Johnson has made sure of
that. There's no mortgage on any of the properties and your father
didn't leave much in the way of debts. He really didn't trust
bankers. In fact it was something of an obsession with him."
"Quite right," said my mother approvingly.
"But...?" I asked. "I sense a but coming."
"He was exaggerating when he said he'd spent all the money, but not by
much." Smythe noticed Martha looking concerned. "Don't worry; I'm
fairly sure that there will be enough to pay out the legacies for you
and the others, Martha." He turned back to us. "But after
inheritance tax, I'm afraid there won't be much ready cash left. If
there are any unexpected expenses, you may have to consider selling
some things."
"Surely an Estate this size must be raking it in?" asked Susie.
"Well, yes, obviously there's a good income from the Estate's tenants.
There are three full-sized farms, several smallholdings and a number
of houses and cottages. But much of that income tends to be swallowed
up by property maintenance and development. Mr Johnson had been
urging the old Earl to undertake various upgrading projects - new
infrastructure such as drainage, irrigation channels, wind farms and
solar panels, and additional modern housing out at the east end of the
village. All excellent ideas I'm sure, highly profitable in the long
run, and necessary to keep the Estate viable in the twenty-first
century, but such projects invariably need bank loans to cover the up-
front costs."
"And Perry hated banks," Mum said.
"Precisely," said Smythe. "Mr Johnson was able to make good business
cases for all his proposals, but the necessary loans would be
contingent on the Estate putting in its share of the funding..."
"And my father spent all the cash," I said.
"Yes. I'm afraid you would be hard pressed to raise enough to get any
of the development work going now."
"And without that modernisation, we can't increase the income from the
Estate's assets," said Susie.
I was glad my wife, the Countess, had a good grasp of these matters.
I hadn't a clue.
"Well, you could sell off the land near the village to private
developers, I suppose," Smythe suggested.
"Maybe," I said, "but I don't want to be the Earl who hacked pieces
off a five-hundred-year-old Estate, if it can possibly be avoided."
Everyone agreed. We fell silent.
"There's no immediate hurry to decide," Smythe said brightly. "You
can't sell anything till after Probate anyway. But if you really need
money now, I can probably authorise an advance against your
inheritance, and I'm sure your bank will increase your credit limit
when they learn of your new circumstances. Now we have a lot to get
through..."
He rubbed his hands together. He was in his element.
"First of all, here are all the keys to the house." He indicated two
enormous bunches of keys. "There is a third identical bunch in the
safe. Regarding the paperwork, I've divided what you need to know
into three headings: the house, the Estate, and the finances..."
* * *
The paperwork took most of the morning. At lunchtime, while we were
sitting down in the huge kitchen to a buffet prepared by the excellent
Martha, Bill Johnson came in. He and Martha entertained us with
horror stories of my father and his various mistresses. They had both
been on the staff of the Estate for more than twenty years. Indeed my
mother hired Martha straight from school, just after she learned she
was pregnant with me, and knowing that she would need help. At first
Smythe tried to look disapproving at the disrespectful anecdotes, but
he was soon joining in.
When we'd finished eating and chatting, Martha took her leave. She
explained, apologetically, that she only worked mornings now, unless
she was needed for some special event. This gave her time to keep the
ground floor and second floors clean, but she was sorry that she
couldn't manage the unused top floors as well.
After lunch Smythe and my mother got stuck into the pile of 'disputed
items', which took up two ground floor Reception rooms. Meanwhile,
Bill drove Susie and me round the Estate in his Land Rover Discovery.
"Your holdings include a mixture of agricultural land, commercial
buildings, and rental accommodation of various sizes - mainly flats
and small family houses," Bill said, as we went past a row of smartly
decorated cottages with beautifully presented gardens.
"A lot of my time is spent discussing maintenance, repairs and
upgrades to buildings," he went on. "As the Landlord, you're
responsible for a reasonable level of upkeep, but we're always happy
to discuss extensions and such like with the tenants, so long as
they'll add value to the property. If we fund an improvement, we will
put the rent up proportionately. If the tenant pays for the work, we
don't do that, but we still need to make sure the design is
appropriate for the building and that the work is carried out
professionally."
After a forty-minute drive round, Bill took us back to the Hall. We
went in through the back gate, which was at the end of a private road
from the Home Farm. He pulled into the courtyard at the rear of the
building, parking in what had probably once been stables, now
converted into a long low garage with room for six cars. He carefully
tucked his Land Rover in next to a nearly new BMW 7 series.
"I had no idea the Estate was so big," I said, getting out and
stretching my legs. Susie agreed.
"I have an Ordnance Survey map on the wall of my office," Bill said.
"I can show you the whole layout."
I saw Eleanor's - now our - Audi A3 convertible parked against the far
wall. I hoped she hadn't sabotaged it out of spite. Next to it was a
Dacia Duster 4x4 off roader. Presumably my father had used this when
he needed to drive across fields on Estate business. It was clean; it
looked like it hadn't been out in a while. The pride of the
collection was a twenty-year-old classic Bentley. It was under a dust
sheet which Bill whisked off to show me. It looked fabulous, and
fabulously expensive.
Bill led the way to the back entrance to the main building and his
office.
"Is any part of the Estate open to visitors?" Susie asked.
"There's a farm shop up on the main road by the South entrance," Bill
said. "All the farms and smallholdings sell their produce there. And
there are a number of public footpaths and bridleways. But the Earl -
beg pardon, the previous Earl - never wanted to open the Hall to
visitors, if that's what you mean."
"Something to think about if we're really hard up," Susie said.
"Might as well sell the whole thing to the National Trust if we're
going to do that," I sniffed.
"Actually I think your father investigated that, My Lord," said Bill,
"but they weren't interested. The architecture isn't particularly
significant and the building isn't old enough. It's only late
Victorian. The original was early Tudor but it was destroyed by a
fire in the 1880s."
He unlocked a back door opposite the garage. We went into the huge
kitchen first and made ourselves coffee. Then Bill led us into his
office, a tidy little room on the ground floor of the Hall next to the
kitchen. There were two desks, each with an ancient computer. An
even older printer lurked on a side table.
As soon as we were sitting down, I asked a question that had been on
my mind since we arrived.
"What security measures do we have here at the Hall? Mr Smythe
mentioned that there are some quite valuable pieces here - paintings,
first editions, jewellery, pottery, and so on."
"Not to mention those cars out back," added Susie.
Bill nodded. "We have a fairly standard security system," he said.
"It's ten years old and could probably do with updating, though it has
been tested and maintained annually. The outside doors are heavy duty
and steel reinforced. They all have two sliding bolts as well as Yale
locks. All accessible windows have deadlocks and impact resistant
glass."
"Sounds like we'll be living in a fortress," Susie said.
"There was an attempted burglary a few years ago," Bill said. "They
did some damage but they didn't get away with anything. So the old
Earl made some improvements. All doors and windows are alarmed.
There are four zones: the first floor in each wing - that is, the
family living quarters - the garage, and then the rest of the main
building. The garage is on a separate system. When you go out, you
alarm all four zones, and when the last member of the household goes
to bed at night, they set the alarms for everywhere except the living
areas. When the alarm is tripped, you have one minute to switch it
off before it starts making a very loud clanging noise and a call is
automatically made to the local police station. I'll show you where
the control panels are and give you the codes."
"What about outside?" I asked. "CCTV? Motion-activated floodlights?"
"No and no. As I said, it's an old system."
"What about the front gate?" It was a tall wrought-iron affair with
nasty-looking spikes at the top; virtually unclimbable, I'd have
thought. "It was wide open when we arrived this morning."
"That was just so you and Mr Smythe could get in easily," said Bill.
"It's normally kept closed. It has an electric lock which opens
automatically if the driver has a compatible RFID card. All your
vehicles have built-in transponders. There's an intercom for a
visitor to call the house. If you want to let them in, you can open
either the pedestrian gate or the main gate from here. They both open
automatically when approached from the inside to let people out. Oh,
there's also a card reader on the gate like on hotel room doors. So
you can give someone a card but disable it later if you don't want
them to be able to get in anymore." He chuckled. "The old Earl broke
up with several old girlfriends that way."
"Charming!" said Susie. "Your Dad seems to have been a delightful
person," she said to me. "They couldn't have made a mistake with that
paternity test, could they?"
"What about the perimeter fence?" I asked. "Could someone just climb
over if we don't open the gate for them?"
"Not easily. There are tall, dense hedges and/or barbed wire all
round the Estate." He paused. "May I ask: are you expecting trouble,
My Lord?"
"No, no, not specifically. It's just that Eleanor and her brother
were obviously very upset by the will, and then by being evicted. I
suppose they might try something."
"I understand," he said. "Between ourselves, sir, we were all glad to
see the back of the Beckett family. Your father wasn't the only
spendthrift here."
I smiled. I liked Bill's candour. We turned to discuss his role as
Estate Manager.
"There is a lot to do. I have a secretary who helps me with the
filing," he explained. He indicated two steel cabinets. "She comes
in two mornings a week. Like the others, I've been expecting to
retire soon, so I've made a list of everything I do for the Estate.
The files are under much the same headings."
He handed me a sheet of paper. I sat down in the secretary's chair
and skimmed the list, Susie peering over my shoulder. Before I got
bored I saw:
* Oversee the development of the Estate, to make sure it's being
effectively run to meet the Landlord's objectives;
* Organise repairs and maintenance;
* Keep up to date with legislation and regulations that affect the
Estate;
* Deal with contracts for all services;
* Manage buildings and renovations projects;
* Carry out financial planning for a project and control the budget;
* Plan, commission and manage the work of contractors, such as
building services engineers, gardeners, tree surgeons;
* Redevelop sites as required, e.g. in preparation for a new use;
* Communications to inform and engage the local community;
* Work with the tenants to keep them up to date on developments or
potential issues;
* Carry out marketing activities (e.g. Social media communication to
build a positive image for the Estate, improving public perception and
encouraging community engagement).
"Wow, that sounds like a lot of work!" said Susie.
"Yeah, I hope you're not expecting to retire any time soon, Bill," I
added. "I thought I might take on management of the Estate myself,
but this is pretty terrifying."
"Oh it's not so bad once you get used to it," said Bill. "I have no
formal qualifications. I learned on the job. I'm sure you can too,
sir. We get Mr Smythe to do all the contracts, but they're pretty
standard."
"Well, you've a job here for as long as you want it. In the meantime,
how about I shadow you through everything you do for a while, whenever
I can get time off school? Then maybe when you retire, I could retain
you on a consultancy contract?"
"I'm sure that will be fine," he said. "Thank you."
And so it was agreed.
We went back into the house. Smythe had left and my mother was
working her way through what looked like a roomful - two rooms full -
of junk.
"Most of it's junk," Mum confirmed, "but Perry gave me that necklace
and the matching earrings for our first anniversary. When we were
still speaking to each other," she added sadly. "It steams me that
that woman has been wearing them for the last fifteen years!"
"They're lovely," said Susie. "They look expensive."
"I think they were, but Perry was old-fashioned. He didn't think it
was proper for the recipient of a gift to know how much it was worth."
"It might be a good idea to have it valued," I suggested. "In fact,
if you're planning to let Eleanor have everything else in here, we
should get a professional opinion on a few more pieces - like those
vases, and the crystal on the sideboard over there, and that cutlery
set..."
"You're right," my mother said. "Presumably Mr Smythe can recommend
someone."
* * *
I gave my notice in at the school. It was a little risky if the
Estate turned out to be poorer than anyone expected, but I would leave
in two months, at the end of the summer term. I wouldn't miss the
little horrors and the adolescent prototype thugs in the least. Susie
wanted to 'carry on soliciting' (as she put it) at least until she was
fully qualified. She would make a decision about her career then. We
could probably manage on her salary, if push came to shove. In the
meantime, she had appropriated the Audi A3, as the Dowager Countess
hadn't passed her test yet. Susie loved screaming to and from the
office, dodging tractors and annoying cyclists.
I started driving lessons. We got 'L' plates for the Duster and Susie
took me out every day. There were lots of private lanes round the
Estate where I could build up my confidence before being exposed to
the public roads.
All our spare time was spent learning about our new home and the
responsibilities that went with it. I concentrated on the Estate, to
prepare myself for when the excellent Bill decided to leave. He took
me round all our tenants, introducing me as the new Earl. People
seemed glad to see me, and were very hospitable, but I was
uncomfortable with all the attention. Suddenly becoming a member of
the nobility hadn't made me any less shy.
Susie worked to understand our finances, supported by Smythe, Bill
again, and Martha. She spent nearly a month of late nights and
washed-out weekends; hundreds of e-mails; and many lunch hours meeting
bankers, accountants, and inevitably the worthy (if pompous) Mr
Smythe. Finally she convened a Sunday evening meeting of all us new
nobles (i.e. me, Mum and herself).
"I think I know where we'll stand after Probate. I've run all the
numbers," she said, pouring us each a glass of decent claret from my
father's - that is, my - wine cellar. "The Estate more or less breaks
even; that is, the income from the tenants balances the running costs.
It generates a surplus during the summer months, but that's wiped out
by heating expenses during the winter. The biggest cost is the Hall
itself, of course. It's recently been refurbished but it will still
be very expensive to run. The insurance premiums are massive too."
"What about ready money?" I asked. "Was Smythe right? Is there
anything left?"
"Yes, but as you know, the Executor must first pay off all debts
before the beneficiaries can access any of the Estate's assets. What
made it simpler to calculate was your father's hatred of bankers and
his reluctance to borrow. Unfortunately he also seemed to be
determined to spend everything he had, rather than let his heirs get
their hands on it. After paying the legacies to Martha and the
others, we'll have just under fifty thousand in ready cash or easily
accessed deposit accounts - cash ISAs and so on."
"Fifty grand?" gasped my mother. "That's a fortune!"
"Not really," said Susie. "It would only take a couple of unexpected
bills on a house this size to wipe it out. Everything's OK at the
moment, but it's an old building. Who knows when it might need a new
roof, or a boiler? What if the cellars flood? We can't afford to
draw down on that reserve for our day-to-day living costs."
"OK, I get it," I said. "We need to keep as much as possible as an
emergency fund. So we may have to find new sources of income to live
on. I'm not having the Dowager Countess going out cleaning again."
Mum grabbed my hand and gave me a grateful smile.
"That's right," Susie said. "After you leave at the end of term,
we'll only have my salary. And we both have student loans, don't
forget."
"What about pensions?"
"Your father didn't have any."
"Nor do I," my mother said glumly. "I could never afford to pay into
one."
"I suppose I could withdraw my notice; try and get my job back..."
"I don't think that's a good idea. Firstly, you hate it; secondly,
Bill really wants to retire, and if you take over, we'll save his
salary. You won't have the time to run the Estate if you're back at
the school."
"Yes, I really enjoyed going round with Bill, apart from the - you
know - meeting people part."
"Should we start thinking about selling stuff off?" Mum suggested.
"Jewellery, books, maybe even land?"
"As a last resort, yes," Suzie said, "but let's hope it doesn't come
to that. We would need Smythe's permission to sell anything before
Probate anyway. He'd probably agree, but then the cash from the sale
would be subject to Inheritance Tax. Of course, if we wait till after
Probate, it could be liable to Capital Gains Tax."
"Would that be better?" I asked.
"Hard to say. Most antiques would be classed as tangible moveable
property, or chattels, and any gains arising will be exempt from
Capital Gains Tax as long as the sale proceeds are ?6,000 or less, but
some of the things we could sell would be worth much more than that."
"We should get rid of the Bentley as soon as possible," said my mother
firmly. "I hate it. It stinks of privilege."
"You're probably right," Suzie smiled. "Private cars are exempt from
CGT unless they've been used for business. I'm not sure how much it's
worth. An ordinary model of that age may be only ?10,000, but if it's
one of the classics, it could raise as much as a hundred thousand."
We paused to think about what Suzie had said.
"We don't have to do anything immediately," I said eventually. The
others nodded. "But we should all think about ways we can use this
place to raise money..."
* * *
So now we had to get used to our new lives. Apart from our
accommodation, not much changed for us at first. That their Maths
teacher had become a member of the aristocracy was a nine-day wonder
to the kids in my classes. It certainly didn't improve their
behaviour.
There were five weeks to go to the end of the summer term, which for
me mostly meant exams and marking. I also took my driving test and
amazed the ladies in my family by passing first time. Susie
immediately claimed the credit for being such a good teacher. My
mother agreed. We opened a bottle of champagne as I ceremonially tore
the 'L' plates off the Duster.
The new Countess awarded the trophies at the school Sports Day. Susie
dressed in a very 'county' twinset and pearls, with an absurd floral
hat. She was still gorgeous, but she looked quite a lot older, more
mature, as I delighted in informing her. She insisted her outfit was
'ironic'.
There was also a School Play at the end of term. I had foolishly
mentioned in the Staff Room that I had done some 'Am Dram' at
Cambridge, so I was roped into being the Assistant Director, which
meant I did most of the work. We put on Ayckbourn's Absurd Person
Singular, although the headmaster thought it was a bit risqu?. A
couple of the kids displayed quite a knack for comic timing. I
actually enjoyed my last month at the school.
Meanwhile Susie carried on soliciting at Wainwrights. But it wasn't
long before the news of the changing of the guard filtered out among
the local community. The demise of the disobliging and antisocial old
Earl, and the arrival of an unknown new one, accompanied by a
beautiful and charismatic Countess, generated a lot of local interest.
Invitations started to pour in to open this and present that.
At which point I began to hate being the Earl. I was too shy to be a
public figure. I went along to a few events, totally tongue-tied,
serving no purpose except to deter smarmy male members of the county
set from trying it on with the beautiful young Countess.
It wasn't long before I started sending my regrets. Susie sympathised
but she had taken to being the Countess like a duck to water. When
she went to speak at the Young Conservative Association dinner dance,
or launch the first boat at the Yacht Club Regatta, I sat at home,
worried that her resistance to rich, plausible scoundrels might be
weakening.
Eventually, in bed one late night after her return from another posh
shindig, I shared my concerns.
"Don't be silly," she laughed. "Those braying idiots are nothing to
me - except when their fathers are clients of Wainwrights, of course,
in which case I'll dance with them and pretend I can stand their
company."
"Still, maybe I should come to more of these dos..."
"Why? You hate those things! Don't you trust me?" She laughed at my
wretched expression. "Look, I have nothing in common with those
horse-faced idiots."
"I just wish I had their confidence..."
"Hush! I love the strong, silent type."
She clambered further up the bed, threw her arms round my neck and
plonked her head on my shoulder. I put my arm round her. Nothing
more was said.
* * *
Susie was soon in demand, opening fetes, judging fruit and vegetable
shows, and giving the prizes at Speech Days. She also quickly built
up a network of useful contacts. Best of all, the Partners at her
firm recognised her potential value to them. They gave her time off
to do Countess-type things. Then when she passed her exams with
flying colours, she was quickly made an Associate Partner. It meant
she would get a parking space in the underground car park in the
basement of their office building.
"Can't have a Countess as a junior clerk," smirked Old Mr Wainwright,
her boss, who was clearly an unapologetic snob.
He was probably afraid she would leave and take his best clients with
her.
* * *
Eventually the summer term ended and I was free - free and unemployed.
One bright Friday morning, while Mum was out shopping with Esme, and
Susie was beavering away at whatever it is an Associate Partner does
in a solicitor's office, I wandered round the huge building that I now
owned. I began to feel the stupidity of the whole experience. We
would never occupy more than half of this ridiculous, anachronistic
edifice.
The house was built in a 'U' shape, the ground floor within the 'U'
being a 'Great Hall'. It was a sizeable open space with distinct
possibilities. We could hold dances here, or exhibitions, or...
something. There were serving hatches through to the kitchen along
the back wall, but it looked as if they hadn't been opened for quite a
while. The edges and hinges had been painted over. The main
reception rooms on the ground floor were down the sides of the open
space with the kitchen (and Bill's office) behind it at the back.
We mostly lived in the big drawing room at the front of the East wing.
The walls were painted a brilliant white, making it much the most
modern and cheerful room in the whole building. At one end there was
a decent-sized dining table with six chairs. This was a much more
practical place in which to take our meals than either the Great Hall
or on benches at the long table in the kitchen (originally for the
staff). At the other end of the drawing room was a modern three-piece
suite, grouped around a home cinema with a sixty-five inch Ultra HD
screen fixed to the wall, and a five speaker surround sound system.
Under the TV screen there was a beautiful old fireplace with antique
coal scuttle, tongs and poker. It was all fully functional but since
my father had put central heating in all the main living areas twenty
years earlier, the fireplace and all its tools were strictly
ornamental. The mantlepiece above was painted white to match the
walls. There was a very cool carriage clock which was probably worth
quite a few bob, and various other objets which my father and Eleanor
had apparently considered d'art. They were hideous but we hadn't
gotten round to dumping them.
The wings either side of the Great Hall were independent with separate
staircases at the front for members of the household and at the back
for the servants. There was no connection between the wings above the
ground floor. Each wing had three bedrooms on the second level and
three more above them at the top of the building. There was a
communal bathroom on each floor and the largest bedroom had an en
suite. I did a quick calculation. Two bathrooms on each floor in
each wing, making eight in all. Wait - there was a bathroom in each
wing on the ground floor too. That's ten - seven more than the total
number of permanent residents of the house. So queuing up for a
bathroom would be a thing of the past. On the other hand, there was
an awful lot of plumbing that could go wrong.
I made my way up to the top floor on the West Wing, our side of the
house. I didn't think Susie had been up to this floor yet in either
wing. I had only been up there briefly before and had quickly been
put off further exploration by the amount of clutter. I made a mental
note to call a house clearance company. Though maybe Susie would like
to browse through it all first...
* * *
When Mum got back she had exciting news. She was just winding up to
tell me when Susie returned. She had brought some work home for the
afternoon, so the three of us could have lunch together.
"Esme's son and daughter-in-law in America have invited her to visit,"
Mum began. "They've been trying to get her to go for years, but she
didn't like the idea of travelling all that way alone. Now that I'm
free, she wants me to go with her. Her son has a big house, so
there's plenty of room. We won't have to pay for a hotel."
"Fantastic!" Susie said. "You must go. You'll have a wonderful
time."
"Absolutely," I agreed. "You deserve it, Mum. You haven't had a
proper holiday for years."
"Are you sure we can afford it?" she said.
"Well you'll only have to cover your flights and some spending money,
won't you?" I said. "That's a couple of thousand at most. We can
probably pay for it on my new credit card, and we must get you one too
for your expenses. I'll talk to Mr Smythe about releasing a little
money from the Estate. He did say that would be possible. We'll set
you up a regular allowance. We can afford a bit more than my stingy
father was giving you."
"It would be nice," she said wistfully. "They live in Atlanta,
Georgia. He works at CNN. Their head office is there."
"When does Esme want to go?" Susie asked. "It'll be hot there in
August."
"We talked about mid-September."
"Well, let's start planning your trip then," Susie said excitedly.
"You'll need lots of new outfits."
"I don't even have a passport..."
I left them to it, hoping that our fifty grand 'emergency fund' would
survive the Dowager Countess's trip to the New World.
* * *
Not long after my mother's departure for the Colonies, Martha had an
announcement to make. She was pregnant.
"To be honest, I thought I was too old," she said. "I'm so sorry to
be letting you down."
"Good heavens, sweetie," said Susie with a smile. "You don't have to
apologise for wanting a baby! It's wonderful news!"
"It certainly is," I agreed. "I hope you'll consider us when you're
looking for godparents!"
We moved in for a three-way hug.
"Davey and I are planning to get married early in the New Year when we
hope your father's legacy will have come through, My Lord," she said.
"So I'd like to keep the pregnancy just between us for the moment, if
that's alright. I know it's silly in this day and age, but some
people are still a bit funny about women who get pregnant before
they're married."
We assured her we understood and would keep her happy condition a
secret for as long as she wanted.
"I should be able to stay on until you can find a new housekeeper,"
Martha said. "I won't have to leave for a good while yet," she said,
"although I might not be able to get into my uniforms in another month
or two!"
* * *
The weekend after Martha's big announcement Susie and I finally
managed to make a start on the third-floor bedrooms. We set ourselves
a schedule: two rooms a day. If we were able to keep to that, we
would get everything cleared in two weekends. So at half-past ten on
the Saturday morning, armed with a vacuum cleaner, a dustpan, and
several brushes, we started up the stairs to the top of our wing.
"I thought you'd done some reconnaissance," Susie grumbled as we
arrived on the third floor. "The landing is full of junk too. That's
going to wreck our schedule."
"I didn't really notice," I said. "I just walked past all this lot to
look at the bedrooms."
We made our way into the largest room. There were endless cardboard
boxes, battered suitcases, tatty books and magazines, toys, board
games, old vinyl records, dusty furniture, curtains, clothes and
shoes. There must have been several generations of Marsham family
junk up there - none of which meant anything to the three of us. We
had no loyalty to the Hadleigh legacy.
We started dividing everything into piles: 'Keep', 'Dump', and 'Think
About It'. Anything we thought my mother might like went into the
last pile. Quite a lot of framed portraits - both photographs and
paintings - went there. They were almost all complete strangers to me
of course, although there were a few pictures of my father. At least
I thought it must be him. The face was vaguely familiar and the dates
on the backs were about right.
"Your Dad was very good-looking," said Susie, who had come up to see
what had caught my interest. "No wonder your Mum fell for him. Those
photos of him when he was in his teens are very like you at the same
age."
"He was quite a bit bigger," I sighed. "It's a pity he wasn't as good
on the inside as he appears on the outside."
"Well, his son is both," she said affectionately, nuzzling my neck.
"I'm a very lucky Countess."
We decided to use the big bedroom as the repository for the 'Think
About It' pile and the landing for the 'Definitely Dump'. It took us
the rest of the morning and most of the afternoon to process both,
with a short lunch break. We had only a tiny 'Keep' pile, which we
decided could go in the small back room, which was directly above
Martha's old bedroom. When we made our way in there, each of us with
an armful of stuff, we found it was full of clothes. There were two
wardrobes, one packed with men's suits, the other with ladies'
dresses. From the styles, I guessed the oldest probably dated back to
Edwardian times or even earlier. The most recent were from the
nineteen-fifties.
"You know who'd like these?" I said. "LADS."
"Good idea," she said. "They want you to be a Patron, by the way. A
letter came from the secretary a couple of days ago. I'm not sure he
was aware that the new Earl was Juliet's old Nurse."
"Maybe someone at the school noticed I was involved in Am Dram.
Anyway this lot could save them a fortune in costumes. Do you think
Polly Whitmore will have room for them all somewhere?"
"Dunno, but some of these clothes are pretty old. They may be too
delicate to be used in a play. Let's have a closer look." She
reached for a very pretty pink and white dress. "Oh I must try this
on!"
"Careful!" I said. "You might damage it."
"So what? If the material has perished, it's only fit for the dump
anyway."
She was stripping her top and jeans off. I took the dress from her
and held it up to the light.
"When would a woman have worn something like this, do you think?"
"It's a tea party dress; day wear; probably about 1900 to 1910. They
usually wore vintage-style cotton, chiffon or lace. Typically they
featured large puffy sleeves, a narrow waist and full hips with a
flared skirt."
"Wow!" I was impressed. "How did you know all that?"
"My Gran was really into fashion when she was young. She learned it
all from her Gran and was keen to pass it all on to me. I once
thought about going into fashion."
"I did not know that."
"Well, I grew out of it. I realised it would be too hit and miss for
a career - like show business. The law may be boring but it's steady
work and it pays well."
She was pulling open drawers from a tallboy chest next to the
wardrobe. They were full of accessories: aprons, gloves, shoes, hats,
parasols and shawls. Susie grabbed a particularly fearsome-looking
white undergarment.
"I'm going to need your help getting this corset on. You can be my
lady's maid."
I laughed and continued opening boxes.
"Why on earth would you want to wear one of those things?" I said.
"Your figure doesn't need any shaping. It's perfect as it is."
"Aw, thanks, babe," she grinned. "But corsets are dead sexy - wait
till you see me. Anyway even I couldn't get into one of these
Edwardian dresses without a corset. Come and help me."
"OK, coming."
"Hey, talking of maids, look at what I found here - maid uniforms!"
"There used to be several maids here when I was little. Those must be
theirs," I said, reminiscing. "They were all very nice to me."
I remembered tall ladies in long black dresses playing with me,
pushing me on the swing in the back garden, pulling my little car
around the corridors.
"Come on then, strip off," said Susie in an authoritative voice. "A
maid should be in uniform when she's helping her mistress get
dressed."
"I don't have a mistress; I'm a bloody Earl!"
"Earls can have mistresses. Your father certainly did. Come on, you
can pretend. It'll be fun!"
"Don't be daft!"
"Think of it as an overall - our clothes are getting filthy up here.
Anyway, your mother wasn't too proud to be a cleaning lady. Who do
you take after - her or your father?"
I laughed. She knew I was nothing like my father, but that doesn't
mean I was like my mother.
"You even worked as a cleaning lady once, didn't you?" she said slyly.
"Cleaning boy, you mean."
"There's no such thing. You were just a male cleaning lady."
She was referring to the horrible time when my Mum fell off her bike
and broke her wrist. I had to help her with her cleaning job or she
might have lost her clients. We were just lucky it was the school
holidays so I was available. We went round the houses she had to
clean together. She did what she could one-handed and I did
everything else. I was thirteen. I quite enjoyed it, as long as I
didn't have to talk to anyone. I was even more self-conscious then.
Susie was the only one of my classmates I told when she asked me what
I planned to do over the summer. I immediately wished I hadn't told
her. I was sure she would tell everyone else and I would be teased to
within an inch of my life. But to my surprise, she kept it to
herself. It was around then that she and I stopped pretending to hate
each other.
"It was what you did that summer that made me realise you weren't so
bad after all," she said. "Come on, put this dress on. Whoever it
belonged to, she was a big woman. It should fit you."
I sighed. "OK, but you're going to be the maid tomorrow," I said.
"Deal!" she said undoing the buttons of my shirt. "You can be the
Countess." I sneered. "No, you'll have to be. Maids don't help
their masters get dressed, just their mistresses."
"I'll just stick with being the maid then. That clobber you'll be
wearing looks too complicated."
"Fair enough. Now come along, Martha, I'll help you get dressed, then
you can help me."
"Martha?" "After our favourite maid. It's a good name, isn't it? And
I can hardly call my maid 'Robert', can I?"
I finished undoing my shirt. While I was doing that, she reached to
unzip my trousers.
"Whoa, you're in a bit of hurry, aren't you?"
"I just can't wait to see you in this uniform. I'll bet you look
great!"
But I didn't. She dropped the long black dress over my head. It
reached down to my calves. It was all baggy and droopy and I looked
stupid.
"Hmm," she said.
"This dress is completely shapeless," I said. "Help me get it off."
"It's not shapeless; you are. You need a bra, and maybe a padded
girdle. Come on, let's go back to our bedroom. I've got some old
things I've been meaning to throw away. They should work for you."
She set off down the stairs.
"Hang on! That's going a bit far, isn't it?" I said, following
grumpily. "I never promised to put on any women's underwear. Anyway,
that will take all day. We've still got lots to do."
"Nonsense! Five minutes. Bring that suitcase - it's got aprons and
caps and things."
To her frustration I couldn't get into any of Susie's old underwear.
She'd stretched it out but nothing like far enough.
"Hang on," she said, apparently in a moment of inspiration. "I've got
another idea.
"So I'll just wait here, shall I?" I called to her retreating back.
"In my underpants?"
"I think there are some vintage bloomers in that suitcase," she called
back. "Put them on. They might keep your legs warmer."
I didn't know if she was serious. It wasn't cold. But I had a look
through the suitcase. There was a garment as she described. I
shrugged and dropped my underpants. I stepped into the bloomers,
half-expecting them to be too tight, but no. I managed to pull them
up to my waist.
Susie returned with an armful of underwear. She stopped when she saw
me and laughed.
"Very nice," she said. "Antique cotton, or linen; possibly cotton
lawn? Same period as my dress, I should think. Late Victorian or
early Edwardian. There's probably a drawstring to secure them at the
waist. Yes, here it is." She pulled it tight and fastened it in a
bow. "There's a flap at the back, by the way, with buttons, so you
can... you know."
"Yeah, well, when I need to go to the loo, I'll take them off,
thanks."
"They have gorgeous broderie anglaise trim."
"Terrific," I said sarcastically. "Why are we doing this? I feel
stupid already and I haven't even got the dress on yet."
"Because we can. Because it's fun. Because we'll never get the
chance again if we give all these old clothes to LADS. Anyway, you
like dressing up. You've been Lady Bracknell and the Nurse in Romeo
and Juliet. I would have thought being Martha was right up your
street."
"Most of the parts I played in my Am Dram years were men, and it was
just acting - which you insisted I did to cure my shyness - which it
didn't."
"No, we'll have to keep working on that, won't we?"
She picked up a lacy white bra that was clearly much bigger than any
of hers.
"OK, if we have to do this, can we get on with it?" I sighed.
"Come on then," she said. "Put your arms through the straps. I'll
fasten it and find something to stuff it with."
I obliged. Then a thought occurred to me.
"Hey, where did you find this lot anyway?"
"It's old stuff of your mother's. Don't worry; it's clean."
"What? You've been raiding my Mum's underwear, and you want me to
wear it?"
"Don't fuss. We bought her all new lingerie for her trip. She was
throwing this lot away. I got it from a bag I was going to take to
the charity shop. There - it fits you very well."
She stood back in triumph. Then she started stuffing the bra with
pairs of panties.
"And whose are those?" I asked testily.
"Mine, but don't worry. They're clean." As though that was all I was
concerned about. "Now let's get this girdle on you. Then a little
more padding will give my maid a nice curvy, feminine shape."
Well there wasn't much point in objecting now, so I let her have her
way.
"Surely a woman wouldn't wear a girdle over bloomers like these, would
she?"
"No, no, bras and girdles didn't come in till the 1930s, and you
wouldn't wear long knickers like these with a girdle anyway, but you
need it to give you a proper female bum."
Between us we eventually managed to pull the thing up over my
bloomers. It had suspenders but I couldn't get stockings on without
taking the bloomers off, so they just dangled impotently. Then Susie
started cramming more of her knickers down it until it was on the
point of bursting. I felt like a cushion had been forced down my
trousers, like a schoolboy anticipating a beating.
"You won't believe how tight I'm going to tie your corset today,
Madam," I said. She just laughed.
"In 1905 a maid would wear a starched cotton petticoat under her
dress, but I didn't see one, so you can wear this old slip of your
Mum's."
"Gee, thanks."
I allowed her to drop the slip over my head and pulled it down to
smooth everything out.
"Might as well add a little make-up as well," she added, casually.
"Hold on a minute..."
"Ssh, Martha. Pucker up."
She had smeared lipstick all over my mouth before I could stop her,
swiftly following that with mascara.
"To make my pretty maid's eyes pop," she explained.
When I was fully underweared and made up to Madam's satisfaction, she
dropped the maid's dress over me again and it definitely hung better.
She tied a white half-apron around my waist. I even had a noticeably
hourglass figure. I couldn't move much because of the tight
underwear, but at least I looked good.
"You'll need to be careful not to let your ankles show as you move
about, Martha dear," Susie said, giggling. "Edwardian maids would
never do that, and you'd be exposing your hairy legs. Now the
finishing touch."
She reached up and pulled a mob cap down over my head.
"This will keep the dust out of your hair," she said. "These rooms
are filthy. I don't think a maid's been up here for years - until
now, I mean!"
"Very funny."
She turned me toward the bedroom wardrobe mirror. If you ignored my
five o'clock shadow and hairy hands, there were no other traces of
masculinity. More importantly, I couldn't see any sign of Robert
Marsham, so I didn't feel too embarrassed dressing as a maid. Surely
no one would recognise me in this outfit, not that I was going to let
anyone apart from Susie see me.
The Hall now had a second maid called Martha. I found my demeaning
outfit strangely erotic...
"Right, Martha," said the Countess. "You can dress me now."
"Yes, My Lady."
"You don't have to call me that," she laughed.
"Well you're a lady, and you're mine, so why not?"
"Well OK then," she agreed. "I suppose I'd better get used to it,
hadn't I?"
* * *
As Martha, the lady's maid, I first had to help my mistress into her
underwear. This entailed quite a few layers and we had fun figuring
out whether we had everything she needed and then how it all worked.
"Dresses in the early Edwardian period were much closer fitting than
they had been for most of the nineteenth century," Susie was saying.
"So underwear had to become lighter and more fitted to the body,
especially at the waist, to reduce the bulk under your dress."
"Fascinating," I said.
I wasn't really listening. I was staring at myself in the wardrobe
mirror. I couldn't believe I looked so much like an actual lady's
maid. My training in female movement was coming back to me. Susie
wasn't looking so I tried a curtsey. Hmm, I needed practice.
"Let's see what we've got here," she said, tipping the contents of the
suitcase onto the bedroom carpet. First, a pair of drawers - like
yours, but mine will be silk, of course."
"Of course."
"This is a chemise, which you wear under your corset to protect your
skin. Corsets can be rough and scratchy. Talking of which, here's
one."
She had found a cream-coloured corset. The top was edged in a band of
finely-made lace trim with two silk ribbons. It was cross-laced down
the back with a tough-looking cord. Pulling that as tight as possible
would be my job.
"Why would you want to squash yourself into a torture device like
this?"
"You'd have to, to get into the dresses of the period. Anyway, it
supports your boobs as well as shaping your body. This was before the
invention of the bra, remember."
"Well you'd never get me into one of those," I scoffed. She grinned.
"If I was a woman, I mean."
Susie was rifling through the remaining items from the suitcase.
"Ah, this is a corset-cover. It protects the gown from the corset. I
won't bother with that. There are two petticoats here too; they add
fullness to the skirt. I'll make do with one, I think."
"What's that little lumpy thing, like a cushion on a string?"
"It's a bustle pad. They were huge in the late Victorian era, but
were going out by the early 1900s. Some women wore them to round out
their bum and hips."
"Again, superfluous in your case. You're very well-rounded."
"Thanks... I think." She wasn't sure whether my comment was a
compliment or an insult. "Come on, help me get dressed, Martha."
First was stockings. Susie remembered her Gran saying that you always
put them on before the rest of the undergarments. Obviously Victorian
stockings were never seen in public underneath all the layers of
petticoats and skirts, but in private women loved fancy, colourful
designs. The ones Susie chose were made of silk. They were grey with
vertical black stripes and came up to just above her knees. There was
no built-in elastic to hold them up, but we found a pair of frilly
garters. She slipped them on and up her legs. By pulling their tops
up above the garters, we managed to persuade the stockings to stay up.
Her legs looked sexy as hell.
She giggled when she saw my mouth watering at the sight -
metaphorically, of course. The garters were now pretty tight and I
was afraid they might constrict her blood flow, but when I tried to
slip them down a little, they wouldn't hold the stockings up any more.
There seemed to be no way of clipping the stockings to the garters, so
I was pretty sure they would soon slip down, but Susie wasn't
concerned.
The first layer of clothing was the silk bloomers. She stepped into
them, and turned round so that I could tie up the drawstring as she
had mine. The frilly cuffs at the bottom of the legs came down to
just below her stocking tops. Rather than having a buttoned flap at
the back, her drawers were split to enable their wearer to use the
facilities.
While I was fastening her bloomers, Susie had picked up the chemise.
She handed it to me and turned her back again.
"A lady shouldn't have to remove her own bra, Martha," she giggled.
"You've had lots of practice. Have at it."
"Yes, M'Lady," I said.
I unclipped her bra and felt a movement inside my own bloomers,
despite the tight girdle. I hoped my mistress hadn't seen. As her
breasts came loose, she turned to face me again, and immediately saw
the tenting in my skirt, which my apron did nothing to conceal.
"Martha!" she admonished. "That's most improper for a maid! Get
yourself under control this minute!"
"Yes, ma'am. Sorry, ma'am," I said, completely unable to keep a
sheepish grin from my lips. We were both enjoying the afternoon's
play enormously.
The chemise was like a light summer nightgown, a very simple pattern,
knee-length, with a low square neck, tight sleeves and underarm
gussets. It had a little embroidery round the neck and hem. Susie
explained that the Victorians considered embroidered underwear to be
indecent. After all, it's never seen, so it should be plain. But
people were starting to relax a little as the Edwardian era
progressed. We mused happily over how times have changed. Susie has
lots of sexy underwear.
Next came the dreaded corset. The lacy dress she had selected was
less extravagant than clothes from earlier in the nineteenth century.
It wouldn't take a crinoline, for example; nor was there a protruding
bustle; and nor was it as tight as a dress from the late 1870s. But
it still needed a severe corset, which I took sadistic pleasure in
lacing up as tightly as I could manage - just as I threatened. Susie
had to lean against the wall to stop herself from moving as I tugged
on the cord. We had to pause a couple of times for her to get her
breath back. Each time we checked to see if she was parcelled up
tightly enough to get into the dress. All the effort and my
cumbersome outfit were causing me to sweat too.
"I don't understand," she panted. "I thought I was slim..." Pant,
pant. "Why can't I get into this blasted gown?" Pant, pant. "And
the petticoat still has to go under it. Come on, Martha! I'm sure a
real Edwardian maid could do me up tighter than this!"
I rather doubted that, even though I was finding my underwear, dress,
apron and especially cap, emasculating.
"A woman of the time would have worn a tight corset every day since
her early teens," I suggested. "Wouldn't that have trained her shape
to fit these stupid narrow waists? Eighteen inches was the goal,
wasn't it? Very bad for the internal organs, I should think.
Frankly, I'd be worried if you could get into the dress."
"The waist on this one is twenty-two inches, I think," she said.
"Maybe twenty."
"When did you measure it?"
"OK, I'm ready again," she said, as if I hadn't spoken. "Tighter!"
She leant against the wall again.
"Also, there's modern nutrition," I said, putting my knee up against
her back. "Women today are taller, bigger... plumper..."
That got me a filthy look. I shut up.
Eventually I could do no more. It would need a tractor to get the
blasted thing any tighter. Susie's breathing was shallow now, as if
she was only using the top of her lungs.
"This is ridiculous!" I said. "I'm going to undo this deathtrap right
now."
"Wait a minute," she said, panting even more heavily. "Let me try the
dress again. Last chance."
"What about the petticoat?"
"Ah! I don't know..." She stopped to think. "If I put it on now, I
won't be able to step into the dress, and I can't put the dress on
over my head as my boobs are too big for the waist. I suppose that
means I'll have to put the dress on first and then work the petticoat
up underneath it. I wonder how Edwardian women did it?"
So I held the beautiful, flimsy gown out for her. Susie put one hand
on my shoulder and tried to step into it
"Can you hold it a little lower, babe?" she panted. "The corset is
stopping me lifting my leg any higher."
I bent lower to comply. The basic dress was pink with white lace
embellishments on the bodice and at the sleeves. The skirt was
gathered at the waist and fell naturally over her hips and the various
undergarments. It gave her an A-line silhouette that was almost bell-
like. It had huge, puffy leg-of-mutton sleeves fitted tightly at the
wrist and with small ruffles at the shoulder. There were no less than
twelve tiny pearl buttons down the back which I found fiddly, my
fingers being bigger and clumsier than those of most Edwardian maids.
"You won't be able to get out of any of this by yourself, you know," I
said.
"That's what I have a maid for," she smiled. "You'll be on duty for a
while yet, Martha sweetie."
Finally the petticoat; it was close-fitting down to knee level, then
with a deep gathered flounce to the ankle, and a narrow ruffled
extension to the floor. It was awkward to get on but manageable.
Susie gathered up the skirt of her dress as high as she could and
stepped into the petticoat, but after that she could do nothing to
help me, tightly constrained as she was.
I slowly worked it up her body. It was a struggle getting it all the
way up to her waist, so we eventually settled for having it rest just
below, high on her hips. There was no elastic, of course. It had a
drawstring which I tied off for her. It seemed secure enough, but
there was about an inch of frilly petticoat spilling out below the hem
of the dress. How on earth did Edwardian ladies put up with all this
stuff? (Mind you, some of our modern fashions don't look much more
comfortable.)
"I need high heels, I think," Susie said. "I didn't see anything
suitable up there or in the suitcase."
"You probably couldn't get your feet into an Edwardian lady's shoe
anyway," I said, accurately but tactlessly.
"Yes, thank you, Martha," she said, icily. "Fetch me a pair of black
heels, please."
Her tone made it clear that her maid had better jump to it, or she
might be out on the street tomorrow without a reference. I jumped to
it. I grabbed the nearest pair of black high-heeled shoes from the
bottom of her wardrobe.
She lowered herself carefully onto the bed, gathered up her skirts,
and raised one foot. She looked at me as if to say, "Well?"
I sighed and mopped my sweating brow on my apron. I lifted my own
skirt and knelt at her feet. Helping my wife-stroke-mistress on with
shoes, while kneeling in front of her, was both utterly mortifying and
sublimely erotic. She tried to maintain a stern demeanour but we were
both helpless with laughter by the time I'd finished. I helped her to
her feet. She looked amazing, as I had known she would.
The dress was Edwardian rather than late Victorian, well after the
time of Oscar Wilde and George Bernard Shaw, so it wasn't really
appropriate for me to say, "You look just like Lady Bracknell."
"Damn your insolence, Martha!" she expostulated. "Lady Bracknell was
an old bag!"
"Cheek!" I said back in protest. "I wasn't an old bag. Everyone said
I made a very handsome woman."
"Well, yeah, you did," she grinned, "but a handsome middle-aged woman.
I see myself as her daughter, Gwendolen."
"Fair enough," I agreed. "Now I suppose you want me to do your hair?"
She passed me a hairbrush and an old-fashioned tortoiseshell comb she
had found in the accessories suitcase. Soon I was brushing and
arranging her hair, like a proper maid. While she was telling me what
to do, she kept up a running commentary about hairstyles of the early
1900s.
"My great-great-grandmother used to wear her hair in a pompadour,
which was the most fashionable hairstyle for Edwardian women. My Gran
showed me pictures and taught me how to do it. My hair's too short
really; it was much longer when I was little. My maid needs to
backcomb it and roll it to create the high, round shape."
We decided not to bother with rollers but Susie showed me how to do
backcombing. I wasn't very good at it but she didn't scold me for my
feeble efforts, she just laughed. Eventually I managed to get her
hair to fluff out a bit and between us we worked out how to hold it in
place using the big tortoiseshell comb. When we'd finished I thought
she looked like a perfect Edwardian lady, if you ignored the wayward
tufts of hair that had managed to escape from the bloated beehive on
top of her head, due to her maid's incompetence.
I flopped down on our bed, exhausted.
"You look great," I said, "like a proper Countess, but we're way
behind schedule now."
"Oh, it's too late to do any more today, and I'd have to take all this
lot off... I mean, you'd have to undress me, Martha. Tell you what -
let's have an early dinner. As my maid you'll be serving me of
course."
"Well I'm not cooking, and you can open the door to the pizza delivery
boy."
We were now playing an exciting and erotic game of 'mistress and
maid'. I pottered in and out with food and drink all evening, while
Susie reclined on the lounge sofa, like an Edwardian lady of leisure.
But it was all in fun. She would never have demanded anything too
demeaning of me, if only because she knew I would flatly refuse and
the game would be over.
She called me 'Martha' all the time and taught me to curtsey whenever
I approached her. As a result I experienced a continual, often
painful, erection in my bloomers and Mum's panty girdle (which I
decided I would have to destroy afterwards).
It wasn't all comfort and ease for Susie either, squeezed as she was
into the tight corset. She could only manage a third of her pizza,
and after two glasses of Merlot she had to make several trips to the
bathroom, requiring my assistance each time.
At about half past nine the continual stimulation became too much for
both of us, so we called it quits and rushed to the bedroom. I
undressed my mistress in half the time it had taken me to dress her.
She returned the favour just as quickly and our lovemaking was the
longest and best either of us could remember. Susie decided that
dressing-up games would be part of our repertoire from now on. I
didn't object too strongly.
There was no rush to donate our entire collection of historic costumes
to LADS, was there? We held back a few of the costumes for ourselves.
Some of the maid's uniforms were too small for me but Susie could get
into them, so we did our ongoing clearing of the top floor rooms
dressed as two maids. I dispensed with the bloomers and wore thick
black stockings to conceal my hairy legs. We told ourselves that our
fancy dress kept the accumulated dirt and dust of decades off our own
clothes.
"You realise this makes you the second Countess of Hadleigh in
succession to work as a cleaner?" I laughed.
"What about you? You're a third-generation cleaning lady. Not bad
considering you're actually a man!"
Unfortunately we usually didn't get a lot done before we'd turned each
other on so much we had to stop for a little 'relief'. Our original
estimate of two weekends looked ridiculous now.