Authors: Aunt Dimity [14] Aunt Dimity Slays the Dragon
Like a tall, well-built Friar Tuck. He wouldn’t have to wear hose if he
dressed as a friar, because the long robe would conceal his legs. If Bill dressed
as a friar, you could dress as a nun.
“A nun?” I said blankly.
Nuns were all the rage in medieval England, Lori. They were often
well-bred and highly intelligent women who exercised a great deal of power.
“But they wore . . . habits . . . didn’t they?” I said, with a moue
of distaste. “Dull, plain, boring habits. I was thinking of wearing
something more colorful. Like a wimple. Do you happen to know
what a wimple is?”
Nuns wear wimples, Lori, but they’re rarely colorful. The kind of wimple
you have in mind is probably a tall, thin, cone-shaped hat with a length of
fluttery fabric attached at the point.
“That’s what I had in mind,” I confirmed. “Calvin said that noblewomen wore wimples. I can see myself as a noblewoman, can’t
you?”
Lady Lori? It has a certain ring to it.
“A pirate maiden would be pretty cool, too,” I said. “I’ve always
wanted to be a swashbuckler.”
Pirate Lori has a definite ring to it.
“Pirate Lori,” I murmured happily. “It’d be fun to brandish a
saber and shout, ‘Avast, me hearties!’ ”
I’d urge you to keep your saber safely in its sheath, unless you want to
add the sport of ear-lopping to the fair’s roster of medieval activities.
“Killjoy,” I retorted, putting my feet on the ottoman. “I’m not
sure what I want to be, Dimity, but making up my mind will be half
the fun. Who knows? Maybe I’ll be a noblewoman
and
a pirate
and
a gypsy.” I shivered with excitement. “I can’t wait for opening day!”
It sounds as though you’re anticipating King Wilfred’s Faire with a
great deal of plea sure, my dear.
“Well,” I said reasonably, “it makes for a change, doesn’t it?”
Is a change what you need right now?
“I could do with one,” I replied, adding quickly, “but it’s not just
me, Dimity. The villagers were
electrifi ed
by Calvin’s announcement.
Aunt Dimity Slays the Dragon
27
The roof nearly came off of the schoolhouse after he left. If you ask
me,
everyone’s
a little bored with the usual summer routine.”
I sense, however, that you’re more than a little bored.
I took my lower lip between my teeth and looked up at Reginald. I didn’t want to seem ungrateful for the many blessings in my
life, but honesty was almost always the best policy with Aunt Dimity, so I told her the truth.
“I’m glad that something new is going to happen in Finch this
summer,” I said. “Something unfamiliar. Something that
wasn’t
planned by Peggy Taxman. I haven’t had anything new and exciting
to look forward to since Annelise got married.”
Annelise got married nine days ago, Lori. You haven’t had enough time
to become bored.
“I’ve had eight years to become bored,” I countered. “Eight summers, anyway.”
You’ve had seven summers, to be precise. You spent last summer in Colo-
rado.
“So I did,” I conceded. “And I had a grand time. I didn’t miss polishing the tea urns or changing the trash bin liners one bit.”
I thought you cherished tradition.
“I do, but you can have too much of a good thing.” I groaned impatiently. “Nothing ever changes in Finch. I’ve heard the same people talk about the same things for nearly a decade. It’s like being on
a conversational treadmill.”
May I remind you that another wedding will take place in September?
You once described it as the fairy-tale wedding of the century. You can’t tell
me that you’re not looking forward to Kit and Nell’s wedding.
Kit Smith and Nell Harris were the most beautiful couple I’d
ever known. Kit was the stable master at nearby Anscombe Manor
and Nell was the stepdaughter of my friend Emma Harris, who
owned Anscombe Manor. Although I’d been instrumental in bringing Kit to the point of proposing to Nell, my matchmaking career
had gone into a serious decline after he’d popped the question.
“There’s nothing I want more than to see Kit and Nell get
28 Nancy Atherton
married,” I retorted, “but September’s a long way off, and I won’t
be involved in their wedding the way I was in Annelise’s.” I leaned
my chin on my hand and went on disconsolately. “Let’s face it,
Dimity, Kit and Nell don’t need my help. They’re so flawlessly flawless that they could get married in a telephone booth, wearing burlap sacks and fl ip-flops, and it would
still
be the fairy-tale wedding
of the century. Besides, I think Nell’s had the whole thing mapped
out since she was twelve years old, and there’s nothing I can do to
improve on her plans. They’ll get along flawlessly without me.”
The fair, on the other hand, requires your active participation.
“Exactly,” I said. “And the best thing about it is: It’ll be a healthy
outlet for my imagination! If I see a vampire at the fair—”
Were there vampires during the Renais sance?
“Vampires are timeless,” I replied. “And Calvin isn’t picky about
niggling historical details anyway.”
I see. Sorry to interrupt. You were saying?
“I was saying that the fair will be good for me,” I said. “If I see a
vampire, I won’t go off half-cocked and accuse him of stalking my
sons. I’ll admire his costume and have a good laugh along with everyone else and that’ll be it. In other words, I’ll behave like a normal human being.”
Is that what you want, Lori? To behave like a normal human being?
“I just want to stop making a fool of myself,” I said hopelessly. “I
want to stop seeing things that aren’t there. I want to stop concocting schemes and sneaking around and behaving like a demented
twelve-year-old. I want to be grounded and clear-headed and sensible.”
Like Emma Harris?
“Emma is my role model,” I declared. “When I grow up, I want
to be just like her.”
An odd thing for a woman in her mid-thirties to say, but I take your
meaning.
“I know I shouldn’t complain,” I said earnestly, peering down at
the journal. “I love my life, I really do, but if I don’t find a way to
Aunt Dimity Slays the Dragon
29
shake it up a little, I’ll lose my mind. I refuse to be sucked into any
more silly mysteries or ridiculous adventures, so I’m going to make
the most of King Wilfred’s Faire while it lasts, and afterwards—”
Try not to think too far ahead, my dear. You’ll only make yourself dizzy.
As I finished reading the word “dizzy,” I realized that I was, indeed, on the verge of hyperventilating, so I rested my head against
the back of the chair and took a few measured breaths before looking down at the words Aunt Dimity had written in the journal.
I believe you’ve found a splendid solution to your dual dilemmas, Lori. A
summerlong medieval costume party will allow you to enjoy the best aspects
of your imagination and at the same time give you a much-needed break
from the tedious routine of village life. It was im mensely clever of Calvin
Malvern to bring King Wilfred’s Faire to Finch. I do hope that Bill will be
open-minded enough to participate fully in the fair.
“I’ll do what I can to persuade him,” I said.
I know you will. The mantelshelf clock is chiming midnight, Lori. It’s
time you were in bed. I look forward to hearing more amazing news whenever
you wish to share it with me. Good night, my dear.
“Good night, Dimity.”
I waited until the curving lines of royal-blue ink had faded from
the page, then closed the journal and returned it to its shelf. After
banking the fire, I turned off the mantelshelf lights, bade Sir Reginald adieu, and left the study, envisioning my pink bunny in a miniature crown and a very small ermine-trimmed robe.
“Reginald will be easy,” I murmured. “Bill’s going to be a much
tougher nut to crack.”
But as I tiptoed into the bedroom, a game plan was already taking shape in my mind.
Four
T he next four weeks were among the most enjoyable I’d
ever experienced in Finch. Eye-catching posters appeared
in shop windows, touting the fair’s many attractions, and
unfamiliar vehicles rolled through Finch, causing curtains to twitch,
heads to turn, and tongues to wag. Rumors zipped along the village
grapevine at top speed, and they weren’t the stale old standbys concerning Sally Pyne’s neon-colored tracksuits or Christine Peacock’s
latest UFO sighting, but juicy new tidbits about the construction
project going on in Bishop’s Wood and the costumes Peggy Taxman had reputedly ordered for herself and Jasper from a theatricalsupply company in London.
No one would admit it openly, but everyone had been bitten by
the costume bug. The mobile library was besieged with requests
for books depicting Renais sance attire, and there was a run on velvet and brocade at the fabric store in Upper Deeping. Sally Pyne’s
Tuesday morning sewing class became so popular that she had to
add five more to her schedule to accommodate the overflow. Villagers flocked to the tearoom to learn how to stitch leather, hem
satin, embroider silk, and, naturally, to sneak peeks at their classmates’ handiwork. Scathing murmurs regarding color sense and
fabric choices rippled outward from the tearoom and kept the rumor mill spinning merrily.
My neighbors were so busy making doublets, muffi
n caps, and
lace-up bodices that they all but ignored the art show, which took
place on the first weekend in June. As a result, only three paintings
were entered, and they were so blindingly dreadful that they wouldn’t
have garnered honorable mentions in previous shows. Since they
had no competition, however, they managed to slide neatly—and
Aunt Dimity Slays the Dragon
31
undeservedly—into first, second, and third place. The paltry submissions made the judging relatively easy, but there was a notable
absence of suspense when Peggy announced the judge’s final decisions.
The summer fete, too, suffered from a lack of interest. The usual
crowd of villagers showed up on Midsummer’s Day to sip locally
brewed ale, play traditional games, listen to the brass band, and
watch the Morris men dance on the village green, but they did so
halfheartedly, with the glazed eyes and fixed smiles of people whose
minds were elsewhere.
Although the village’s fi rst two summer events fell flat, Finch’s
businesses saw a modest but measur able upturn in sales throughout
the month of June. Sawdust-speckled workmen made their way
from Bishop’s Wood to Peacock’s Pub twice a day, with regular
side trips to the greengrocer’s shop. They paid Mr. Barlow to repair odd pieces of machinery, and kept the register ringing at Peggy’s
Emporium.
Rumors abounded about the nature of the structures the crews
were building in Bishop’s Wood. Some villagers confirmed conclusively that the fair would feature a three-tiered, moated castle, while
others claimed that the main attraction would be a gigantic
fire-breathing dragon. Since I lived next door to Fivefold Farm, I was
perfectly situated to spy on the construction site and find out if the
tittle-tattle was true, but I resisted the temptation. I wanted the fair
to surprise me.
Finch’s entrepreneurs didn’t care what the fair looked like as
long as it kept filling their coffers. They were well pleased with Calvin Malvern for selecting a site so near the village, and they expected profits to soar when King Wilfred’s Faire finally opened its
gates to the public.
Sally Pyne benefited the most from the fair’s proximity to Finch.
Her sewing skills were in such high demand that she had to trim the
tearoom’s hours drastically. I regretted the inconvenience even
though I was, in part, to blame for it. I wasn’t sure about anyone
32 Nancy Atherton
else, but in my rush to adorn myself with medieval finery I’d forgotten one small but important detail: I didn’t know how to sew. A
short session with a sharp needle made me painfully aware of my
ineptitude and I hurriedly signed up for one-on-one sewing tutorials
with Sally, only to discover that I had no talent whatsoever as a
seamstress.
I made such a mess of the twins’ page costumes that I quietly
disposed of them and hired Sally to make replacements. She agreed
to make a dress for me as well, but since she was pressed for time,
I had to scale down my vision quite a bit. Instead of a wimple-wearing
duchess or a saber-rattling pirate, I would attend the fair as a runof-the-mill peasant woman.
Sally finished our costumes in five whirlwind days, but she
never got started on Bill’s. Although she’d off ered to make a modest, leg-concealing friar’s robe for him, he wouldn’t even allow her
to take his measurements.
My husband had evidently inherited a gene that rendered him