Carol entered the small smoke filled room and gave a cough. She could cope with the permanent lingering smell of cigarette smoke out in the large newsroom, but she disliked the impenetrable haze that hung over meetings in the editor's office.
"I'm going to open a window and let some fresh air in before we all choke to death."
"Morning Carol, glad you could join us."
"I'm not late so don't start."
Carol Miller was a tall, attractive, athletic looking woman of 42, she'd been a reporter at the Middlesex Chronicle for twelve years. She covered fashion in the main, but also wrote about weddings, garden fete's and household tips as well as occasional family matters. It was a job that she enjoyed most of the time, and she'd been doing it since she'd left the her role in the Publicity and Information Section at the War Office in 1945.
She'd been married for twenty years to Patrick Miller, a successful banker, fifteen years her senior. Her loveless, childless marriage had been a huge disappointed to her, but she had resigned herself to her fate and had made the most of the trappings of her husband's wealth. They slept in separate rooms in their large house in the suburbs of London. She knew that he'd had several affairs but she played the role of dutiful wife so that, to everyone else, they appeared to be a contented if somewhat boring married couple.
Carol sometimes thought that she ought to start an affair. She hadn't had sex with anyone but herself for almost a decade. Whilst she was fond of some of her male acquaintances, she didn't find any of them desirable. At 42, she knew there must be more to life, but she didn't know where to look to find excitement and affection. All of that was about to change.
Her parents had both died in the last couple of years. Her father had been a distant, cold man and her mother had been unhappy. According to the many doctors that had seen her, her mother had suffered with her 'nerves,' and had been prescribed a cocktail of medication, that left her dull and listless. Carol had benefited from their demise, she was an only child and they had left her a modest house worth about three thousand pounds, and a similar sum in savings. Patrick earned a high salary, and she had independent means and didn't need to work, but she thought she'd go out of her mind if she didn't have a job to keep her occupied.
Reg, the Chief Editor, called the meeting to order, "Right, let's get started, there's lots to do this week. Bob, how's that case of yours going? Are you expecting any significant developments this week?"
"God I hope so, the judge adjourns proceedings at every opportunity, probably needs to nip out to the pub for a refill. Should be over by Wednesday though, so there'll be time to do a big piece on the verdict for this week's edition."
"Good, It'll be front page and I'll give you a couple of columns on page three as well. Phil, how's your investigation into Councillor Smith's connections to Fred Owen's development company?"
"Nothing concrete yet boss," said Phil to groans all round.
"Well keep at it, and keep your awful puns out of anything you eventually write."
"Okay boss," said a grinning Phil.
"Carol, I've got something a little different for you this week, the English Women's National Bowls Championship is taking place at West Ealing Bowls Club on Wednesday and Thursday. Apparently Middlesex are expected to do well, home soil and all that, can you go and do something that might interest our female readers? Henry's at Lords for the Middlesex Surrey match"
"Henry practically lives at Lords during the cricket season."
"It's a tough job old girl but someone has to do it," said Henry with a smug grin.
"I can't exactly say I'm gripped at the prospect of women's bowls, but I'll try to make it interesting."
"Good girl Carol, that's the spirit."
Carol scowled at being referred to as "good girl" and "old girl" but it was 1957 and quite normal for women to be patronised in this way. She was the only woman on the editorial team at the newspaper, but she generally got on well with her male colleagues. Reg was a hard task master but, he'd taken her under his wing when she had joined the team, and had always seemed to believe in her ability.
As the meeting broke up, Carol asked Henry, the sports reporter, for advice, "Henry do you know anything about bowls? I can't remember you ever writing about it."
"Sorry old girl, dreary pastime if you ask me."
"That's rich coming from a cricket correspondent," laughed Carol.
"Greatest game in the world old girl, nothing finer than sitting with a sherry in one hand whilst recording the demise of the Aussie batsmen with the other. Look, I must dash, need to get there for start of play and all that, why don't you pop down to the library, they're sure to have a book or two about bowls."
"Looks like I'll have to," said Carol as she deliberately peered out of the newsroom windows at the sky, "Are those rain clouds gathering in the direction of Lords Henry?" she teased.
"Oh very funny old girl, the forecast is for a fine day, have fun at the library."
Henry gathered his notepad and waved a cheery goodbye to his colleagues, leaving Carol to contemplate a pile of readers' household tips, before she set off for the library.
********************
Two days later, on a delightfully warm sunny mid August morning, Carol readied herself for her assignment as a stand in sports reporter. She wasn't sure that bowls ought to be described as a sport, and she chuckled at the absurdity of the situation in which she found herself. It wasn't that she was a complete stranger to the notion of sporting competition. Before the war had intervened, she had, in fact, been a promising tennis player and, at the age of 24, had won the Middlesex Ladies Singles Lawn Tennis Championship in 1939.
She knew that she would be facing the critical appraising eyes of lots of other women today, so she made a special effort with her appearance. She looked cool and elegant in a lemon coloured summer sheath dress, with a large boat neck collar that emphasised her bust. It had a narrow waist, and her curvaceous hips were bound inside a pencil skirt. Carol fastened a white bead necklace around her throat, stepped into her white heels, tucked her hair into a lemon brimmed hat, and looked at herself in the hallway mirror. Pleased with what she saw, she set off for West Ealing.
Carol had grasped the basics of the game from a book that she had borrowed from the library, and she tried not to feel like a fish out of water as she entered the pavilion at the West Ealing Bowls Club. She'd phoned the County Secretary the day before, to tell her that she would be reporting on the event, and the woman had seemed delighted at the coverage that the tournament would get in the local newspaper.
"Hello, you must be Mrs Miller from the Chronicle?"
"Yes, that's right, and you must be Mrs Bell?" said Carol as she shook hands with a short, rotund woman in her mid fifties.