Authors: Aunt Dimity [14] Aunt Dimity Slays the Dragon
teeth brushed, your hands washed, and your hair combed before
we go to church.”
The twins’ faces registered surprise, as did their father’s.
“Are we going to church?” Bill inquired.
“Of course we are,” I said. “We don’t want the vicar to think
we’ve forgotten him, do we? And it seems to me that a certain pair
of young men will benefit greatly from a period of quiet reflection.”
Bill took the hint and nodded to the boys. “Off you go, guys.
Teeth, hands, and hair.”
I let Bill finish his omelet in peace, but resumed my interrogation while he and I loaded the dishwasher.
“When do the rest of the vendors set up?” I asked.
“Most of them come wandering in around half past nine,” he
replied.
“Do the vendors live in the encampment?” I asked.
“Most do,” said Bill. “Some live at home during the week and
spend weekends at the fair. They’re called weekenders.”
“Fascinating.” I closed the dishwasher, then asked another question out of sheer curiosity. “What do the nonweekenders do during
the week?”
122 Nancy Atherton
“I imagine the knights practice jousting. As for the others . . .”
Bill shrugged. “I guess we’ll find out.”
As Bill and I went upstairs to tend to our own teeth, hands, and
hair, I analyzed the timetable he had constructed for me. If my calculations were correct, the arena would have been virtually deserted for a full thirty minutes after the rehearsal had ended. Once
the squires had taken the horses to the stabling area and the knights
had departed for Gate house Square, the saboteur would have had
more than enough time to damage the quintain’s rope, unobserved
by any members of the jousting crew.
The food vendors, on the other hand, could have seen him.
They’d gone to work an hour before the fair had opened, and their
stalls were so close to the arena that Bill had been able to identify the
savory aroma wafting from their ovens. I made a mental note to visit
Pudding Lane as soon as I reached the fair. As an afterthought, I decided that my first stop would be the honey cake stall. I saw nothing
wrong with mixing business with pleasure.
The early service at St. George’s Church was the only one my menfolk would consider attending, because it was the only one that
would allow them to arrive at the fair before ten
o’clock. My
last-minute decision to bring them with me meant that we got a
late start, but when we left the cottage we still had a modest chance
of reaching a pew before the vicar offered up the first prayer.
Thankfully, we left early enough to avoid the stream of vehicles
I’d encountered the previous morning. I savored the sensation of
having our lane to ourselves, though I was distressed to see the glint
of beer bottles in a ditch and a few discarded chewing gum wrappers clinging to the hedgerows. Under normal circumstances, we
would have stopped immediately to pick up the trash, but since we
were running late, I decided to wait until after church to begin our
cleanup campaign.
While I ruminated darkly on litter and litterbugs, Bill, Will, and
Aunt Dimity Slays the Dragon
123
Rob performed the raucous family rituals that made a trip to Finch
complete. They cheered for the ponies when we passed Anscombe
Manor’s curving drive, and even though the Pym sisters were away at
the seaside, the boys saluted their redbrick house when we passed it.
All three hooted like hyenas when we reached the top of the humpbacked bridge. Bill encouraged me to join in the hooting, but we were
all shocked into silence by the sight that met our eyes when we came
down the bridge and saw the village stretched out before us.
It was as if a tornado had swept through Finch, leaving a trail
of destruction in its wake. Candy wrappers, potato chip bags, grocery sacks, empty beer bottles, and odd bits of clothing carpeted
the village green. Crumpled soda cans lay in drifts along the pavement and an abandoned fashion magazine fluttered forlornly on
the bench near the war memorial. The pub’s sign hung at a crazy
angle, a leg was missing from one of the bins in front of the greengrocer’s shop, and a splintered web of cracks covered the Emporium’s big display window. It looked as though someone had been
sick on the tearoom’s doorstep.
Bill and I were too stunned to speak, but the twins didn’t hesitate to share their take on the situation.
“Pirates,” Will said decisively.
“Marauding pirates,” agreed Rob.
“We’re too far from the sea for pirates,” said Bill, finding his voice.
“We’re not too far from the fair,” I said tersely.
“No one from the fair would do this,” said Bill. “They may be free
spirits, but they’re not fools. It’s in their interest to get along with
locals.”
“Who, then?” I demanded.
“Tourists,” Bill answered succinctly. “I think we can lay the blame
for this mess on marauding
tourists
.”
I was almost too angry to speak. “If they’ve touched St. George’s,
I’ll hunt them down and—”
“Let’s find out, shall we?” Bill interrupted, to keep me from spoiling the Sabbath day with strong speech. Peering somberly through the
124 Nancy Atherton
windshield, he put his foot on the accelerator and drove forward
slowly, almost at a snail’s pace, as if we were inspecting the site of a
natural disaster.
Someone had smeared mustard on the schoolhouse doors and
trampled the flowers Emma had planted around the war memorial,
but the rest of the village had escaped obvious damage. Wysteria
Lodge, where Bill had his office, appeared to be unharmed, as did
Crabtree Cottage, Briar Cottage, the old schoolmaster’s house, the
vicarage, and Mr. Barlow’s house.
The church seemed to be fine as well. The lych-gate hung solidly
from its hinges and none of the headstones in the cemetery had been
knocked over or defaced. Relieved, we parked on the verge, released
the boys from their booster seats, and hurried inside. Our slow progress through the village had delayed our arrival considerably.
It was impossible to enter the church quietly. The weighty oak
door creaked when Bill opened it and boomed when it swung shut
behind us, and we could do nothing to keep our footsteps from
echoing hollowly as we made our way across the flagstone fl oor.
A pale-faced congregation turned to watch us as we shuffl
ed
contritely into a back pew, and the vicar, who looked shattered,
waited courteously until we were settled to continue the service.
When he mounted the pulpit, I expected him to read the first lesson, but he’d apparently been inspired by recent events to give a
sermon instead.
“Matthew 24:6.” Theodore Bunting’s pleasantly sonorous voice
was cracked with fatigue and his long, dolorous face was haggard.
“ ‘Ye shall hear of wars and rumors of wars: see that ye be not troubled: for all these things must come to pass, but the end is not yet.’ ”
“Is he talking about the end of the world?” I whispered to Bill.
“Must have been a rough night,” Bill whispered back.
Thirteen
T he vicar’s doom-laden sermon was mercifully short, and
he brought the service to a close as swiftly as decency
would allow. Afterward, he didn’t stand at the church
door to exchange pleasantries with his departing flock, but staggered off to the vicarage, as if he needed to conserve his strength in
order to make it through the next service.
The rest of the villagers milled around the churchyard, twittering
excitedly as they exchanged views on the catastrophe that had befallen
Finch. A surprisingly large number of my neighbors had shown up for
the early service. I wondered how many of them had come in order to
get a jump start on the fair and how many had needed spiritual aid to
sustain them after seeing the village green.
While the twins ran off to play hide-and-seek among the headstones, Bill and I gravitated toward a circle that included Emma
and Derek Harris, Lilian Bunting, Mr. Barlow, Grant Tavistock,
Charles Bellingham, Christine Peacock, and Sally Pyne. Sally was
venting her spleen when we joined the group.
“What is the world coming to when full-grown adults behave
like rampaging water buffalo?” she demanded “What kind of example are they setting for their children? They should be ashamed
of themselves, every last one of them. If I’d been here, I would have
given them a few choice words
and
the back of my hand.”
“If I’d been here, I’d’ve broken a few heads,” growled Mr. Barlow.
“George Wetherhead won’t come out of his house,” said Christine Peacock. “He’s a nervous wreck.”
“Teddy’s terribly shaken, too,” Lilian said, looking anxiously at
the vicarage. “He thought he’d left hooliganism behind when we
left London.”
126 Nancy Atherton
“What happened?” I asked. “Who’s responsible for the mess?”
“Yahoos,” said Mr. Barlow.
“Savages,” said Sally Pyne.
“Barbarians,” said Grant Tavistock.
“Fairgoers,” said Lilian. “A flood of them swept through the village on their way to and from the fair. They stormed the shops,
wrought havoc on the village green, and vanished, like a plague of
locusts.”
“Locusts are a force of nature,” Emma pointed out. “Our disaster was definitely man-made.”
“Did it go on all night?” I asked, surveying their wan faces.
“No,” said Lilian, “but most of us were too worn out after our
day at the fair to deal with the situation when we returned home.”
“I was up till all hours finishing Peggy’s new bodice,” Sally put
in. “I’m going to make her pay dearly for robbing me of a good
night’s sleep.”
“Why did you have to make it overnight?” Emma asked.
Sally’s eyes twinkled. “She heard about the wenches and the belly
dancers. I have a feeling that Jasper will be left in charge of the Emporium from now on, while Peggy takes over the stall at the fair.”
“If she goes at all,” Lilian added portentously. “I’m afraid that
yesterday’s events have revived her antipathy toward the fair.”
“I’m not too keen on it myself, at the moment,” said Derek.
“People threw rubbish out of their car windows as they drove through
Finch. We’re lucky no one was hurt.”
“Very lucky,” said Grant. “A beer bottle came within inches of
striking Charles on the head.”
We all turned to Charles, to express our sympathy and to make
sure that he was all right.
“No harm done,” he said airily. “I must say that when Grant and
I purchased Crabtree Cottage, we didn’t expect to find ourselves in
the middle of a war zone. We were afraid to stand on our own doorstep yesterday.”
“Finch isn’t normally a war zone,” Lilian assured him.
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127
“It’s normally the most peaceful little village in the world,” I
added earnestly.
“It wasn’t yesterday,” said Christine Peacock. “Dick had to use
the soda siphon on some idiot who was swinging on the pub sign.
After that, he put two of the Sciaparelli boys on the door, to keep
drunks away from the pub. Half of the people who drove through
the village were squiffy before they got here.”
“The sober ones were just as bad,” said Sally Pyne. “I left my
niece in charge of the tearoom while I was at the fair. A riot nearly
broke out when she ran out of scones. When she ran out of fairy
cakes, she was so terrified that she locked the front door and hid in
the kitchen until I got back.”
“Teddy attempted to remonstrate with the invaders,” said Lilian, “but he was outnumbered and ignored. Peggy Taxman was so
busy minding the till at the Emporium that she didn’t have time to
assert her authority, and everyone else who might have helped Teddy
was at the fair.” She bowed her head remorsefully. “I can’t tell you
how guilty I feel. While I was off watching magicians and knights,
my poor husband was under siege.”
“If you’re guilty, we’re all guilty,” said Bill, putting a comforting hand on her shoulder. “We underestimated the destructive
power of irresponsible day-trippers.”
As he withdrew his hand, I saw him glance at his watch, then
look toward the boys, who were using willow wands to conduct an
action-packed sword fight among the headstones.
“Go,” I told him. “You can leave the Rover here with me. Emma
and Derek can take you and the boys to the fair.”
“Shouldn’t we stay here to help with the cleanup?” he asked.
“No, you shouldn’t,” I said. “We’ll have plenty of opportunities
to teach our sons civic responsibility. Right now they have a responsibility to their friends. If they stay here, they’ll let Alison and
Billy down.”
“What do you think, Emma?” Bill asked.
“I think Lori has a point,” Emma replied. “The show must go on.”
128 Nancy Atherton
“I agree,” Lilian said firmly. “Rob and Will have earned their
moment in the sun. We mustn’t allow the inconsiderate actions of
a few bad apples to rob them of it.”
“Hear, hear,” I said.
“Emma can drop me off at home on the way to the fair,” said Derek.
“I’ll round up a crew of riding students and stable hands and bring
them back with me in the van. We’ll manage the cleanup without
you, Bill.”
“Well,” Bill said reluctantly, “if you’re sure. . . .”