Cathy Leonard
a cup of Earl Grey tea
A shadow
eclipsed the wedding shot of Lady Reece Beverly to Squire George Winthrop.
Maisie Taylor clicked her tongue and raised her head to view the orbiting
source of this hiatus in her perusal of last month’s copy of Hello. Ethel
Stillman’s large frame filled the door of Dr Henry’s surgery and behind her, a
double-shot to her pint-size, Arlen Stillman emerged hugging a crooked
shoulder.
No caps
tipped to Her Highness today. Most of the patients were blow-in yokels who
didn’t know that Mrs Stillman had aspirations. Aspirations and one seat to
share with the double-shot. Maisie watched the sixty-plus matron scope out the territory
before directing her second-in-command to the three-legged stool at the end of
the corridor that passed for a rural doctor’s waiting room.
Her
skeletal smile belied the eruption flaring across Ethel’s neck and the
unsoftened glare that followed her sighting of Albert Sweeney stretched across
the battered two-seater, eyes buffered on the Dandy. It’s few Dandys that lad
ever saw in his piggery, so not even a cosmic event was likely to scupper his
gaze.
Maisie
stroked the feather in her lapel, for Ethel was her arch rival in the Baked Alaska
competition in the County Fair, and to downsize Ethel was accolades to her. She
could forgo the fopperies of Hello would-be celebs for the foibles of a local
one. And she knew something that Ethel didn’t.
Quietly
steaming as the matron was now, fur rising on her faux-fox collar, hackles
would soon eject at high speed. For Maisie Taylor was advised to keep her
varicosed legs raised at hip level, and when Joe Carbery beside her went in to
get his weekly blood check, she planned to ease her right calf into the much
coveted vacated chair.
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