To get you back up to speed before posting new story episodes for Lady Ann, here is everything that I've previously posted in one handy location.
It's the story of what happens in the first two books in brief, followed by the first three episodes of the new book.
What has Gone on
Before
Being the story in brief that is more intricately told in the novels
Lady Ann’s Holiday and Lady Ann’s Folly.
Lady Ann’s Holiday
In the spring of 1908, in the Yorkshire
village of Griply, Lady Ann Neville, eldest daughter of the Earl, Lord Howard
Neville and his wife Elizabeth, found herself being forced to visit London to
be paired up with yet another unsuitable suitor. Ann didn’t want to go but as
fortune would have it, she obtained the means to avoid the trip when she
happened upon a pendant with the mystical power to switch two people’s bodies.
Ann made the dubious decision to trade places with Burt Harper, the
dim-witted stable hand who tended her horse. Burt was sent off to London in her
place feeling very bewildered and Ann remained in Yorkshire with a note giving
her two weeks holiday from Burt’s job and plenty of money to spend.
Burt had long been in love with Ann from afar and he willingly went on
with the charade, doing his best to fit in and pretend to be the real Ann. This
came easier than he had expected as the pendant continued to work its magic
long after the swap. Burt took on more and more of Ann’s ways and mode of speech
until there was little to distinguish him from the original lady. He, or rather
she, even started thinking of herself as Ann.
Meanwhile in the country, Ann found herself in the opposite position.
The more that time passed, the more she found herself acting like a Yorkshire
clod. Her accent became base and lowborn and even her intelligence and
education slipped away. Soon she had lost all her refinement, carousing with
the other peasants and frittering her money away. Her self-image began to shift
as well until she, or rather he, saw himself as a lower class oike and
identified fully as being Burt.
The new Ann in London met the man the original Ann had been intended
for, but rather than pushing him away, this new Ann found herself falling in
love. When the original planned two weeks were up, the new Ann decided to
extend her stay in the capital so that she could pursue this new courtship,
despite feeling guilty about trapping the former Ann in her place.
And in Yorkshire, the new Burt really was trapped. He was forced to
work as a stable hand, shovelling dung and grooming the horses as well as
numerous other pitiful labouring tasks. Worse, his personality continued to
shift and he became fawning and obsequious to his betters, rushing round eager
to please them. He even started taking on memories of his new life and, in
desperation at his predicament, even started fantasising that he might remain
that way – such was the hopelessness of his position.
In desperation, Burt made a gambit to retrieve the pendant from Ann’s
bedroom, but was caught in the act by Hattie, Ann’s sister. Exposed, Burt was
dragged down to the village square by the Earl and flogged then thrown in gaol.
He was put on trial and put at risk of many years imprisonment.
In London, the new Ann’s courtship ended with a proposal of marriage
and Ann eagerly accepted. Lord Richard Hurley, her suitor, seemed the ideal
husband, but almost immediately he showed signs of being cold and distant now
that he had obtained her promise.
Burt’s trial began with dire portents of Burt’s future, but at the last
minute, the Earl decided to have him released on advice, via telephone, from
the new Ann who was soon to return home. This required a substantial bribe to
the magistrate, but though Howard Neville achieved his goal and Burt’s release,
it got him in trouble.
Chastised by a local MP and very embarrassed, Howard laid the blame at
Hattie’s door, chastising her severely. She, after all, was the one who had
accused Burt in the first place. Howard made his daughter’s life miserable,
leaving her fuming and wishing she could get back at him.
With Burt released, he gratefully accepted the return to his life as a
servant. Even that was better than prison. When Ann returned finally it was in
doubt whether he would even accept a return to his former life. Both Ann and
Burt deliberated over whether to swap back. Ann had grown accustomed to being a
titled lady and Burt was so obsequious now he was willing to do anything to
ingratiate himself with his beautiful mistress.
In the end, after some conflict in which Burt professed his love for
her, Burt and Ann reached an accord. The former Ann would remain a man and a
commoner, ill-educated and dim, while the former Burt would hold onto the life
of a cultured lady.
But Ann had been exposed to more of Richard’s coldness and she missed
the promiscuity of her old life. As Lady Ann’s Holiday came to a close she was
left questioning her decision and fantasising about a different switch – not to
become Burt again, but to swap places with Mavis, Burt busty, bar-wench
girlfriend. She didn’t want to stay that way forever but she longed to have her
wicked way with the virile man and she had inherited the original Ann’s rather
reckless behaviour.
Lady Ann’s Folly
With her reckless plan in mind, Lady Ann
invited Mavis up to Griply Hall’s nearby holiday cottage. There, she persuaded
the girl to a secret short-term trade. Ann became Mavis and spent a lovely
couple of hours getting her pleasure from Burt who remained unaware of this new
swap.
Things didn’t continue to go as smoothly though because Ann’s
mischievous sister, Hattie, discovered Mavis in the holiday cottage and found
out the truth. She allowed Mavis to take her sister’s place in the manor and
when Ann returned she found herself trapped in the body of a common serving
girl.
Richard planned to take his fiancée with him to Nockton Vale to meet
his mother and, eager to make the most of her opportunity, Mavis pushed for a
rapid departure. Ann tried to prevent the body thief from leaving on the train
but was unable to. Mavis escaped in Lady Ann’s body, leaving the former Ann in
hers and forced to take on the life of a humble barmaid.
The new Ann and former Mavis arrived in Nockton Vale in the East
Midlands and set out to secure her new position, but Lillian, her future
mother-in-law seems even colder than her son and more conniving. It seems that
Mavis may have a challenge ahead of her if she wants to maintain any kind of
power in her potential marriage to Lord Hurley.
Hattie had meanwhile taken possession of the magical pendant and she
had plans of her own to take revenge on her parents. The Earl had blamed her
for the debacle surrounding Burt’s trial and her mother had supported him. Hattie’s
uncle’s family were visiting and they had just employed a new maid named
Nellie. These events presented her with some ideas.
Hattie hatched a complicated plan and then set herself the task of carrying
it out. By the time she was finished, her father, Howard, was trapped in the
body of the new maid, Nellie. Elizabeth, his wife, was stuck as a four year old
boy called Reggie, her nephew and son of the domineering Uncle Patrick. Nellie
was temporarily using Hattie’s own body and Hattie had taken the place of her
father.
Now a pitiful maid, Howard was forced to do his new duties. Hattie had
made the body swap while he slept so he had no idea how it had happened. This
left him questioning reality and wondering if he had really been a man before,
especially as his voice and character started to become more like a servile
wench. When he tried to challenge the new Earl, really his daughter in
disguise, he was chastised severely and locked in the cellar.
Hattie’s plan had also made her mother be none the wiser to her true
identity. Now stuck as a four year old boy, Elizabeth found herself being
spanked whenever she tried to explain what had happened to her new parents.
Like her former husband, she was forced to keep her head down and pretend that
she really was Reggie, just to avoid being punished again!
While that was going on, Reggie had assumed her former place as lady of
the manor, but his immaturity posed Hattie a problem and risked exposing her
plan to everyone. To resolve this, Hattie made him write a hundred times that
he was really the Countess and should behave appropriately. This caused the
acceleration of the mental changes and helped him quickly assume many of the
manure feminine qualities of the true Elizabeth.
Meanwhile in the stables, Burt was questioning his decision to remain a
servant but he decided he had to make the best of it and his entire happiness
hinged on his future with Mavis. He begins planning a wedding proposal but when
conflict comes between them it makes him question even more the decision he has
made in remaining a man.
At the centre of this ever more complicated tangle stands Hattie. She
has achieved all her goals but in order to do that she has been forced to take
on the identity of her father, the Lord Howard Neville, a man in his late
fifties with a bald head and a thick silver moustache. She saw it only as a
means to an end but in fact she has come to enjoy the sense of authority she
has gained. Being a man is strange but becoming her father has allowed her to
start seeing things as he would. The true Earl was a domineering misogynist and
with the pendant’s mental changes ticking on, Hattie is seeing life more and
more as he would, accepting the inferiority of women and seeing men as the more
important sex. She still plans to change back into her own body in twenty four
hours but it remains to be seen how much another full day as her father will
affect her state of mind. Maybe she will take on his personality a little too
much...
But that isn’t the development that threatens to change the course of
this tale for everyone. It is the lowly Nellie, now in the body of Lady Hattie,
who may prove to be a catalyst to new and shocking developments, for she seems
determined to keep her new social position as a titled lady, and she knows
where the pendant is hidden!
Griply Valley
Yorkshire
England
1908
Chapter One
1
Lord Howard Neville had always been, to his mind, a fairly
perfect specimen of manhood. As the Earl of Griply, a wealthy, titled
gentleman, he had possessed all the attributes he could have wished. At fifty
seven years of age, this towering well-built man had crafted a life and persona
for himself that satisfied every aspiration he had. He was over six feet tall
with a proud jutting chin and a stern brow, a thick, silver handlebar moustache
and a bald head. With his irascible egocentric character, he dominated every
situation he found himself in, perfectly secure in his position and his power,
his physicality and, most of all, his masculinity.
But when he opened his eyes from sleep and realised he was
still trapped in the cellar of his home, he remembered again how utterly all
these qualities had been stripped away.
He wasn’t the lord of the manor anymore. He wasn’t even a
man. He was a pitiful wench; a serving girl; the lowly maid-of-all-work. He was
still Nellie Barrow.
He raised his skinny arms and hands up where he could see
them and moaned. There was almost no light coming from the steep and narrow
stair leading up to the house and precious little coming from the tiny windows
at the top of the walls at ground level, dirty and obscured as they were by foliage.
The arms seemed so weak, so unlike the steely limbs he should have been seeing.
The fingers were so tiny.
He felt his body: the thin legs inside the dress (dress!) he
had been forced to wear, the round tummy, the oddly shaped breasts. Touching
the maid uniform he was trapped in made him want to weep but the idea of that
was just as horrifying. He covered his face in his hands and muttered, “Why me?
Oh Lor’, why me?”
But even that chilled him further. He could hear the
difference in the way he talked now. Even his dialect was being stripped from
him. Straight from sleep, without any kind of forethought, his choice of words,
the simpering lower class inflexion: they were those of the common maid he had
been turned into. Gone were his brash, confident tones and hard well-bred
consonants and the weak ignorant sounds stripped him even further of his
confidence.
He recalled the terrible events of the previous day: the
humiliation of waking up to find himself transformed into the body of one of
his own housemaids; being forced to act out the part as though he truly
belonged in it despite all his efforts to stand up to the higher servants who
were now his “superiors.” And the worst: finally confronting the imposter who
had taken his place as the Earl and learning just how complete his
doppelganger’s disguise was as he faced the full ire and retribution he would
have meted out himself for such impertinence.
He couldn’t believe that this could have happened to him,
with still no clue as to how. He couldn’t believe that the fake Earl had been
so real. He couldn’t believe the butler, Powell, had made him spend the night
down here in the cellar. But more than anything else, he couldn’t believe that
he had stayed here, trapped and punished like a snivelling simpleton, even
though the door hadn’t been locked. He could have left at any time in the night
but he had been too afraid. He had gone on following their terrible ruling out
of fear.
Why hadn’t he left in the night? Why hadn’t he gone back to
at least his maid’s room in the attic? Why hadn’t he gone up to the first floor
and demanded the imposter Earl get out of his bed and give him his life back?
But the answer was obvious.
He was afraid? He wasn’t himself. He wasn’t acting like
himself. All that confidence and surety that he could solve any problem for
himself had been stripped from him. He wasn’t Lord Howard Neville – not at the
moment. He was only Nellie Barrow. And Nellie Barrow couldn’t risk the enmity
of the butler, and most certainly not the Earl. Nellie Barrow wouldn’t dare
confront anyone, let alone a powerful aristocratic man. Nellie Barrow would be
too petrified to go against a direct order to remain in the cellar.
“I’m Nellie Barrow now,” he whimpered forlornly. “I’m Nellie
Barrow and there ain’t two ways about it.”
There was a scrape and a rattle from the top of the cellar
steps. Howard flinched back into the folds of his maid’s uniform, terribly
worried as the door up there opened a crack then pushed open fully. More light
spilled down the tatty wooden steps but he couldn’t see who was there. He was
terrified it would be the fake Earl but instead the voice of the butler came
down, lanced with chill authority.
“Nellie, get yourself up these steps now before I have a
mind to lock you down there for good.”
Howard jerked up to his feet and hastened to follow his
instructions, rushing up the narrow staircase. Powell stood at the apex glaring
down at him and he wilted still further under those merciless eyes.
“Well?” snapped Powell. “What have you got to say for
yourself girl?”
Howard stammered. This was the moment when he could stand up
for himself; try to explain the truth of this magical exchange or at least
attempt to rebuild some of his pride and self confidence. Instead he said, “I’m
so sorry Mr Powell. I done wrong. I shouldn’t’a talked to the Earl. I should
have done as I was told.”
Powell glared coldly and Howard wilted further.
“I’m so sorry sir. I’m sorry. I should have known my place,”
he said, hating himself for saying those things but truly unable to do any
different.
“Have you learned your lesson?” asked Powell.
“Yes sir. Certainly. I have,” stammered Howard, eager to
please him; to be allowed egress from the cold dankness and be given a chance
to remain in Griply Hall long enough to find some way to change back to being
himself,
“Then get upstairs and make yourself presentable,” snapped
Powell, “and be quick about it. There are chores to be done and the family will
be awake soon.”
“Yes sir. Thank you sir,” gushed Howard, rushing past him
and heading for the servant’s staircase. “I’m sorry sir. I won’t let you down.”
But inside his throbbing head, Howard knew he had let
himself down. He was losing track of everything that made him who he was. If he
wasn’t careful he was going to end up living the life of this maid willingly
and subserviently.
2
The woman who had been Lady Ann Neville just a few days
before opened her eyes and looked up at the dirty bare roof of the hat barn. It
was the chill that had woken her, playing across her bare legs and arms that
splayed from under the single blanket she and Burt shared.
She didn’t shift. Burt was lying on his side against her,
his huge muscular limbs wrapped round her. He was still deeply asleep and
snoring gently. Ann turned at the neck to regard his innocent slumbering face
and thought about the tangle their lives had become; how confusing it all was
now and how unexpected all of this had been.
Only a month or so earlier she had been Burt, dim-witted and
simple, just going about her duties as a stablehand, making love with Mavis,
the slutty barmaid from the village; admiring the beautiful Lady Ann from afar.
In those days her desires had been simple because her intellect was. She had
know little doubt or worry, just shovelling the dung, cleaning the stables,
grooming the horses. And the nights with Mavis were enough pleasure to mark out
the endless drudge, to keep her content. Or content enough. She had known she
could never really be with Lady Ann but she still enjoyed her life to a point.
Things had started to go wrong when Lady Ann took her, as
Burt, and made them change places.
Suddenly she’d been Lady Ann herself, hurled into a new
world of London socialising and trips to the theatre. And no matter how quickly
she became used to the whirl and the beauty, the gentility expected of her, she
was never truly secure on her feet. Even when she found love and betrayed the
new Burt, planning to trap him in his new life as a servant, she had seen
cracks in her contentment almost immediately. Richard Hurley, her fiancé as
Ann, was not the kind and loving man he had implied he would be.
She had fought for her life as Ann and kept it but it hadn’t
made her happy enough and now she’d ruined everything.
Changing places a second time, this time with Mavis herself,
had left Ann trapped more fully than ever before. She had been stuck as a
commoner as Burt but without anything to compare it to it had just been her
life. Becoming Ann had, after a period of acclimatisation, been mostly joyous.
Now that she was Mavis she had all the comparisons she needed to comprehend her
folly and how low she had sunk.
She had been a lady of the manor! Why couldn’t she have just
accepted that and lived that way? She could have broken off the engagement with
Lord Hurley – she realised that now. She needn’t have married him. She could
have been happy.
And now look at her: curled up on the floor of a hay barn
with an dirty, uncouth, country simpleton; nothing but a serving girl at the
local watering house with little to no prospect of ever getting her real body
back.
And what was her real body now even? Who was she? She still
felt, on the whole, like Ann trapped as Mavis, but she knew it wouldn’t be long
now before her sense of identity started to shift more fully toward being Mavis
for real. Already her voice was mostly that of a Yorkshire clodhopper. She knew
the education she had inherited as Ann had been stripped away.
“Is this me now?” she whispered.
Beside her Burt stirred, making a low buzzing in the back of
his throat and smacking his lips together. He shifted his arm, gently rubbing
her naked stomach under the blanket and giving her a graze of a thrill.
There was nothing left whatsoever in him of the original
Lady Ann. That he had been a gentile lady was completely eradicated from him
body and soul. He was only the simple man that she had once been now, and more
perhaps. She sensed that his own changes had turned him into a simpler creature
than even she had been once. All she knew for certain was that this Burt; the
only Burt now; loved her and wanted to look after her. He was passionate and kind
and doggedly loyal. And he was a titan under the blanket. He was everything she
had fantasised about as Ann and everything she fantasised about now.
She let out a brief and shallow sigh.
There was no getting out of this new life of hers. That
seemed certain.
Mavis. Barmaid. Lover of Burt. Lower class wench.
And maybe the only way forward was to reconcile with that;
explore it; test out each facet of her new role and accept it for what it was.
She had wanted to be loved by a kind and passionate man. She
had wanted to be with Burt. She had achieved that, even though she was now
trapped in the fantasy.
She snuggled up against him and he mumbled something
unintelligible but affectionate. Ann smiled. But a frown passed over her face
because she realised there was something sad about all this, if she really was
trapped.
Because surely she could never tell Burt about her true
identity. He would never understand. He might even be hurt and angry.
It was a shame. She wanted to be open with him. But she was
sure she couldn’t.
No. Burt must never find that out; that his Ann was now only
a common servant girl. He must never come to understand the disgrace that she
now felt to be brought so low and kept there.
3
Lady Harriet Neville, youngest daughter of the Earl and
Ann’s sister, gave a gruff, guttural snort and opened her eyes, smacking her
lips several times. She had been snoring deeply and the sound of it had woken
her up. She brought her hands up to her face and rubbed her eyes and grizzled
cheeks. She slowly sat up, scratching the smooth skin of her bald head and
absently smoothing down the crescent of silver hair that circled from one ear
to the other. She went on making most unladylike smacking sounds with her lips
and then smoothed her bushy moustache down, wondering what she should do
today.
Then she stopped and her eyes went wide.
She whipped her hands up in front of her face,
the massive, manly hands, of her father: lined with age, the backs laced
with wisps of silver hair. She felt her face; the hard cragginess of it; the
thick moustache, the bushy eyebrows and finally her bald pate and crown.
"Good God," she muttered in her father's dusky
voice.
For that first full minute upon waking she had forgotten the
body-swapping hijinks she had perpetrated over the last couple of days - but
waking up as a man and her own father had not reminded her! Her every sensation
upon waking, from the uncouth, guttural noises to the hairy body and hairless
head had done nothing to jerk her into a sense of wrongness. She had already
grown so used to this new form.
"Goodness gracious me," she said, but hearing
those strange words enunciated in a perfect simulacrum of her father's accent
and word choice was deeply chilling.
She recalled her actions just before dropping off to sleep
the night before: underscoring her new identity just as she had forced her
little nephew Reggie to do the day before to make him act more like the
Countess now that he was spending an extended time in her body.
What had she said...?
"My name is
Howard Bartholomew Neville, the Earl, Lord Neville. I am a fifty six year old
man who owns the better part of this valley.”
"I am Howard
Neville. I am a bombastic and confident man who looks down on women and bullies
all those around him.”
"I am Lord Howard
Neville. I have a wife named Elizabeth and two daughters named Ann and
Harriet.”
“I am Howard Neville,
the Earl of Griply Hall. I am a haughty misogynist who looks down on everyone
about him; an arrogant and overconfident aristocrat.”
It had seemed only a playful game at the time but with each
phrase she had felt the odd tickling sensation at the back of her skull that
she was now coming to associate with the effect of the magic working on her,
turning her more and more into her father, not just in physical form but in
mental attributes and character.
"My name is
Howard Bartholomew Neville, the Earl, Lord Neville."
Those words alone were chilling enough – that she could
actually alter her own sense of self until she saw herself more as man than lady
– until she became in her own eyes, a middle-aged man who owned the better part
of the valley.
God, what would that be like? How terrible would it be to
assume that identity? To become the man in charge of the estate and all its...
all its holdings...?
"Hmmm." Hattie rubbed her chin thoughtfully and
then gave one of her father's chuckles.
Actually the idea of owning all that land and having
everyone in the valley defer to her authority sounded kind of wonderful. It had
been fabulous to Lord herself around the house yesterday but there was a whole
valley out there of peasants who lived to bow to her newfound authority. It
would be so delightful to bask in the adoration and servility from her many
subjects.
And for now they really were her subjects. "After all,
I am the Earl," she said, receiving a tingle at the top of her neck.
But that tingle brought her back to her senses. Enjoyable
though this experiment was, she had to maintain a firm control. She had a
feeling that the more like her father she became, the more inclined she would
be to want to be like him and the less inclined she would feel to return to
feminine ways. She was of course slowly becoming a bombastic and confident
man who looked down on women and bullied all those around him. That man – that
end goal – would not want to sully himself with female traits and would
certainly not want to become his own daughter. Hattie was sure of that.
With the perspective she had already gained she recognised
the contrasting virtues of the masculine and feminine life. It was already
obvious to her that women were inferior to men in many ways.
It was actually a shame that she couldn't pick and choose
from her father's attributes. She had no particular desire to look down on
women (it wasn't their fault that their lives were filled with such pointless
trivialities or that they were so weak), but it would be a delight to possess
such a high level of confidence that she could be described as bombastic!
To imagine striding around possessing that irascible sense
of purpose and self-importance – and for it to be a physical fact based on her
manly body! She relished that and she longed to practice again while she had
the chance – perhaps today getting out of the house and interacting with the
peasants whose lives she currently owned. That would be spiffing!
It was the last iteration she was most unsure of: the one
cementing her has the husband and father of Elizabeth and the girls. That was
not a part of her father's identity she had any wish to absorb. Though... Was
it already influencing her, just from that single spoken statement? Had the
changes crackled on while she snored in her father's bed, wearing not just his
pyjamas but his entire manly body; resting within his masculine brain?
Elizabeth... and the girls. Surely she should have
visualised them as her mother and sister; as herself.
And there was something else she noticed now. Reggie. She
had thought of him as her nephew just moments earlier – not as her
cousin.
"By Jove," she whispered.
She threw back the covers and put her legs out of the
bed.
Reggie, in the Countess's body, was already up and about.
Hattie had the room to herself. She put her hands on her muscular, meaty thighs
and stared down at them. Then she caught a glimpse of herself in the dressing
table mirror and walked tentatively across, seeing her huge masculine frame
come more fully into view.
She was gigantic and not feminine in the least. There wasn't
the slightest hint of her true gender in the way she stood or the expression on
her face. The words that came from her were not the words of a twenty yer old
woman.
"Am I him already?" she muttered, but the answer
seemed obvious. The colour drained from her cheeks and the dome of her white
forehead. "Am I... myself? Am I Howard Neville?"
But no. Surely not. Not by a long way. The real Howard
Neville would not be filled with such conflicted emotions. He was in total
control. He didn't simper like a silly woman as she was doing now. That proved
she was still herself really; still Hattie; and that meant there was still time
to see this through. It was, after all, only one more full day she would be
spending like this. The return to her own form would take place overnight
tonight, once again while everyone was asleep.
It made her sad that it was going to be cut short so soon,
despite the clear dangers. That was all the more reason to take full advantage
of her position of authority while she had it.
Yes. She resolved to make the most of being her father today
– to really enjoy every superior aspect of his life and his importance.
Hattie put her big hands on her cheeks and ran them up over
her bald head, then she smiled at herself.
"I'm Lord Howard Neville," she declared. "I
am the most powerful man in the region."
Her smile turned into a grin. Saying that made her doubts
drop clear away. She even considered doing it again and begger the
consequences.
Yes. She puffed up her chest. "I am Howard Bartholemew
Neville. I am the Earl of Griply Hall, husband to Elizabeth and father to Ann
and Harriet. My brother Patrick is staying at the moment with my niece and
nephew."
His breathing was heavier than normal. He stared at his
reflection, feeling the effects of what he'd said tickle at his brain stem. He
felt giddy and a little scared, but he pushed that silliness aside. The longer
he remained as a man the clearer it became that emotions were the province of
weak-minded, simpering females and not worth wasting time on. He was certainly
not going to allow himself to be tossed by their whims when he became his
daughter again. He was going to act far more like a man!