Author's Note To Reader - This series is the second part of a longer story arc I began in
"The Caged Student"
. I strongly recommend that you start there before beginning this series. However, if you do wish to begin with The Good Housemaster, there could be some confusion about the importance of certain plot points in this story. With that only warning, please enjoy...
The Good Housemaster
Chapter One
May 15th, 2000
Staring through the window at our front garden, I feel a certain peace settle over me. In the background, I could hear the morning BBC report. Corporal Punishment Now Outlawed in Schools. It was half of my life's work. Great Britain can now put one of the darkest parts of its history behind it. I never believed that one needed to hit a child to make them behave. As a teacher, I eschewed the use of a cane and took pride in it. My peers had gone by the old adage of what was good for them and whatnot. It's too bad so many children and young adults had to face the gauntlet that was more appropriate for Victorian times.
Absently eating my porridge, I flip through some of the cards I had received the last few days. Many are from my party. Being a former Minister in the House of Commons, the amount of mail is piling up rapidly. I find one with a name I recognize. It's a close personal friend in the Foreign and Commonwealth Office. Must get back to her. There will be a get-together this evening, and I haven't received a confirmation. Flipping through a few more, I see a small scarlet letter. It's addressed to me, but there's no forward. I pick it up and begin opening the stiff paper. The inside is gold foil. It's almost as if it's an invitation. My interest piqued, I pull out the card and read the very loopy but precise handwriting.
Congratulations on your victory. I wish I could join you in your celebrations personally, but I find my hands quite full at the moment. Do give my regards to 'The Knights.'
I flip the card to the other side, but it's blank. The Knights? Who would send an unsigned letter like this? I look at the card again. No... Surely not after all these years.
The Future Knights. I begin to think back to a time in my life I buried deeply away. I had finished my college education at Cambridge with a first-class degree and then completed my Masters in sixty-eight. During that period, I was doing my post-graduate research when an unplanned meeting at the school changed my life forever...
* * *
June 13th, 1968
Cards. Cards. Even more index cards. I'm nearly half done sorting them properly. The poorly lit storage building for most of the school's seldom-used texts smells of old paper and mildew. I stifle a cough. A fitting job for an aspiring professor. I couldn't complain, though. It WAS Cambridge, after all. Only five or six more years of this, and I could really start teaching. Trying not to sigh, I put another book back in its proper place and return to the high table. The single door to the room opens, and I look up in some surprise. No one has ever bothered to come here other than me for almost two weeks now. I see it's another graduate student.
"Mr. Wright?"
"Looks like you found me." I pick up another card and begin searching for its associated book.
"It's Dr. Barnaby. He would like to see you immediately."
"Oh?" Immediately sounded important. I look down at the cards, and this time I did sigh. This was never going to get done properly. "Can't keep him waiting, can I?"
Grabbing my brown tweed coat, I stride out quickly into the bright summer daylight. Squinting, my poor eyes have a hard time adjusting. I really need to get out more. Crossing the narrow street, I hurry over to Trinity Hall and pass through its golden brown double doors. Less than a minute later, I arrive at Dr. Barnaby's office and knock.
"Come."
Entering, I find the fifty-year-old man sitting behind his desk, waving me over. There's a second gentleman in here as well. His dark hair and deep brown eyes are striking as he watches me in silence. Dr. Barnaby is smiling, though. "You wished to see me, sir?"
"Yes, Mr. Wright. I want you to meet an old friend of mine. He teaches at a small school near Wales, which is currently in need of a professor. After he mentioned that, I of course remembered how much you were pestering me about starting your own career."
My jaw drops to the floor, and I look at the seated man closely. He appears to be in his mid-forties. "And you are...?"
"I am a Housemaster at Eddington Preparatory School."
His voice has a nasal quality about it, and he does seem to be a bit off-putting. I try again. "Uh. Right. I'm Alan Wright." I reach out my hand, and I realize he's wearing gloves. The man shakes mine quickly and then looks over to Dr. Barnaby.
"Didn't I tell you?" my boss says with a bit of confusion on his face. "I'm sorry, Mr. Wright. This is; Professor Brown. Charles Brown."
Well, that's an unfortunate name to have these days. I cover my expression as best I can. His last name is common enough, at least. "Professor Brown." I turn back to Dr. Barnaby and smile. "Are you trying to get rid of me, sir?"
The graying man laughs heartily as he fishes out a cigarette. "No, No. But you have been pushing pretty hard as an assistant, and I do think it's a talent that's wasted here."
I look back, and the dark-eyed man is now smiling a bit. A teaching job in the middle of nowhere compared to a chance at Cambridge? Should I just turn him down flat? "Professor Brown. Despite what Dr. Barnaby has said, I'm actually..." The middle-aged man puts up a hand, and I look at him questioningly.
"Of course, Mr. Wright. I just wish to say that Dr. Barnaby has given me the strongest of recommendations for you."
"It's good to hear that." Strange. The quality of his high-pitched voice puts me immediately at ease. What could it hurt to listen? "Fine then. What is this position you're offering?" I pull the other chair and sit as Mr. Brown commences his pitch.
And it's bloody amazing! The school is set out in the country at an old manor near a small town in the hills south of Shrewsbury. It's a finishing school for eighteen to twenty-one-year-old ladies of the well-to-do. As I watch the dark-haired man paint a lovely picture of a progressive school in liberal arts as well as the sciences, I begin to actually get excited.