Number 5 Paynter's Lane was only just outside the village and yet it was completely surrounded by fields. I stopped the car outside the front gate, picked up the parcel that I had placed on the passenger seat, and walked to the front door. From somewhere inside I could hear loud music so I was pretty sure that there was someone at home. I knocked once, and then twice, and then a third time. But there was no reply. It was a warm, summery afternoon, and there was almost no prospect of rain, and so, for a moment or two, I was tempted to just leave the parcel on the doorstep. But then I decided to follow the narrow path that seemed to lead around to the back of the cottage.
I walked down the side of the cottage, pushing past the rhododendron bushes, turned the corner, and there she was. She was reclining in a rustic fan-back garden chair which had probably once been green but was now almost grey. She was wearing dark glasses and a floppy straw hat of the type often favoured by lady gardeners. But that was all she was wearing. I wondered, briefly, if she was sleeping. I wondered if I should discreetly retrace my steps.
'Oh. Hello,' she said. 'Sorry. I didn't hear you.'
'Umm ... no,' I said.
'The music,' she said, nodding in the direction of the cottage. And she smiled.
Judging by her lack of tan lines, I guessed that it was probably not the first time that she had enjoyed the sun's rays in the altogether. Her whole body seemed to be a more-or-less-even golden colour -- even the insides of her splayed thighs. And, at the point where her toned thighs converged, she had quite a profuse patch of pubic hair, light chestnut coloured, with more than a few not-unattractive streaks of silver that echoed the silver hair peeping out from under her hat.
'I'm sorry to ... umm ....' To be honest, I wasn't sure if I should actually go and hand her the parcel, or if I should just leave it on the edge of the birdbath and beat a hasty retreat. 'I was in the bookshop,' I said. 'Over in Hepton. Duncan asked if I could ... you know ... since I was ... umm ... coming this way anyway.'
'Oh. Yes. A new book. Thank you. Duncan said that there had been some new arrivals.'
I kept half expecting her to at least put her knees together. Close the gap. Or perhaps use her hat to cover her crotch. But no. 'Should I ...?' I held the parcel out in the middle of nowhere. And she held out her hand. What was I to do? I took another couple of steps towards her.
'Are you also lover of dirty books?' she asked.
'Umm ... gosh ... umm ....'
'I know that Duncan also has other books,' she said. 'But it's the books in the backroom, isn't it? And, of course, the ones that he gets in specially.' And she smiled. 'So ... what do we have here?' She unwrapped the parcel and her eyes lit up. 'Ah! Yes. The talented Marcia Smith.
The Summer of Silver Foxes and Vixens
. An apt title, don't you think? Silver foxes; silver vixens. I do like Ms Smith's sexy pics. Who would have thought that it would be an advantage -- a requirement even -- for the subjects of her arousing little studies to be over the age of fifty? Often
well
over the age of fifty.'
'We're all getting older,' I said.
'Well, yes,' she said. 'I guess so.' And then she smiled again. 'And cunts are still cunts and cocks are still cocks even as we age.' And she began to leaf through the softback volume. 'Oh yes, I can see that I am going to enjoy this,' she said. 'I do so love summer. Now, can I offer you some tea? Or would you prefer something cold?' But, before I could answer, she said: 'No. I think tea. Green tea. I find hot green tea rather refreshing on a warm afternoon -- strange as that may sound.'
'Thank you. But I probably should ... you know....'
'Nonsense,' she said. 'Oh ... and I'm Suze by the way. Susanna when The Queen comes to visit.' She pronounced Susanna as though it was spelled Su-ZARN-a.
'Mike,' I said.
'Right, Mike. Let's you and I go and make some tea.' And she finally put her knees together. I was almost sad to see her glistening purplish-pink labia retreating into her silver-streaked bush.
The inside of her cottage was quite a surprise. At some stage in its history, someone had removed most of the interior walls. At least they had removed the substance of most of the interior walls. There were still little stands of hand-hewn studs, supporting the ceiling at presumably key spots. It was all a bit like being in a sparsely-planted wood. And there was a staircase. Also hand-hewn. 'Interesting,' I said.
'Interesting?'
'The open plan. Not at all what I had expected.'
Suze smiled. 'No,' she said. 'No. I sometimes wonder if someone simply got halfway through a major renovation and lost interest. Not that I'm complaining. I rather like it like this. I think it was one of the things that attracted me to the place.'
Suze filled an old-fashioned whistling kettle and placed it on the hob. Then she picked up a neatly-folded piece of colourful cloth and, in what I guessed was a practiced move, she turned herself into a woman from a painting by Paul Gaugin, or perhaps Henri Matisse. 'It's still slightly cool out of the sun, isn't it?' she said.
I just smiled. But then I was wearing a shirt and trousers.
'Now ... where were we?' Suze asked. 'Oh yes. Dirty books. You didn't really answer, did you?'
'Did I not?'
'I don't think so. I think that I would have remembered. So ... are you? A lover of dirty books, I mean.'
'Erotica?'
'If that's the term you prefer.'
'I have been known to dip into the odd tome designed to speed up the circulation,' I said.
Suze nodded. 'And do you have a preference?'
'A preference?'
'Yes. Professionals or amateurs? The subjects -- not the photographers. Although I must confess that some amateur photographers seem to have almost missed their calling.' And she smiled and lined up two ceramic beakers and a Japanese-style tea pot.
'Well ... it can sometimes be difficult to distinguish,' I said. 'But I do think that there may be a certain something about depictions of some of the more ... shall we say homely? ... models.'
Suze nodded again. 'And is it the girls or the boys that quicken your heartbeat?'
'The girls. Yes.' And then I added: 'Well ... mainly.'
'But you are not beyond the occasional glance in the other direction?'
'Umm ... occasional glance,' I said. 'Although I don't know why I'm telling you this.'
'Probably because I asked you,' Suze said. 'And are you married or otherwise spoken for?'