This is my first attempt to write erotic fiction. It seemed natural to me to give my tale specific locations, Loughborough, Leicester and North London, and a specific time-frame, the 1850's. I hope my tale gives pleasure, despite being so far removed from most stories on Literotica. Please bear with it. Almost all the characters are made up, but two, Alderman Biggs and William Perkin lived real lives. Much to my regret I totally lost touch with my first volunteer editor when my computer ingested its hard drive and spat out the bits. All I can now remember is that his name was Ed. (Ed. if you remember me, please get in touch) I am indebted to him and, for their generous help, to my more recent editors, Creative Talent and LustyMadame. I made use of their advice and suggestions, but, of course the end result (w.a.f) is my own.
Miss Mabel
i. Caught in the act
My name is Arthur Cowell and this is my story. Most people have no story at all. They live and die unnoticed, even by their neighbours. Some, like the brave soldiers of the peninsula, have many stories. Sergeant Coxon, who sits, tankard in hand, evening after evening in the snug at the Dun Cow is one of those who has outlived a myriad of adventures. Some; like me; have but one story, but one that will live in their hearts until the day they die.
I was born in 1834 in the village of Burbage, near Hinckley in Leicestershire. Although only a village lad; the elder son of a poor framework knitter, I had the inestimable privilege of being educated at grammar school at the expense of my generous patron Alderman Biggs of Leicester. I received this munificent gift, not by any merit of my own; (as I fear that this narrative will amply show); but because of my late father's reputation as a man of shining probity and loving-kindness and a devout and eloquent Unitarian elder. Our beloved pastor, Henry Saltmarsh of Hinckley was as poor as he was generous. After my father's sad passing, leaving a widow and three children, Pastor Saltmarsh commended us to Alderman Biggs of Leicester, one of the leaders of Unitarianism in our area.
My older sister had married a railwayman and lived nearby with her little daughter. The Alderman helped my younger sister to get a place in service with a kindly family and gave my mother a small pension of ten shillings a week. I was eleven years of age at that time; just ready to leave school and work as a bobbin-winder, but when he was consulted, the master at our National school in Burbage spoke very highly of me as a scholar, and gave it as his opinion that I was the cleverest boy at number work he had ever taught, and Alderman Biggs used his influence to get me a place at Grammar school, and paid the fees. My young brother Ceddie, who, sadly, showed no talent or aptitude, remained with my mother, and was later apprenticed to a glover. It was my pleasure and privilege, as time went by, to assist them both to a reasonable standard of comfort, and to enable my mother to stay in her own home until the day she died.
So it transpired that a few months after my father died, I found myself lodging in Great Wigston, with a family much like my own, and attending the Wyggeston grammar School. I had a struggle to catch up with my form-mates, but I worked hard and had an excellent, retentive memory, so that even the dreaded Latin became intelligible in time. Four years later, I left school and took the job of office boy in a branch of the Midland counties bank.
***
I begin my story in early May 1858, when I was twenty-five years of age. One morning I was summoned from my desk at in the Loughborough branch bank in the Marketplace; to see the Chief Cashier at the Leicester office. Of course I searched my conscience to see what I had done wrong -- but nothing more than the most trivial of sins came to mind. I am one of those happy people for whom columns of numbers dance intricate and beautiful dances, and so, work in a bank was my idea of heaven. The bank at Loughborough was a happy place for me, as I had found there a real friend and mentor; the branch cashier Frank Dennis.
At Leicester I found I was not on the carpet. Rather, I was offered a handsome promotion to a post in the new London office, at Holborn, in central London. This was a wonderful opportunity for someone like myself, born without wealth, position or connections. I had only once been to London - a huge and terrifying place -- but offers like this come only once. Accordingly, in the last days of May I bade a sad farewell to my mother and family, and, privately, to my sweetheart Jessie, and took a railway train for only the second time in my life; the Midland Railway to St. Pancras station.
On my arrival at the Holborn offices, I reported to my new senior, a huge towering Lancashire man, Mr Ollerenshaw. He welcomed me and told me to report at 8 sharp on Monday. This being Friday afternoon, I had perfect freedom for a long weekend. Mr Ollerenshaw's assistant had given me the address of some suitable accommodation; very respectable lodgings in Boscastle Street, a fifteen-minute walk away off Kingsway. Little could I have know as I made my way there through unfamiliar streets that this house was to be the scene of some of the most thrilling moments of my life, and the place where I was to find my life's partner.
14 Boscastle Street I found to be a handsome, four-story, stuccoed house, with a railed area below from which came sounds of cheerful chatter and the smell of cooking. I went up the steps to the front door and rang the bell, to be greeted by my future landlady Mrs Bissell. She was a stout, florid, handsome, motherly woman, showing signs of former beauty and also of former affluence. I later learned that her late husband had been a merchant, apparently prosperous, in the Levantine trade; an importer of currants from Smyrna and mastic from Chios. Alas, when he had died suddenly the extent of his debts was revealed. His widow found herself in straitened circumstances, and forced to take in paying guests.
Mrs Bissell introduced me to her sister, Miss Harriet, and showed me to the room she had designated for me, subject to mutual approval. I was delighted. With its handsome marble-topped washstand, large mahogany chest and wardrobe, and huge, soft feather bed, the room seemed palatial compared with my little attic room at home. Over the mantle, with its small cast-iron fire-grate (lit only in cases of illness in bleakest midwinter), stood a pair of pink lustre candlesticks. Above them two drab, browning oil paintings of highland cattle in the rain recalled to me the Queen and the late Price Regent's relentless promotion of the Highlands. Why, I wondered for the thousandth time, was art so often drab and dispiriting? Why couldn't more paintings be full of life and vitality like Mr Frith's wonderful "Derby Day", that I had stared at, enchanted, in Leicester Art Gallery?
The terms for half-board were high, but well within my means, and I could see that I could be comfortable and happy there. My pleasure was increased when I discovered that, apart from Mrs Bissell and her sister, the only other residents above-stairs were her two pretty daughters, Miss Mabel and Miss Emily, and two elderly ladies who were paying guests. I was the only adult male in the house, a situation I was well used to and of which I knew the advantages well.