He turned the scroll to face his audience, letting them see the same flamboyant handwriting that had neatly recorded the daily comings and goings of Rupert Standish’s life in the goat’s packet of papers. Beneath the declaration was an assortment of signatures, each attesting to the veracity of the document and score recorded on it. There, alongside that of the Reverend and Billy, was the tightly written signature of Octavius Belcher, accepting once and for all that he had lost.
“Huzzah!” Henry bounced into the air, and on landing almost managed to execute a cartwheel. “Bad Billy, you were a reckless twit, but bloody hell—one-thirty-one! Ha! Ha! Hear that Ed? Octavius lost! Lost!”
Henry ran to George and they embraced tightly. He would never get bored of hugging him. The two men were in the midst of a rapidly growing crowd as the spectators gravitated toward them.
“It all came right in the end, then!”
“It always does when you’re in love.” George laughed, pressing his lips to Henry’s. “Most of the time. Usually.”
“Although this isn’t the end—not really. We’re right at the beginning.”
“A new adventure for the Standish-Brookes-Fitzwalters.” George drew back just a little, his arms around Henry’s waist. “With Billy, Tobias, Rupes and Nimrod keeping an eye on us? And maybe giving the odd cricket bat a helping hand?”
“As long as they don’t keep an eye on us all the time.” Henry whispered, “Chaps need a little privacy every so often!”
“Especially newlyweds.”
“Let’s go, dear old George—to the home you saved.”
“Jez and I were saying just last night how much we’d love to live in the manor…if the offer still stands?”
“Of course! The stable’s ready and the lake is perfect for a swim this time of year.”
“Don’t you want to collect your trophy first?” George glanced toward the podium. “I’d hate to drag you away before your big moment.”
“You’re my prize, I don’t need anything else.”
But Henry didn’t have a choice. The surging crowd of Longley Parva residents hoisted him onto their shoulders and carried him. When he looked over his shoulder, he saw that George was being carried across the cricket field in identical fashion. With Jez and Nimrod trotting alongside they were borne to the podium and there, surrounded by the villagers of Longley Parva and the national cricket team, Henry finally received his trophy as Ed Belcher, with his wife and Randy Cheese’s lawyers in hot pursuit, slunk away.
There were photos to take and interviews to give and champagne to drink but finally the little family was winding its way through the lanes and home to Longley Parva Manor. The scroll was safe inside the cup and this time, George promised, he wouldn’t forget where he had put it. This time, there would be no question who was the winner.
The house wore a different face now all anxiety had melted away. Permanence, not decay.
Everything that had been lost was now recovered.
“Fancy an evening stroll in the grounds, dear?” Henry linked his arm through George’s, the cup swinging from his other hand. George responded with a nod and a smile of pure contentment as he drew in a deep breath of fresh evening air. The day had been more than a success. It was the start of a new life for both of them and here, in the manor where their ancestors had fallen in love, Henry and his captain would continue the story.
The breeze shivered the high branches, whispering like the voices of ghosts. In the half-light, Henry could almost swear that there were figures in the grove of trees, watching. Two men and their animal companions, out for a stroll in the balmy summer night.
George and Henry looked to the grove as one, though neither seemed to want to be the first to speak. It was George who broke the silence with a playful murmur of, “It’s a big enough house for everybody.”
Then they kissed again, little caring who might see.
Also available from Pride Publishing:
An Actor’s Guide to Romance
Catherine Curzon and Eleanor Harkstead
Excerpt
Chapter One
Every hero needs his villain. The thorn in his side, the shadow on his sun, the fly on his teacake. Holmes had his Moriarty, Superman had Lex Luther, ET had the lack of intergalactic telephone lines and Thomas Fox had Adam Fisher. From that long-ago audition at drama school when each had chosen a monologue that had stopped the panel in its tracks to the first of innumerable shared curtain calls when a new Jeeves met his Wooster, he was always there, always up for the same roles, his name on the same lists that were proposed for your consideration, matching every single achievement until, still chasing one another’s shadow more than two decades after that very first meeting at RADA, together they had waited for Godot. They were like a mirror image, two careers on parallel lines, from youthful love interest to middle-aged gravitas, each as decorated, as popular, as perfect as the other.
Maybe they always would be until one died or they killed each other.
Who knows?
In any titanic struggle, the parties must know their places and right now, theirs was a dingy basement off Covent Garden, where Thomas and Adam were embracing.
“Thank god we found each other. What would I do without you, darling?”
Adam rolled his eyes. Not enough for it to be noticeable from the front row, but Thomas noticed, because he intended Thomas to notice. Because that was the sort of thing that Adam did, the sort of thing he had always done. He rolled his eyes, gave a little sigh and finally whispered, “Did you have onions at lunch?”
Then he raised his voice to an audible volume and replied, “I feel as though I’ve been searching all my life for something, and I didn’t realize until we found each other.”
Thomas gazed down at Adam’s full lips and, despite sudden stiffness in his neck, began to lower his face to kiss him. Adam blinked, his blue eyes shining when they met Thomas’ gaze, his embrace around Thomas’ waist tightening. He pursed his lips, blinked again and declared, “God, that is oniony!”
Thomas flung up his hands and backed out of their embrace. “I can’t bloody do this, Adam, if you keep titting about!”
From the side of the room there came a flurry of movement as their solo audience threw up her hands, dashing script pages across the floor. Gill Henley rose from her seat in a whirlwind of scarves and floral print and exclaimed, “For Christ’s sake, gents, this scene again! Can you not just plough through and pretend you might actually be in love? You’re supposed to be actors, so act!”
“It was a joke, darling!” Adam was all innocence now, of course, because he would be, wouldn’t he? He put his hands on his hips and addressed Thomas. “You dragged me out of character, Tom Fox. It’s a cheap way to steal a scene.”
“I dragged you out of character?” Thomas felt his face flush as he tried to rein in his frustration. “You keep breaking out of character to comment on my breath! Which, I might add, does not smell of onions. And don’t bloody call me Tom Fox. I’m not a character in Wind in the bloody Willows.”
“Look,” Gill addressed them as though they were naughty schoolboys. “This isn’t a play about being gay. Stop making it the fulcrum of the drama. Your characters being gay is just part of the fabric of their lives, just like your lives. It’s not as though your whole lives are spent camping about and being as gay as gay can be, are they?”
She looked at Adam and narrowed her eyes.
“Yours is, I know that, but as a whole, gay is part of life, not life itself.” Gill held up her hand before Adam could protest. “You have one kiss in the text. It’s not the end of the world. Let’s call it a day and come back tomorrow, lips puckered, ready to kiss and move bloody on, yes?”
“Tell him.” Adam shrugged, already turning to retrieve his coat. “I’m a professional, he’s an onion-eater.”
Thomas clenched his fists. “It was a shallot, Fisher! It was not an onion!”
“Well, enjoy your evening of onions, Tom Fox.” Adam kissed
Gill’s cheek and raised his hand to Thomas. “Because I am off home to study my lines. Bonsoir, my fine supporting player!”
He spun on his heel to give a deep bow then, with another wave, opened the door and disappeared into the hallway.
Even though Thomas knew that Adam could no longer hear him, he raised his chin imperiously and declared, “Equal billing, darling! I am no one’s support.”
“You both want bloody shooting.” Gill knelt to retrieve her abandoned pages. “I’ll see you in the morning, Tom—Thomas. We’ll crack it, I’m sure, and your adoring fans will never know how much you bloody hate each other.”
Thomas dragged his fingers through his hair and sighed.
“Look—why don’t I just do the honorable thing and back out? I should never have agreed to this. I thought—challenging play by an emerging writer, and if I have to put up with Fisher to do it, then fine.” He shook his head—he suddenly felt very tired. “We can’t even be in the same room as each other without warring—how can we ever kiss, for heaven’s sake? I’ll stand down from the cast, Gill.”
“Are you trying to wreck my career? It’s Fisher and Fox playing lovers. Have you seen the advance box office on this? You stand down, the press’ll think you’ve gone nuts, the producers will sue and when, not if, Adam gets nommed for this play, you’ll be chewing your own hand off. Better to be there on the list next to him, don’t you think?” She rose to her feet and patted Thomas’ arm. “You’re the best there are—it’s one kiss out of two hours of bloody good drama, we can get past it.”
“I bloody hope so.” He leafed through his script and found the stage direction that was causing so much trouble. Just two words—They kiss. It wasn’t difficult.
But it was.
“I’ll see you tomorrow, Gill. And don’t worry, I’ll bring breath mints.”
“Just bring your best game, love. That’s what’ll really piss Adam off.”
Won’t it just.
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About the Authors
Catherine Curzon is a royal historian who writes on all matters of 18th century. Her work has been featured on many platforms and Catherine has also spoken at various venues including the Royal Pavilion, Brighton, and Dr Johnson’s House.
Catherine holds a Master’s degree in Film and when not dodging the furies of the guillotine, writes fiction set deep in the underbelly of Georgian London.
She lives in Yorkshire atop a ludicrously steep hill.
Eleanor Harkstead often dashes about in nineteenth-century costume, in bonnet or cravat as the mood takes her. She can occasionally be found wandering old graveyards, and is especially fond of the ones in Edinburgh. Eleanor is very fond of chocolate, wine, tweed waistcoats and nice pens. She has a large collection of vintage hats, and once played guitar in a band. Originally from the south-east, Eleanor now lives somewhere in the Midlands with a large ginger cat who resembles a Viking.
Catherine and Eleanor love to hear from readers. You can find their contact information, website and author biographies at http://www.pride-publishing.com.
Also by Catherine Curzon and Eleanor Harkstead
An Actor’s Guide to Romance
Captivating Captains: The Captain and the Cavalry Trooper
Also by Catherine Curzon
I Need a Hero: The Angel on the Northern Line
The Captain and the Cricketer Page 28