Author note: This is my entry for the
April Fools Day Story Contest 2024
.
It was after dinner at Fooling Priory, which meant the Duke of Ruthering and his son, Lord Fitzmichael, had gathered in the drawing room to discuss matters of importance. In reality, this meant Daddy and Bertie were smoking the most evil-smelling cigars and talking about tomorrow's hunt, the first of the season. In fact, Bertie hadn't spoken about anything else for the past week: he'd got a new champion hunter he'd been training, called Dodger, and this would be his first chance to put Dodger through his paces, and, far more importantly, his first chance to show his new horse off in front of everyone else at the hunt.
But enough about the drawing room, full of men's talk. On the other side of the door, in the ladies' sitting room, I was seated, re-reading The Count of Monte Cristo.
"I do wish you wouldn't hold with those new, overly-feminine novels," Mummy said, looking up from her work. She was treasurer of the National Society for Friends of the United States, an organisation full of oddballs which had begun as an effort to thaw relations with the new nation in the eighteenth century but now seemed mostly to exist in order to entertain rich, distinguished Americans when they were over here, visiting. Mummy claimed it was geopolitically vital, as some of these Americans held sway over issues of international if not global importance. I told her I was sick of dull Americans and their fat wives at dinner parties and soirΓ©es, which doubtless didn't help with my reputation for being insolent. In any case, Mummy was poring over the latest Friend's Bulletin, the tedious monthly magazine of the society which even she couldn't read without yawning, and comparing it favourably with Alexandre Dumas.
I looked at the cover of Monte Cristo. "I think you've confused which book I'm reading, Mummy."
"Well, I don't mean that one specifically, I mean generally," she said, adopting the haughty tone she usually used when she thought I was being unmanageable.
"Mummy, you plainly don't know anything about this book."
"Look, Kitty, darling, all I'm saying is, while we've got your Aunt Peony staying, you ought to involve yourself in something more improving than some awful novel you found in your father's library."
I rolled my eyes, another gesture that tended to lead to suggestions of insolence. "Did you have something specific in mind?" I asked, setting my book down and setting my teeth as well. Aunt Peony was half-American, had been widowed in the Great War and would think Monte Cristo excellent if she ever had the chance to sit down and read it.
"Well, what about helping me plan this wretched April Fools 'joke for tomorrow? I've spoken to Mrs Inbrock and she didn't seem completely sold on the idea. We still have time to change the arrangements..."
Mummy was fishing to cancel it. Fooling Priory had a tradition, going back generations, of living up to its name and throwing a Fools' Festival on the first of April. In the olden days this had meant laying on entertainment for the peasantry at the Duke's expense, but in recent years Daddy and Bertie had altered it and begun playing tricks on the rest of the family, generally for the amusement of the domestic staff. Last year, for instance, Bertie had set a rat loose in the ladies' bedchambers. Obviously we were horrified and our screams seemed to please the staff no end, while Daddy demanded we women were 'soft' and needed to 'sort something out ourselves for a change'. We'd gone as far as calling in a local rat-catcher and his terrier before Bertie admitted it was a mechanical toy he'd bought when he was last up in London. Daddy thought this was hilarious, of course, and he, Bertie, the rat-catcher and doubtless the terrier had laughed themselves hoarse over drinks well into the night, while the ladies were left with red faces.
"Why don't we call Mrs Inbrock and see what she says?" I suggested, sweetly, reaching for the cord-pull that would summon a maid.
"I don't like to bother her after dinner," Mummy said, primly. "She's presumably quite busy with the washing-up."
I scoffed. "They're domestic servants, Mummy, they can manage the washing-up." I rang the bell and sat back, smugly.
"Well, this was your idea and on your head be it," Mummy said, the haughty tone returning.
"You'll enjoy it, really," I hissed at her, half-joking, half-annoyed.
"You called, Ma'am?" asked Gertie, a wizened old housemaid whom I did not like, but who Mummy insisted was the only one who knew how to dust the dining room tapestries properly.
"Fetch Mrs Inbrock please, Gertie," I said before Mummy could interfere.
Mrs Inbrock was plump, middle-aged and, if anyone was laughing, it would usually be her. She loved the April Fools' jokes and I knew she'd back me up. Her apple cheeks and grey curls were at the door in a flash.
"Yes, ma'am?"
"Sorry to interrupt your washing up, Mrs Inbrock," I said, tartly, and Mummy scowled.
"Oh, I get the girls to wash up, and if it's not finished by now I'll be raising hell with 'em when I get back, if you'll pardon the expression."
"We were thinking about arrangements for tomorrow," Mummy said, bossily taking over.
"Well now hold on a minute, I don't want to be left out," Aunt Peony declared as she bustled in from behind Mrs Inbrock, skirts swishing.
Mummy backed down, defeated. With Aunt Peony on my side, I'd win for sure.
With the big hunt due, Daddy and Bertie had decided not to play a trick this year, or, as I kept reminding everyone, they'd told us they wouldn't so we'd let our guard down. In any case, now that I was twenty and therefore legally a full member of the household, I had made a suggestion for how to get one back against them. It was simple but had a lot of potential: Mummy, Aunt Peony and I would all dress up and replace members of the household staff, explaining our absence by telling the men that we were urgently needed all day somewhere else in the county. If we were able to do our tasks well, then it would be amusing to see their faces when they realised who was responsible. If we did them badly, it would be even more amusing as they'd be furious with nobody to be angry at.
"It's genius," Aunt Peony announced. "Personally, I have always wanted to be the Duke's chauffeur."
"Don't be silly, Peony, that's a man's job," Mummy said.
"Nonsense, Willow. I can drive perfectly well and putting on a hat and coat is hardly difficult."
"You'll have to take my place, ma'am. It wouldn't be right for any but the lady of the house to be overseeing things," Mrs Inbrock added, talking to Mummy. "I'll help, of course."