Enjoy!
Extract from We Are Villains All
In the town of Daneburton, the
women would often turn their drawing room conversation to the subject of the
poet, Maxwell Wainwright. He had lived among them in the Hampshire market town
for twenty years, seeking the peace and solitude that London could not offer.
He sought to further the appreciation of poetry amongst the ladies of the
community. It was not only poetry that the ladies who gathered in his home
appreciated. When they returned to their own drawing rooms, the talk was of his
latest publication, the sweetness of his words. Sometimes the praise of his
writing came dangerously close to praise of the man himself. It wasn’t that Mr
Wainwright was not a praiseworthy man, quite the opposite. What they did not
say was the way his glance, his smile, the brief, warm touch of his hand made
them feel. Each one of the women considered his unmarried status with
speculation. Not one of the fine ladies of Daneburton would have admitted this
as they spoke of his deep well of feeling behind each metaphor, but each and
every one had considered his ever so proper form, if only for a moment, naked.
Max Wainwright
could have been accused of promoting this feeling among the women of the town
by his insistence on holding poetry appreciation meetings. During these
gatherings the poet stood in front of them, his book cradled like a precious
thing in his hand. When he read, his voice was even and smooth, laced with a
smile and the ruffle of humour. The words that escaped his lips were mere
background noise, compared with the lips themselves, faintly blushed and wide,
but not full. His hair was light brown, speckled with grey and brushed back in
waves, a little tousled, unruly, and appropriate for the romantic poet he was
at heart. His eyes almost vanished as he smiled, crinkled and dark, pressed to
curves by the apparent authenticity of his joy in the company of others. His
countenance was generally one of innocence, despite now being in his sixth
decade, enhanced by his frustrating habit of remaining on pleasantly
professional terms with his ladies. This drove some to flirt, to cast their
gaze down then allow their eyes to rise to his in an encouraging manner as they
breathed a little deeper, their book held just before their rising breasts. Max
would just smile, seemingly oblivious to the actions of the increasingly
desperate women. His cheeks curved his eyes to mirrored smiles, but then the
butterfly of his attention would move on.
The poetry
gatherings were held in Mr Wainwright’s spacious dining room. The table had
been cleared a while ago and an assortment of chairs accommodated the twenty
women of status and leisure who gathered there.
A half dozen of
the women were in their older years, such as Rosalind Hunter, a woman who
looked upon Max with a reflected warmth and motherly affection. Her regard for
the poet was gentle, patient and appropriate, and she had distaste for the more
obvious plays for the man’s attention by the younger women. She wasn’t much
older than Max, less than a decade, but her hair was white and her figure had
roamed to fill the chair, so the idea that she had ever been a lithe young
woman seemed impossible. It was if she had been born a fully formed matron,
stately and wise.
Some of Mr
Wainwright’s acolytes were women in their middle years, but not all the women
in their thirties were married. A few were spinsters, like Maud Blake. Maud sat
at the back where she could not even see the poet the others so avidly
attended. She sought to be as unobtrusive as possible. It was possibly the
reason her employer liked her; that, and the fact that Emeline had become Mrs
Hutchinson and Miss Blake had not.
Emeline Hutchinson
was the youngest of the group, but wore her widow’s weeds with assumed
superiority. She had barely accomplished her first anniversary of marriage
before her husband dropped dead from a storm in his brain, brought on from an
excess of brandy and shouting, mainly due to the company of his young wife.
Despite her youth, no-one was under any illusion as to the social power she
held. Her connections, her parentage and her beauty fitted her perfectly to
rule and none of the ladies had yet come close to usurping the girl-queen...
Coming very soon.... |
It sounds delightful - I can hardly wait! :)
ReplyDeleteThank you! I look forward to launching it upon you later this month...
ReplyDeleteSounds great - looking forward to reading it! (I am amazed by how you find time to do everything you do...)
ReplyDeleteThank you. I think you can always find time to do stuff you love (as opposed to the washing up)...
ReplyDelete