Authors note: Hello everyone. This is my entry into the National Nude Day contest. I hope you enjoy reading it as much as I enjoyed writing it. Thank you to Kate and Paul who were my sounding board and second set of eyes on this one. ~ellie.
Ashton Hill Naked Sundays
Chapter 1.
Estelle Eastman grinned widely as the last of her charges left the classroom. She loved her job, but felt like she needed this weekend. The pressure of assessments and reporting time looming left her exhausted. She was looking forward to not having to deal with the weekly call and lecture from her mother, who was away on a second honeymoon with lucky husband number three. Estelle had plans to hibernate, read trashy magazines, drink red wine and eat chocolate while wrapped in a big, warm, fluffy blanket.
"Estelle, you have to help me! You're my last chance!" Tarlee practically ran into the classroom with her dramatic announcement.
"Tarlee, come on in," Estelle laughed as she went about tidying her classroom and packing her laptop, planning, and an interesting book on early childhood education in the digital age into her matching carryalls. She'd do some work over the weekend between the trashy magazines. "Something I can help you with?" she asked calmly, knowing her unenthusiastic demeanour wouldn't daunt her friend.
"Oh my god, yes! Exciting news!" Tarlee grinned widely. "I know you're not into live bands and concerts, but..."
"No!" Estelle said shortly. "I hate crowds and the crush of bodies, and very few bands are better live than on Spotify while wearing my pyjamas and sipping a glass of wine."
"Just hear me out, please?" Tarlee whined. "It's not what you think."
"Let me see, there will be a band and a load of screaming fans. The parking will be terrible, and, knowing you, there won't be any seats. Everything will be over-priced, and we will end up in a cramped mosh pit having drinks spilt on us while strange guys grope us in the squash of bodies," Estelle sighed.
"As awesome as that sounds, no. I told you it's not like that!" Tarlee said again, pulling out a tiny chair next to an equally tiny desk and sitting awkwardly. "You're in luck, because..." she paused as Estelle went to argue against going to a concert again. Holding up her hand to silence her friend, she started again. "My cousin's friend's band, you know, the one I said signed with a label last time you refused to go to a concert with me," she waited for Estelle to nod. "They are awesome, and I joined their fan page after the last gig I went to. They finished a tour as the opening act for Saladin and have been in the studio writing for a few weeks." Tarlee began her carefully thought out campaign to get Estelle to go out tonight, watching her friend carefully.
"Saladin?" Estelle asked. "Aren't they rock? I thought you were into hip-hop."
"Yeah, rock. They are great. I am fully into indie rock bands now!" Tarlee enthused.
"I am just not into concerts, Tarlee. Can't you find someone else? It's the weekend; can't one of your friends from the city meet you there? You wouldn't have to drive all the way home again if you stayed with them," Estelle appealed to her friend's hatred of the distance between Ashton Hill and the city.
"That's just it! They are doing a small gig at an out of the way tavern, and they are only giving tickets to their fans who follow them, and I won tickets! When I say out of the way tavern, I mean out of the way for city folk, not for us; they are playing at the Glenn!" Tarlee almost exploded with the announcement. "Small venue, small select crowd, not far to drive, and home before midnight, I promise! I have no one else to go with me, and you know I can't go to something like this alone. Please, Estelle. I'll love you forever and ever!"
"I thought you already did?" Estelle raised her eyebrow. Both girls had come to this town straight out of university to do their country service with the education department. While Estelle had been there for three years and quite enjoyed country life, Tarlee had only arrived this year and found the slower pace of country life didn't really suit her, and had leaned heavily of Estelle, who was only a few years older, to help her adjust to the quieter life.
"I do, of course, I do, but I would love you even more, enough to help you get out of visits from your mother for the rest of the year," she wheedled.
"What is this band called? And it had better not have blood, death or metal in the name!" Estelle warned.
"Midnight Blue, and you won't regret this, I promise!" Tarlee squealed in delight and hugged her friend, bouncing up and down.
"I didn't say yes," Estelle hugged the girl in return as she was jostled.
"I don't have anyone else, Estelle, you have to come. Look, if we go and you are having a really awful time, I will bring you straight home. We go out to the pub here all the time; this is no different, except, instead of an awful jukebox it will be exceptional music from an exceptional band. Please, I promise you won't regret it. Plus, as of half an hour ago, we are officially done for the week and deserve to let our hair down. This is a great way to let off steam and purge all classroom drama from our systems."
"Fine," Estelle gave in, "but if they suck and I don't want to be there you won't make me stay," she said.
"Cross my heart, hope to die," Tarlee said earnestly before squealing with delight. "We'll pick you up at six!"
"Wait! What? Who's we?" Estelle tried to stop her friend, but Tarlee skipped away. She felt like she had just been conned into going to a gig when Tarlee obviously already had people going with her.
Midnight Blue was not a band she had ever heard of before, so that was good, at least. The truth was any band was okay with her as long as it wasn't Crossfire. Memories of her groupie fan girl days flared in her mind, making her face heat with shame and humiliation. She took another half hour ensuring her room was perfectly in place for the beginning of next week and picked up her heavy bags of work before heading out to her car.
"Estelle!" a distinctly male voice cried out. "Let me help you with that."
Estelle turned as the groundsman jogged toward her. She let herself admire his lean muscled frame. He was gorgeous, by anyone's standards, and flirted relentlessly with the younger teachers. She had let herself get carried away by the attention in her first year here... almost. She had gone on a couple of dates with him; he was funny and romantic and everything her ex was not. It was all a show though, just a means to an end, the end being getting her into bed. Their thing had been to go skinny dipping at a remote part of the dam and make love by the water's edge. It was a magical time, and she believed he really liked her and she could finally move past Jason Jones, the love of her life, even though she had left him in a rare moment of clarity, breaking her own heart in the process.
She had been happy seeing Darren until she started being warned off by other women who knew his history with the new teachers in town. It occurred to her then that they never went on real dates in public, and never slept at each other houses, always separating after their midnight swim. The reality of entering into yet another bad relationship where she took what scraps of attention were doled out to her gratefully hit her hard, and she had broken it off without much of an explanation. She told him that she needed to concentrate on her mother's health and headed to the city each weekend, much to her mother's delight. No one had known of their affair, so she and Darren could just go on with their lives. He had never truly stopped trying to rekindle that flame though.
She was smarter than that, she told herself each time she was tempted to get physical with him again. She wasn't ever going to repeat the mistakes of her past. She wanted more than just a pretty face and a hard body if she was ever going to have a proper relationship again. She believed it was a game for Darren to sleep with the new teachers when they came to town, even now, and she had an inkling that Tarlee was amusing herself by taking him up on his offer of distraction to stave off the boredom of country life.
"Thanks, Darren, but it's not as heavy as it looks," she said in a tired voice.
"I'm heading that way anyway," he said, taking the carryall from her. "Did Tarlee find you? I know she was looking for you today."
"Yeah, she found me, and ambushed me!" Estelle grumbled. "Why is it so hard to say no to that girl?" she despaired exaggeratedly.
"If you tell me, then we'll both know," Darren chuckled. "She's like a whirlwind the way she just sweeps people up into her plans."
"You too?" she asked, tilting her head.
"Designated driver," he chuckled again. "I think she used the fact that I don't drink very often against me somehow, but made it seem like a great idea at the time to escort the two of you and ensure you both got home safely. She's letting me bring a friend to keep me company while you girls go all fangirl over the band."
"So much for me being her only chance to go," Estelle rolled her eyes. "She made it seem like no one else had agreed to go with her, and she couldn't go alone."