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Slippered!
Slippered!
Slippered!
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Slippered!

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If there was one thing guaranteed to get up Reginald Slipper’s nose, it was interfering with his running of the ancient stately pile of Staddon Hall. But when it was newly inherited by a Yorkshire ‘Butcher’s Boy’ with plans to turn the decrepit estate into a Pie factory and upmarket guest accommodation, it got so far up the old butler’s nose that it penetrated his sinuses. Archibald Lappit was not his idea of the 16th Lord Melsham, and Slipper made it his business to thwart Melsham’s plans whatever it took.
As it happened it took a great deal of planning following a chance encounter with a German ‘masseuse’ from Fat Lil’s Massage Parlour, a relative of Melsham’s on the run, half the Yorkshire Chinese mafia, and a motorway patrolman caught up in the middle of the ensuing mayhem.
Even if the best laid plans go awry, it is sometimes all to the good, and with all paths leading to Staddon Hall on the night of the grand Opening Banquet, the scene is set for a bawdy romp that leaves hardly any taboos untouched, quite a few stereotypes set in stone, more extreme sexual encounters than is really necessary...oh, and a clumsy Chinese gangster baked in a pie.
All’s well that ends...well, messily as it happens, but at least Slipper fulfils his vow not to allow Melsham’s plans to prevail, and shacks up with Lady Melsham to boot in a fitting end to a farcical romp through an ancient English Stately Home.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherMalcolm Twigg
Release dateApr 14, 2011
ISBN9781458037374
Slippered!
Author

Malcolm Twigg

Malcolm Twigg has been writing in some form or other for most of his adult life, much of it in local government circles where he put a bit more of the 'creative' element to writing minutes of meetings than was actually warranted. However, it kept the madness away.He discovered science fiction at a very early age and started writing his first novel at the age of 18. He promptly consigned it to the bin and concentrated instead on reading stories by the legendary greats of Science Fiction who actually knew how to write, such as Fred Pohl and Algis Budrys. Both of those authors and many others he was later to meet when a short story he submitted for the L. Ron Hubbard Writers of the Future contest got him into the finals of the contest, and a trip to Florida to boot.A short time earlier, a novel had won the Peter Pook Humorous Novel competition in England (To Hell with the Harp!) and was published through Emissary Publishing (he was a second place winner the previous year). In that same year he had a small collection of science fiction stories published in Chapbook format by Piper's Ash and was also actively publishing in small press genre magazines and well as writing mainstream feature articles for various magazines.Shortly after he attended the L. Ron Hubbard event, he was made redundant from local government and what should have turned into a burgeoning writing career took a bit of a left turn when he was (fortuitously) offered a position as launch editor for a local county magazine (Cornwall Life), followed by another magazine (Young at Heart) building upon a series of freelance articles published in Devon Life.Under his unfailing leadership, both of those new titles folded within a few months (a fate that, alarmingly, befell a number of genre magazines as soon as they had published contributions from him). However, he was kept on as Chief Writer for Devon Life, went on to successfully launch Cornwall Life again and then Wiltshire Magazine, taking an already extant Wiltshire magazine head on and winning.This second career left little time to pursue the more creative element however, leaving a number of unfinished works on the back burner for ten years or so, despite only working (ostensibly) part time.He retired last year and started researching his family history. As always suspected, his wife seems to have married beneath her. Whereas her family history (purportedly) includes the Duke of Wellington and can (some say) be traced right back through William the Conqueror to Cleopatra (via King Frosti of Finland - yes, really!), his includes more than a few liaisons outside the marraige vows and an ancestor whose suspected relationship to his daughter was closer than was really necessary.After a period taking stock (and learning his place again), he is starting to dust those old manuscripts off and show them the light of day once more. He was persuaded to join 'Smashwords' by recognising the name of co-member Hank Quense, an author whose work he admires and who was once, with him, a member of 'Critter-Litter' an informal spin-off from the online critiquing Workshop 'Critters'.Malcolm also runs a social Badminton Club and participates in Field Archery on a regular basis. He used to run a sword fencing club. An innate clumsiness, however, makes all of these extra-curricular activities highly suspect.He also has an interest in the UFO phenomonen and, together with his wife and son, once witnessed an unexplained incident immediately over his home - an experience that was subsequently corroborated by another family across the other side of the valley where he lives. The experience comprised two balls of light, spaced about ten minutes apart passing silently overhead and (as resported by the corroborating family) apparently returning on a different path before disappearing, one shooting off, the other fading out. Subsequent enquiries of various sources revealed no other aerial activity in the neighbourhood. The event took place during a weekend of unexplained phenomenon across England and the wider world. The jury is still out on that one.

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    Slippered! - Malcolm Twigg

    Slippered!

    By Malcolm Twigg

    Copyright 2011 Malcolm Twigg

    Smashwords Edition

    Smashwords Edition Licence Notes

    This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return to Smashwords.com and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.

    All Rights Reserved: Without limiting the rights under copyright reserved above, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise) without the prior written permission of both the copyright owner and the above publishers of this book.

    This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, brands, media and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictionally. The author acknowledges the trademarked status and trademark owners of various products referred in this work of fiction which have been used without permission. The publication/use of these trademarks is not authorised, associated with or sponsored by the trademark owners

    NOTE:

    THIS WORK CONTAINS ADULT THEMES AND SEXUAL REFERENCE

    .

    CHAPTER 1

    The 21st century had come late to Staddon Hall - but it came with a vengeance, and a new hand on the rudder with plans which Slipper - steward, family retainer, chief butler and, at times, wet-nurse - took both as a personal slight and a blot on the escutcheon of the family honour. In fact, Slipper looked on the new Master and his grand plans with nothing short of open hostility.

    Staddon Hall had been the ragged-arsed seat of the Earls of Melsham since the Norman Conquest. Not that the fact was widely known. Nor, indeed, the existence of the Hall itself, tucked away as it was in the rolling folds of the Dimpset hills, where it had successfully disappeared from public scrutiny for the last 80 years or so, the consequence of the reclusive 15th earl, and his father and grandfather before him. A crumbling monument to a lost age, it stood isolated in its own creaking progress towards an uncertain future, hanging grimly on to the proprieties of the feudal dependence which had seen its birth.

    It was ably assisted in this by the doleful ministrations of Slipper, who was as set in his ways as the foundations of Staddon Hall were set in bed-rock . It's never right, you know he confided to Brandybutt, the head gardener,and Lord Melsham not yet cold in his grave! He never would have stood for it.

    The statement bore more than a grain of truth, for the late Lord Pemberton Horrocks, 15th earl of Melsham, had stood for very little - save the National Anthem - these past 30 years, and then only with Slipper's steadying presence on his left hand and firm grip on a bottle of claret with his right. The bottle had been Lord Melsham's downfall. A particularly hefty session one night had left him crumpled at the foot of the grand staircase, leaving – at one and the same time - frowsty old Staddon Hall in the avaricious hands of his late cousin's only son, the unhurried pace of the Estate in the balance, and Slipper mortally affronted by the unexpected turn of events. Whatever else he may have been, the late Lord had been an aristocrat - unlike the new earl!

    A Butcher! Slipper intoned, speaking for the benefit of no-one in particular, Brandybutt had heard it all before - on an average about three times a day since the inheritance of Staddon Hall had become established - and was gently nodding off by Slipper’s fireplace. A common tradesman! The 1st earl would have had him hung, drawn and quartered!

    Slipper spoke as though he knew the 1st earl personally. In a sense, he did (albeit that the 1st earl had been in his grave these past 800 years) for the stewardship of the Melsham estate had been Slipper's for all his working life, and his father’s before him. Consequently there was little about the family history that he did not know. The aristocratic side, at any rate – the rest wasn’t worth bothering about.

    The fact that ‘the butcher’ was, in reality, a self-made man and the head of a national chain of High Street meat product merchandisers made not a scrap of difference in Slipper's estimation. Once a tradesman, always a tradesman, and no tradesman had ever crossed the front portals of Staddon Hall in the whole of the edifice's cloistered career. Quite a few rogues and knaves had, but they were of the nobility and, whatever the rights and wrongs of it, that was the way of the world, always was and always would be.

    Brandybutt was snoring openly, an ebullient sound which rattled the teacups hanging from the shelf. His needs were simple and, as long as he had a roof over his head, food in his belly and a bed of earth in which to dig his stubby fingers, Brandybutt was a happy man. The ramifications of the changes afoot had not percolated through to him, as yet. Slipper doubted whether they would register when they did. He shook his head at his friend's sleeping figure, sighed, and trudged outside.

    From where he stood, he could see little of the surrounding Houndsmoor hills. The overgrown estate trees that crowded the parkland close to the Hall, withdrawn in its secluded valley as it was, prevented any long-distance view, but Slipper had no need to see any further than the Hall and its immediate environs anyway. His world consciously stopped at the Gate House, where he had been born and which he had made his own over the years.

    He turned to look at the Hall. It had seen better days, he had to admit that, but the recent earls had been too supportive of the wine cellar to worry overmuch about restoration. The fabric of the building outside the servants' quarters had never been the most prepossessing and years of neglect had reduced it to something of a shambles. The facade of the Hall was little better. There was an air of gentle decay, both about the building and about Slipper as he stood in the cobbled courtyard, arms akimbo. He looked up with an almost proprietorial eye at the place which had been home to him for his whole life, and reflected on the pending upheaval.

    These past few decades, it was due to Slipper that the Estate had been kept going. He ran the household and ruled what servants remained with a firm hand, his only concessions to humanity being his devotion to the late Master and, to an extent, his friendship with Brandybutt. The gardener was well into his dotage now but still kept the grounds, if not in pristine condition, at least in some semblance or order. In this, he had the grudging assistance of Harris, a callow youth from the village to whom Brandybutt had taken a liking, but whose general attitude to life at the Hall, and to Slipper’s regime, left a lot to be desired in Slipper’s opinion. He found that in a lot of things of late. More particularly in the new Master’s own attitude, both towards himself and the running of the Estate. He felt that his place in the household was being eroded slowly, and gathering pace by the minute.

    The end of an era, he though glumly, turning once more to the dark doorway to the Gate-House. Then, taking a firm grip on his resolve: "But not if Reginald Slipper has anything to do with it.

    ***

    The object of Slipper’s disaffection was, at that moment, exercising a firm grip on something a great deal more tangible than well-intentioned resolve, but proving equally as elusive, as the twanging of knicker elastic demonstrated. Doris, the parlour maid, straightened from her fender polishing with considerably more alacrity than that with which she had applied herself to the task. She turned to face the new earl, covering her ample rear with brassoed hands. Milord! she gasped, uncertain whether to be flattered or incensed - it had, after all, been some years since any man had shown the slightest inclination for dalliance. But, a peer of the realm! And with her Ladyship in the next room! Milord! she gasped again, with more gusto, this time.

    Now, now Doris said Archibald Lappit, 16th earl Melsham and entirely lacking in the most rudimentary of social graces. Don't take on lass. Just a friendly gesture, that's all.

    Doris groped for words. Mr. Slipper had said nothing about randy earls. Not that the present Lord Melsham was her idea of an earl. She had pictured some haughty, monocled old Etonian, not this ruddy-complexioned, over-weight bull of a man, coarse of speech and coarser of manners, with his leering eye and sausage-fingered hands even now, in her imagination, fumbling with the straining buttons on her blouse. She found her voice at last.

    Milord!

    Hardly an improvement over her previous contribution but expressed in a tone that managed to deliver a mixture of reproach, surprise and disgust - which was entirely lost on the new earl.

    He laid a meaty finger alongside his nose, sidling closer. Mum's the word, now, Doris. We don't want to go upsetting her Ladyship, do we? he asked, confidentially, adding with a hint of malice If you get my drift, eh? He reinforced the statement with a light slap across her rump. Doris jumped, combined it somehow with a hurried curtsey, and withdrew in a fluster of confusion and embarrassment.

    Melsham's lascivious eye watched her plump form retreat with appreciation. He imagined himself stretched out across the billiards table while Doris, clad in basque and high-heeled shoes, advanced on him in menace, feather duster at the ready. Since moving down to the rural backwaters of Dimpset he found that he missed the flesh-pots of Brandsley, and Doris had enough flesh to fill a few of the best pots Melsham had ever seen. He had a catholic taste in women - the bigger, the better. To plunge into the cavernous cleavage of an enormous bosom whilst being beaten about the bottom with a big stick was his idea of Nirvana: an unconscious yearning after the mother-figure he had always wanted, and a twisted reflection of the hair-brush wielding mother he had had.

    Not that anyone could have blamed Wanda Lappit, for Archibald had been obnoxious even when a child. To his mother's eternal regret, he had been conceived in inebriate stupor after a drunken Master Butchers' Ball, and had thereafter got in the way of her endless pursuit of pleasure, which made it even harder for her to bestow any of the normal maternal instincts on the infant Lappit. His erstwhile father - the late Lord Melsham's distant cousin - always looked with suspicion on the lad's paternity (with no foundation in fact, as it happened). Nevertheless as a consequence he always treated his son with a certain distant reserve. Given his parents' disregard, the seeds of the new earl's disenchanting personality were well sown.

    From that seed also sprang young Archibald's fierce determination to succeed and to grind everyone else into the sod on the way. He found he had a natural talent for that. When, at his majority, his parents were killed by a runaway lorry as it swerved to avoid collision with a young mother and her baby and, instead, crushed their car against the Corporation Cesspit Cleanser, Lappit junior had experienced a curious sense of release and an innate feeling of justice.

    With the insurance money and the inheritance of his father's small chain of butchers' shops, he soon turned his talent to divesting his competitors of their livelihood, built up a small local empire and, when the supermarket boom hit the country in the '60's, took his opportunity to elbow his way in amongst the big boys. Nowadays, Lappit had a finger in every meat pie ever bought across a supermarket counter, and he ruled the roost. And now, by courtesy of an old soak he never knew, he was Lord Melsham, 16th Earl, and incumbent of Staddon Hall: a long, long way away from his plebeian beginnings. It was owed him - and not before time. He felt vindicated.

    At that moment he also felt queer. The thought of feather dusters in capable buxom hands always did things to his knees. He crossed to the dresser and poured himself a large scotch, disposing of it in a manner which would have won the approval of the lately departed 15th earl. He felt better after that and addressed himself to the purpose of his presence in the Dining Room which held the only table large enough to contain the plan of the Estate he had forcibly extracted from Slipper's clutches.

    The man's a pain in the bloody arse Melsham thought to himself in sudden irritation as he smoothed the plan out on the flat expanse of table. Despite Slipper’s studied air of subservience, Melsham knew that there was little love lost between the old butler and himself: Slipper resented the earl's proletarian beginnings, and made it plain and Melsham could never decide just how much Slipper was quietly sneering at him, so he returned the resentment in full measure.

    The trouble was, Slipper was part of the place and without Slipper, Melsham wouldn't have had a clue how to run it. Both men were astute enough to realise it, so, for very different reasons each tolerated the other: Melsham because, in spite of himself, he respected Slipper's knowledge; Slipper because his position required him to and because – did Melsham but know it - come hell or high water, he was going to see this upstart out on his ear even if it cost him his job - or worse.

    ***

    Quite how Slipper was going to bring about Melsham’s downfall, he didn’t quite know yet. But of one thing he was sure: there was going to be a sausage factory in the hallowed grounds of Staddon Hall over his dead body! He returned to the Gate-House, ignoring Brandybutt's stentorian rumblings, and mused further on the bombshell that Lappit - he couldn't bring himself to use the title in private - had dropped on him: the conversion of the range of stables and outbuildings into a sausage factory, and the Hall into an up-market eating and international guest house. Melsham hadn't put it quite like that, of course, but that was how it equated in Slipper's mind.

    What the earl had actually said, in his irritating northern accent, was something to the effect of expandin' t'base of operations to market a noo range of exclusive cooked meat products under't label 'Lord Melsham's Table': 'ome prodooced fare from t’seat of Dimpset' s oldest haristocratic family. The Fortnum and Mason of the south-west.

    Add to that, the rider that the earl would also open the Hall for pre-booked banqueting and week-end house parties for the international tourist trade, featuring the Exclusive Home Produce, and there was a proposition that the earl couldn't resist and that Slipper abominated. The thought of tourists disporting themselves within the walls of Staddon Hall was something almost too awful to comprehend. What was worse was the thought of Lappit passing himself off as the scion of a noble English family to unsuspecting and gullible foreigners who would leave convinced that the British Aristocracy came down to dinner in tweed jackets and ate peas with a spoon! And, to compound the heresy, as Melsham's butler and steward, Slipper was actually expected to participate in the arrangements!

    The first, irretrievable, step in that direction was the release of his beloved Estate plans for the man Lappit to paw and pore over - before his team of surveyors, architects and tame officials descended in droves to disrupt the bucolic anonymity in which Staddon Hall had basked for so long

    Brandybutt's snoring finally got on Slipper's nerves. How could he concentrate on a plan of campaign to an accompaniment of snorts and grunts that wouldn't have been out of place in one of Lappit' s pig farms? So, rousing the old gardener, he escorted him back to his own quarters. He missed a flummoxed Doris by seconds.

    ***

    In the dining-room, Melsham had finally regained control of his knees and was studying the estate plans minutely. Comparing it with the notes from his marketing experts he now knew precisely where everything would fit within the stable complex. It would be a tight squeeze but in keeping with the ‘cottage industry’ presentation the marketing men envisaged.

    There was only one addition that Melsham would like to make: a Hospitality/Exposition suite. And, stabbing a podgy finger decisively on the Gate House, he knew exactly where he wanted it!

    CHAPTER 2

    Carmen, the Hon. Lady Lappit and bane of her father's life, watched the sun sink behind the distant hills of Houndsmoor, and hitched her skirt down over dimpling thighs as she pushed herself up against the hay bales. She picked pieces of straw from her hair and turned a jaundiced eye on the heaving figure beside her, wheezing face down in the straw like an Olympic marathon runner in final extremis. She liked her men young, strong, healthy - and often. Her partner of the moment fulfilled the first three criteria, at least. On a rating of 1-10 she ranked his score at four and-a-half, with 'E' for Effort - not a bad score to Carmen's exacting standards.

    She also liked them with unblemished posteriors. The vision at the moment mooning up at her from amongst the straw put her in mind of a hitherto unknown and virulent strain of measles. 'Ere, she said, elbowing the dying whale Cover it up. It's disgusting, that!

    The figure responded with a grunt and a feeble flap of a limp arm. Carmen sniffed and scooped her bosom together, harnessing it back into the tight blouse, from which it immediately fought to escape once more. She pulled herself to her feet and smoothed her clothes, nudging the now sleeping figure with her foot. Bits of straw stuck out at odd angles from the interstices of her clothing, making her lumpy body seem like some badly stuffed doll - which, she reflected, was precisely how she felt.

    Precocious at ten, a coquette at twelve, at the age of fifteen Carmen had been proficient at things most girls twice her age had only dreamed about. At the ripe old age of eighteen she had now turned in to a hard- bitten cynic who regarded men as no more than mobile pleasure factories, flaccid and uninspired for the most part but, at rare intervals, fired with the odd flash of thunder that sparked a similar response in her

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