"Well how about that? Frankies! They're playing our song!" laughed Kathy as the DJ announced another 'golden oldie' for the gyrating mass of teenagers on the marquee dance floor. In this case, it was 'Two Tribes' by Frankie Goes To Hollywood.
"Shall we show them how it's done?" laughed James, nodding towards the dance floor.
"No, I think we've embarrassed Katrina enough with our antics. It's
her
birthday party after all," replied Kathy, waving to Katrina. Her dancing daughter waved back, looking older than her 18 years in her figure-hugging little black dress, and skilfully applied make-up, clearly the object of a great deal of attention from the many boys present.
Kathy and James slowly exited from the large marquee, chatting and nodding to guests, many of whom were parents to the teenagers enjoying the disco, now well into its near midnight retro set.
Staff mingled with tenants and peers, along with artists and critics, as guests all equal. However, plenty of them showed due deference out of habit; "Good evening Your Lordship, Your Ladyship."
"Kathy! I've just see your latest exhibition at the London gallery," gushed Petriona. "Wonderful! All of it!"
"Why thank you Petriona," beamed Kathy graciously to the rather dumpy guest who was sporting a dress at least one size too small. "Be sure to tell all your friends about it."
She walked on by, arm in arm with her husband and leaned into him. "Why don't we go for a ride, just the two of us?"
James smiled and steered his wife towards the stable block, the sounds of the disco dying away behind them in the warm summer night, the bright lights festooned around the trees twinkling. Here and there came the sound of laughter and the rustle of bushes as certain guests improved their friendship with other guests, inhibitions loosened β along with clothing β by the abundance of freely flowing alcohol.
The couple soon reached the stable block and gently coaxed their regular mounts β both home bred, grandchildren of good old Mercury β out of their upright slumbers. Duly saddelled, the two horses affably trotted across the field adjoining the manor and up the dark hill.
"Hmmm⦠I hope they won't miss us," said James looking back down to the brightly lit panorama which dropped away behind them.
"We've been there all bloody evening," said Kathy, adjusting her long evening dress around her waist to allow her a comfortable seat on the saddle, relishing, as she often did, the rub of warm leather on her soft buttocks, her flimsy panties being the only barrier between it and her aching throbbing privates. "We deserve a bit of quality time alone. They'll be fine, there's plenty of food and drink, they can cope without us for an hour or so."
They rode on in silence under the brightness of the full moon. Kathy reined Firebolt to a halt. "The barn," she said. "Let's go to the barn!"
"Good idea!" enthused James. "I was just about the suggest that."
"Hah!" laughed Kathy, but without malice. "Time was, you'd never have thought of something like that."
"Oh no?" beamed James wickedly. "Well, time was, you'd have thought I was just some spoilt upper class toff who was probably a shirt-lifter anyway."
"
I never did
!" protested Kathy.
"Well, you should know," chuckled James. "And it was all good old Frankies' doing tooβ¦."
*************************************
Kathy squinted, shielding her eyes against the sun with one hand, her other hand clutching an HB pencil, holding it at arm's length, as she checked the perspective of the old, twisted oak in the middle distance, measuring it against the copse immediately behind and the rolling blue-green hills beyond. Satisfied that she'd framed the picture clearly in her mind's eye, she made some swift downwards strokes on her large drawing pad, plotting the trees' positions, then making three quick bump-like shapes in the background to denote the hills.
Some artists worked in meticulous detail from the word go, many made preliminary sketches; some just made it up as they went along. Kathy made simple plot-markings and then filled in the exact detail from observation and memory. Some of her tutors despaired of her less-than-textbook methodology, but what did they know? She still managed to produce a detailed likeness of whatever subject she was drawing or painting.
You can teach someone the rudiments of anything; painting, writing, carpentry, metalwork, making a bed, ploughing a field. But it was their
talent
β or lack of it β which determined whether or not they simply rendered a task or whether they made an art of it. And Kathy
knew
she was talented. It wasn't arrogance on her part β not really β just what she knew. And what was wrong with that?
Kathy swiped a small cloud of gnats away from her face and reached into her large canvas bag and withdrew her bottle of lemonade. She took a swift chug, feeling some of the cool liquid dribbling down her chin. She wiped her mouth with the back of her hand, replaced the bottle top and pushed the bottle back into the dark, and slightly cooler depths of the bag. She reclined a moment in the long grass, closing her eyes and savouring the warmth of the sun on her face, the slight breeze gently lifting her long, curly hair and fluttering lightly across her bare arms. She hitched her long button-through skirt up to her knees, pulling the long lace petticoat up with it, flapping both garments to create a cool breeze on her legs and her privates. She almost felt like whipping her panties off and feeling the fresh air on her exposed pussy, as she so often did on hot days such as this, but she wasn't on her father's land now and, secluded though this spot was, a rambler might turn up at any point, or even some riders. Kathy giggled to herself at the thought of old Mrs Mountjoy's riding class β Pony Club clones all β trotting up the slope to be confronted by her bared muff. How wanton! How wicked! How terribly
typical
of 'that Boscombe girl'! No
wonder
she'd never made the County Trials team with behaviour like
that.
She giggled again and looked lovingly across the meadow to where Tanya was grazing, her chestnut coat glistening in the summer sunshine, her tail deftly flicking flies away. She was, as ever, saddled and ready for action.
As with her art, Kathy was an instinctive rider, a natural β and that's what intimidated Mrs Mountjoy as much as her college tutors. Basically, they couldn't teach her anything. People don't like that.
"And then they call you a know-all," muttered Kathy, angrily dismissing the line of thought on which she had inadvertently progressed. She might
say
she didn't care what people thought, but it
did
irritate her privately.
She pulled her skirt and petticoat down over her smooth, brown legs and deftly undid a couple of buttons at the bottom of the skirt, to allow it to flap a little more freely. She absently tugged on the laces of her flimsy camisole top to loosen them slightly, then slipped her Walkman earphones into place. She snapped the little machine to 'play' and took up her drawing pad again, rubbing a bead of perspiration off the tip of her nose as she began to carefully bring the gnarled old oak to life.
Karma Kamelion faded and then a sonorous beat began, heralding a more recent off-air recording β from last week's Top 40 β good ol' Frankies again!
Oh yes! Now you're talking!
She felt, rather than heard the approaching hoof beats, the dry earth being the perfect conductor of the jarring vibrations which travelled up Kathy's legs and directly through her bottom. In fact, it felt like the horse was already there, several seconds before it materialised into view at the far side of the sloping meadow. A grey, a stallion by the looks of it, leaping majestically over the fence, the vibrations momentarily suspended until all four hooves thudded onto the bone dry earth on her side off the fence. The rider, by its stance and seat, a man, reined the plunging beast around and urged it on up the slope towards Kathy. She pondered sketching the magnificent animal into 'her' reality as it cantered towards her, but when its rider's features became clearer, Kathy's creative mind closed down as though staffed by a forgetful shopkeeper who had just realised that today was early closing day and it was mid afternoon already.
Even so, to keep up appearances and to signify her total disinterest, Kathy ignored the grinning rider as he drew nearer and bent her head to her work, lightly shading one branch of the old oak, poring over minute details which simply were not there to start with. To her annoyance, the tape clicked off in the Walkman as the last of the song died away and she didn't have a chance to rewind it and start it playing again before he spoke.
"Kathy! Well now, what a surprise!"
Deep voice, well-educated, good pronunciation β perhaps slightly
too
good. And as full of self-confidence as she had remembered it to be.
In other words,
thought Kathy moodily,
bloody arrogant
.
"Hello Jimmy," she said quietly, without looking up, as the long shadow of horse and rider fell across her drawing pad and temporarily shielded her from the hot sun.