Despite the 27 years that separated them, the two women who stood on the immaculate burgundy carpet, flanked by parquet flooring that had enjoyed the benefit of years of meticulous attention, in the warmly and subtly-lit wood-paneled corridor at Great Kingsford College for Girls, could well have passed for sisters. The young mother's looks belied the 45 years during which she had brightened the lives of those around her, whilst her 18-year old daughter, only 6 months away from her nineteenth birthday, could easily have passed for a young woman in her mid-twenties, having inherited not only her Mother's elegance and fresh-faced good looks, but also a hint of her Father's eye-catching maturity.
In many ways, however, the two women were very different in terms of their individual styles, the elder of the two still favouring nuance over bold statement in terms of her attire, whilst the younger, even in the immaculate uniform which she was wearing, officially, for the last day, managed to create an appearance of discreetly-tailored defiance, the knot in her tie being just slightly out of line and the top button on her shirt being left undone, albeit invisibly to all but the most inquisitive onlookers.
Their conduct also brought them close together in terms of age, since the very low murmur of their voices in the hushed environs of the corridor was characterised by warmth, humour, excitement and, to a degree, sadness, for this was Sophia Louise's last day at school, before leaving for her gap year and before going up to Aberdeen University to read Medicine.
However, the day did not simply represent a critical waymark on Sophia Louise's passage through life, but also in the lives of her mother, Eleanor, and of the school. This was, in fact, also the last day in office for the Headmaster, Mr. Alistair Mackinnon, and the caretaker, Mr. Brian Harding, both of whom had been conspicuous at the school, not only because they constituted half of the permanent male members of staff, but also on account of the respective manners in which they had served this impressive educational establishment.
In educational circles, the profile of the Great Kingsford College for Girls had risen steadily, from a high starting point, over the 28 years since the arrival of Mr. Mackinnon, at the age of thirty-seven. The career of this softly-spoken native of the Isle of Skye had included a three-year appointment at a college in Seville and a two-year post at a Lyons Lycée, before taking up his appointment as Head of the Foreign Languages Department, under the eagle eye of Miss Helena Frobisher.
The formidable former Headmistress had been a keen and strict disciplinarian who had produced results, both academically and socially. She had been almost universally adored and revered by pupils, governors and parents alike and there were rumours that she was blessed with a wicked sense of humour. She had also been a widely-acknowledged judge of character and this had led to the appointment of Messrs. Mackinnon and Harding to their respective posts, for she had seen qualities in these two gentlemen that she admired.
Although she had been a staunch defender of a campaign to advance the status and quality of life of young women through good education and training, with nurture of individuality, Miss Frobisher had also recognised how unhealthy and unbalanced it could be to expect up to 280 girls to go about their school lives in surroundings that did not in some way reflect the gender mix in Society and which did not offer good male role models outside the immediate families of her pupils.
There was also a handful of former alumnae who could testify to her devastating accuracy with the cane, an implement that had been used on extremely rare occasions and the effect of which had been to instil a sense of genuine respect amongst pupils at the school, both for discipline and for academic standards. In point of fact, the cane had never, at any time, been used as a punishment for failure to achieve academically, since Miss Frobisher had felt that this was a barbaric misuse of an effective form of disciplinary control. Such restraint had not, however, extended to the use of The Dragon, as it had been labelled in school lore, in cases where girls had been foolish enough to lapse into unjustifiable violence, abuse or flagrant breaches of standards of public behaviour. She had always been meticulous in her investigation of misdeeds warranting corporal punishment. However, once she had reached her conclusion, execution of sentence had always been a swift, painful and memorable experience that had left its imprint in several ways upon the girls who had left her Study in tears, to inspect the outcome of their encounter with her.
The appointment, two years later, of Mr. Mackinnon to the post of Headmaster, following Miss Frobisher's retirement, had sent ripples through the educational establishment and had raised concerns amongst certain parents, yet such was the trust in Miss Frobisher's judgment that no one was ready to deny him the chance to prove that the decision had been wise.
He had not failed. In fact, he had excelled and both academic and disciplinary standards had not only been maintained, but improved. Interestingly, this had been achieved, ultimately, without the threat of corporal punishment, which he had abolished three years into his appointment, after a long discussion with Mrs. Helen Marlow, the young Physical Education teacher whom he had appointed to the post of Deputy Headmistress. He had not, in fact, used or ordered corporal punishment to deal with any pupil. His look alone seemed sufficiently effective to convey the legendary message of his predecessor and recourse to the penultimate sanction had never been needed.
The departure of Mr. Harding was also of significance to the school, since he had overseen the running of the school estate in a manner that had encouraged pupils to take an interest in such often-overlooked matters. With his impeccable manners and great depth of knowledge of both horticulture and wildlife, he had introduced many a young mind to areas of interest that might otherwise have escaped them, earning high regard from teachers, pupils and parents alike.
Eleanor had particular reason to remember Mr. Harding since, when he had arrived as a fairly young and not-long-married young man, he had been at the centre of a controversy that had resulted in the one case of what ultimately transpired to be a miscarriage of justice during Miss Frobisher's headship. However, the story was not as simple as it might at first have seemed.
In 1975, just a year after his appointment, Mr. Harding had been suspended from his post pending investigation of a most embarrassing incident.
His rugged and youthful weather-beaten looks had earned several admiring gazes from girls at the school, particularly those on the point of departure for university, whom he had unwittingly prompted to ponder, in greater depth than was possibly healthy for them, the freedoms that lay ahead of them. Flirtatious remarks had been addressed to him, all of which he had brushed off, somewhat bashfully, with a smile and a rapid return either to a safe neutral subject or to his work. There was, however, one girl at the Great Kingsford College for Girls who had not played by the rules and who had, in fact, earned the loathing of many of her peers due to the high-handed and cavalier attitude she had adopted towards 'that gardener'.
Julia Beaulieu lacked nothing in the self-confidence department and, whilst this enhanced her attractiveness to younger, less confident pupils, it had earned a healthy measure of disdain from older peers, who had come to like Mr. Harding and who appreciated his genuine and totally innocent desire to encourage them to discover the wonders of Nature that were there in their own gardens.
Julia also had an unproven record as a deceitful manipulator. Circumstantial and anecdotal evidence was there in abundance, but Miss Frobisher was not the sort of woman to act on such unsubstantiated material and she had, until the final dénouement of this unfortunate episode, confined herself to reminding the arrogant girl that pupils at her school were strictly forbidden to abuse any member of her staff.
Julia also engaged in a number of unapproved extra-curricular activities, including supposedly secret assignments with her boyfriend, whom she would meet amidst the cluster of outbuildings from which Mr. Harding ran his side of school life so efficiently. These, however, were a well-guarded secret and only two pupils had spotted her one lunchtime when, on the pretext of feeling slightly unwell, she had asked to be excused from the communal meal so that she could go and rest for a short while.
The two pupils in question had been Patricia O'Connor, a vivacious and highly popular girl from Co. Wicklow in Ireland, and Eleanor, whom she had befriended at a very early stage during their shared school years. They had become inseparable contrasts in just about every way and they were extremely well-liked by the other girls, unlike the distant and, as it turned out, deeply unhappy Julia Beaulieu.
The discovery of a pair of green knickers, matching an item missing from Julia's inventory of clothing, in the inside pocket of Mr. Harding's ex-RAF greatcoat, had shocked Polly, his wife, who had felt it her duty to bring this matter first to his attention and then to that of Miss Frobisher. The latter's reaction had, initially, been one of total bewilderment, but, anxious to satisfy the demands both of justice and of the need to maintain a good reputation, she had decided to investigate the matter herself, without recourse to outside agencies. As it turned out, this proved to have been one of the wisest moves in her long career and it spared an honest and decent family the shame of wrongful prosecution and public humiliation.
Miss Frobisher resembled an 'old school' nursing sister, a professional whose ability to accumulate and sift through information from the most unlikely and, in the view of the majority of onlookers, impossible sources was legendary. These skills she applied with the utmost finesse in her investigation, during which, as a precaution, she had suspended Mr. Harding on full pay. Such was her confidence in his innocence and such were her powers of persuasion that she was able to convince Polly very quickly that the presence of young female underwear in her husband's greatcoat had been the result of schoolgirl malice, not of male perversion.
It had taken the best part of three weeks for Miss Frobisher to complete her enquiries, which had culminated in the presence of a senior girl in her Study one Wednesday morning, two days before the end of term and her departure for summer holidays, before embarking upon her final year at school. She had sat at the desk, recited the facts as she had found them and then waited for Julia to explain how her underwear had found its way into the caretaker's great coat.