by Roger Noons
a glass of freshly-squeezed orange juice.
Dorothy Stevens is a regular at St Luke’s; not only
on Sundays, but on any weekday when brass needs polishing, crockery washing or
woodwork dusting. Appreciated at the Church as she accepts all requests, doesn’t
gossip and carries out her duties diligently. She speaks little but when she
does, expresses considerable common sense.
She appeared one day in Southgate Road, one of Mr
Braithwaite’s new tenants, moving in without fuss. She washes her net curtains
and cleans her windows on a weekly basis, has few visitors and when spoken to,
has a smile and a friendly response.
One Thursday morning while tidying the vestry,
she moved a box of hymn books and found a collection of magazines. Assuming they
were comics which had been confiscated at Sunday school or Junior Church, she
moved to set them aside until a slightly larger, glossy magazine slid from the
middle of the pile. Picking it up she saw it was a copy of Men’s Monthly.
After looking around, listening and hearing nothing, she closed the door and
sat down.
She flipped through the early pages until she
found the first feature. Introducing Helga from Germany, the caption read
and over six pages there were several studies of Das Fräulein without clothes.
They were black and white and the studio lighting was such that whilst her upper
body was clearly portrayed, there was mystery surrounding the area where her
thighs met her trunk. Two pages later, there was a similar set, this time of
Monika, from Denmark. Comparing the two sets, Dorothy confirmed that it
was the same model wearing different wigs.
She spent some time studying the poses, smiling
as she recognised familiar props and settings. Nodding, she recognised the
well-proportioned body and facial expressions which were neither lascivious, nor
as her mother might have said, smutty. She felt the images were artistic and had
they been paintings, would have been lauded and hung in galleries.
There was a third collection, covering eight
pages, in which the settings were in the countryside. The lighting was soft and
a grassy mound provided a base for reclined poses. Although the pictures had
been taken thirty years previously and showed none of the discomfort caused by
insects, tree roots and at one time a passing grass snake, they were the best of
the lot. She was again excited by the results. There was no mention of the
model’s name.
Dotty sighed as she closed the magazine and slid
it back between the Dandys and Beanos before she hoisted the collection on to
the top of the wardrobe. Shaking her head, she wished she had kept her cameras
and darkroom and not been put off by bullying from male picture editors and
glamour photographers.
About the author
Roger is a regular contributor to Café
Lit.
No comments:
Post a Comment