Saturday 6 December 2014

Mistress Sapphire

For those amongst you who enjoy dropping your pants for a female disciplinarian you can do a lot worse than paying a visit to this excellent exponent of the art. Quietly spoken, this Edgeware based lady mixes kindness and gentle humour with a serious right arm and a no nonsense approach. She warms backsides with a variety of implements and an impressive display of roles from governess to police officer. In her cosy and well furnished chambers you can fulfil practically any persona you desire and, well smacked, enjoy a post session tea and chocolate biscuit. Nothing is hurried, all is refined and civilised. But, by God, she can hurt you. If that is what you want. Going over her knee, pants down and bottom bared, for an early Christmas spanking was heaven.
So I was told.
I, of course, would not dream of indulging in such hedonistic practices.



Mistress Sapphire (North London) - Tel 07984 579501 for appointment.

Monday 3 November 2014

The First Time I Got Caned (M/m)


This is a new story, only recently composed. Total fiction but fun to create when my social life was at a low ebb. I confess I had a small incentive, other than the fact that Christmas preparations generally mean blogging neglect in the early winter months. Sometime ago I posted a small and inconsequential piece on the red letter day I did receive my first actual experience of a cane across my bottom. I was about eleven and, other than the fact that it was the first time, that caning was definitely not memorable. But I posted it when feeling idle, purely as a small blog, and called it, unoriginally, My First Caning. There must be something in a title because it vey quickly went to the top of my hits list and has remained there ever since posting. To my constant puzzlement it still gets more hits, by a long way, than any other blog or story of any ilk. So this, a detailed fictional account of a fourteen year old boy's first caning, trousers down, is a bit of a response. And the title is, hopefully, the hook for all those googlers who key in certain words. But, however or whoever finds it, I hope they and you enjoy....

The First Time I Got Caned

I can remember it as if it was yesterday. It is as fixed on my mind as indelibly as any event in my childhood. No, more so. Much more than any Christmas, much more than the day my parents separated, and so much more than when my favourite pet died. It is a day that is etched on my memory, a day in which all the small details still reverberate, it is the day I got caned. For the first time. And it was not any ordinary caning, not that I know what an ordinary caning is, or didn’t then all those years ago. It was long drawn out, in circumstances, in sentence, and in execution. Especially execution. I was fourteen, I had been warned, I ignored the threats. With two others I suffered our school’s final sanction, our headmaster’s ultimate punishment. It pained him, so he said, to have to do it. But do it he did. To me and two others, partners in crime, authors of our deserved downfall. So he said. For them, both of them, it was nothing new. They had been caned before. But I had not. Their fear was of the pain, the expectation, the humiliation. Mine was of the unknown. And nothing anyone said could ready me for it. My first caning. And I had no illusions. He, the headmaster, had made that clear. I was going straight into the big time for my initiation to scholastic discipline. Six of the best, how strange that phrase sounds, six of his very best with his very best cane. With my trousers down. There would be no gentle learning for this miscreant boy. I had seriously transgressed and there was no alternative. My first caning was to be my best or worst, depending on your point of view. And nothing anyone said could ready me for the experience. My only saviour would be myself.

 

I wondered, as he gave out the sentence, what it would be like. My stomach lurched, my legs trembled, and breath seemed not to come. But the words were absorbed. The cane, six strokes, across our backsides. Nothing less would do for our heinous crimes. Heinous, I am sure that is what he said. He would wait an hour or so, to allow his anger to subside. But when it did we would be summoned. Singly. He emphasised this. Singly. One at a time. As if to do what he intended to do, six strokes across our bottoms, other than separately would dilute the punishment, lessen its importance. So we would be called, separately, to have what we must have. To suffer what we must suffer. After an hour or so. And then, all anger spent or most of it, we would be caned, six times, for our most heinous of crimes. With our trousers down. My companions flinched, I remained silent and still. The enormity of the sentence I could hardly absorb. Six strokes. Six strokes of his cane, delivered in a manner my fevered brain could not imagine. My fear compounded as I realised that my companions, familiar with such scholastic matters, were equally afraid. They had been here before but knew this would be worse. This caning was to be high on the disciplinary scale. When we were dismissed, dismissed only to await our fateful summons, I had not one jot of consolation. We would all be treated equally, we were all equally culpable. The headmaster looked at me as he said this, I am sure he did, there will be no concessions. I don’t expel fourteen year old boys, he said. They deserve a second chance. A second chance, the price of which was something I could hardly bear to imagine. We all went our separate ways, desperate to fill our allotted time in personal ways. None spoke, there was nothing to say. Our deed had been done, we had been caught and, sentence passed we awaited retribution. Our second chance. I hoped it would seem like that, a second chance, when I bent for a vengeful cane.

 

It was all so innocent, or so it seemed to us. Boys are naturally curious and that curiosity, at a certain age, encompasses girls. But life was strict all those years ago and girls with all their mysterious complications and temptations were kept well away from fourteen year old boys. Never the two shall meet was our schools mantra. A policy which fed the curiosity and increased the fascination. The segregation, the seclusion, the distant shepherding of the strange female species only enhanced their attraction. And two days a year, spring and autumn sports, the two species gathered in proximity. A healthy interaction or a test designed by authoritative minds of a Machiavellian bent? I still, at this distance, do not know. But the rules, oh yes those rules, were clearly defined. Scrupulously outlined. It is inter-school sports, parents and guardians and friends and hangers on watching and cheering, and it is important. But there are rules, rules that must not be breached. Five schools may come together in the one suitable venue but our school, our boys, know those rules. When not running, jumping, throwing javelin or putting shot, we stay together. Shepherded, segregated, distant. Those were our school rules. Immutable, rigid, promulgated. Breach them at your peril. We listened, we absorbed, we understood. They were said every six months, every time before the big day. The day that five schools in the area came together in healthy outdoor, inter active sport. But for three boys, me and two companions, our thoughts were not healthy. And for that we were due to be caned. Singly. In an hour. Trousers down.

 

I had regrets, I remember that. Not regrets for what we had done but regrets, many, for being caught. My hour was passing and I awaited my inevitable summons with increasing dread. We had showered on that interactive sports day, my companions and I only being involved in the team events and suffering early elimination. Showering schoolboys were closely monitored but on this fateful day clearly not closely enough. We found ourselves left to our own devices and, instead of returning to the school bus to await departure, we decided to explore the hosting school. A girl’s school. We had no particular plan, I remember that, and no particular intent to do mischief. But all that day was conspiring against us, or so it seemed as I awaited my summons. We explored the impressive grounds, skirted the outer walls of the equally impressive building, registered the various classes and outbuildings. And then we heard it. Familiar sounds of gushing water and, less familiar, thin female voices. Voices echoing around an empty chamber, briefly filled. The sound of girls. Girls showering. Naked girls.

 

Someone has just told me that Baker, a companion, has been sent for. It will not be long for me.

 

I wonder how long it will take? How long will it take Baker to walk down two flights of stairs, cross two corridors, knock and enter? Or knock, wait, and enter. How long will it take for the headmaster to say what he has to say and for Baker to bend down? No, before he bends down he must fumble with his belt, undo his trousers, lower his clothes. Then he will bend down, then he will be caned. Six times. And I wonder, as I visualise it, how long it will take.

 

We tried to look, to reach the small high windows and peer down on those unseen naked, female, bodies. They were just, tantalisingly, too high. The windows, not the naked females. Nothing around us suggested a solution and then one of us, the tallest, said we could stand on his shoulders. But not for too long. I eagerly, remembered now with shame, volunteered and after a couple of failed attempts managed to get my head level with the first window. It was open and, if I risked putting my hands on it I could lever myself and glimpse my first sight of, hopefully, naked female flesh. The temptation was too close, the prize too immediate for me to relent. I risked all, fleetingly, for a few seconds and when I fell to the ground, giggling, I convinced myself that I had seen what I desperately wanted to see. Baker was now equally eager to take my place. He desired to see what I had seen, or what he and I were convinced I had seen. I think he did. He was an inch or so taller than me, usually unworthy of comment but crucial in our adventure, and he stayed longer at the window and saw more. Or at least he convinced himself he did. His laughter on the ground was louder and longer than mine, indicating a challenge accepted and achieved. We should have stopped then. The chattering, thin, female voices had dropped slightly in volume, lessened in the intensity that communal nakedness induces. Even amongst girls. We should have noticed, as we giggled in our collective guilt and clandestine shame. We should have stopped then.

 

Baker has gone to his dormitory. He was crying, or had been  so I was told, he was distressed. He lay on his bed and said nothing, other than indicating that Mallon, the tallest of us, had been summoned. It had been twenty five minutes. Twenty five minutes since Baker himself was called. Allowing for a two minute walk to the headmaster’s study and a two minute walk back, perhaps it took three in his suffering, which means at least twenty minutes in the headmaster’s study. Twenty minutes to do what? It only takes a couple of minutes to lower your trousers and bend down and surely no more than three or four to take six strokes. Five minutes at the most if the headmaster spaced each stroke to his behind at sixty second intervals. Almost fifteen minutes when nothing was happening. Did Baker take all that time to recover and pull up his clothes? Was he made to wait whilst the headmaster considered what he was about to do? Neither option, due soon for me, appealed. I calculated and feared that nothing almost as much as I feared all else.

 

Mallon, the tallest and heaviest of us, was determined to have his moment. The subtle changes in the naked girl’s camaraderie had not registered. It took both Baker and me to lift him. Perhaps it was the moment, perhaps it was the sight of frightened naked girls staring at the window, perhaps it was the unfamiliar surge of incipient testosterone surging through a fourteen year old boy. Or perhaps it was none of these things. Perhaps it was just pure boyish devilment. But seeing and being seen, we should have registered that shower room change of atmosphere, released a charge in Mallon which compounded our situation. We would be caught, that was even now decided, a sturdy sports mistress was alerted and acting. But Mallon, our tallest and heaviest, proved to be also our most stupid. Our offence registered high on any boy’s school scale, he now pushed it to unseen limits. He lit a firecracker, a jumping jack, and threw it amongst the naked girls. He was laughing uproariously as we all fell on the ground, his companions were not.

 

Mallon went five minutes ago. He should be there by now. Will he be made to wait or will he go straight in. What is worse, the journey, the waiting, the going in, the instructions? The undoing of one’s pants or the bending over? Then further waiting, further adjustment of clothes? All this and then pain, unfamiliar pain, searing and excruciating pain. A pain never experienced, never imagined. Until now. Imagined by me, experienced by Mallon. Our firecracker. The boy who notched a misdemeanour, a silly prank, to a heinous crime. So the headmaster said. Heinous, a word, a word worthy of taking down anyone’s trousers. Soon for me but, for now, Mallon. He should be there by now.

 

Baker is recovering so someone said. He won’t say much, except that it hurt. The hardest caning he had ever had. Someone else asked him if he got it with his trousers down. More than that he said. Heinous. I can remember it as if it was yesterday. It is as fixed on my mind as indelibly as any event in my childhood. A day that is etched on my memory. It is the day I got caned.

 

And Mallon, the Mallon now bending over and receiving his caning, his heinous caning, was to blame. Or so we said. As we collapsed on the ground, one laughing, all things changed. A track suited woman appeared, girls screamed, a series of explosions echoed beyond the wall, more screams, girls appeared. Some naked, some wrapped in towels, some clutching feet in pain. Real or imagined. Another adult, also track suited, male, some shouting, more screaming and, in the distance, a firework gradually being spent. Order was gradually restored and we were returned to our own school on the earliest bus. And then the headmaster, appraised of all the facts or the ones that mattered, and the lecture, the anger, the sentence, the dismissal. For an hour. All to be encapsulated in s single afternoon. From idle schoolboy thought to busy scholastic cane was merely the blink of an eye in a lifetime. But as I waited, waited for Mallon to follow all the rituals of Baker, it was a thousand million blinks. And all, everyone, seemed longer than a day.

 

He has been back for over five minutes. I heard him pass along the corridor, shuffling, slow and deliberate. Soon it would be me. I have rehearsed my speech, if asked for anything in mitigation, but suspect no words will be needed. We should not have been there, that in itself is enough. Mallon’s stupidity merely compounded. It made me angry but I could not totally absolve myself. My only uncharitable thought about him was that if, if no firecracker had been deployed, if no girl’s foot had been injured, perhaps my first caning would have been with my trousers up. No words were really needed and the few that were uttered were merely to confirm what I already knew, or suspected. My journey to the headmaster’s study was slow and nerve wracking. Mallon had also cried, or so someone said. But, like Baker, he refused to confirm any of those details fellow boys desire. Now all waited for me. I remember knocking on his door, the headmaster’s, tentatively at first and then with courage I did not feel. I was not called in but, after a moment, the door opened and the headmaster stood aside to allow me to enter. I had never been in his study before, except in the summer before I became a pupil, and the surroundings were unfamiliar. The room was small and furnished just as you would expect such a study to be. I registered little except on a shiny brown desk rested an equally shiny lighter brown cane. It screamed at me Mallon and Baker and I averted my eyes. The headmaster wasted little time, he may have caned unmercifully if others were to be believed but he had no wish to prolong my obvious distress. Except in the way he intended. Preliminaries were therefore to be kept to a minimum. There were no excuses and no reason to treat me differently from the others. Not being caned before was no excuse for what we did. I would therefore suffer the same fate as Mallon and Baker. I flinched and did so again when he told me to take off my jacket, undo my trousers, and bend over the back of the small chair he had conveniently placed. As I did so he spoke again, and I flinched again, and the words he spoke is what I remember to this day. They were what made my first caning very special. Trousers all the way down he said. And your underpants. I rarely cane a boy’s bare backside but this, I am afraid, is truly earned.

 

It is truly earned. The phrase still haunts. My first caning, on my bare backside, was truly earned. That is what he said. I trembled as the words intermingled with my nervous fumbling. Until that moment, until he uttered the fateful words, I had hoped against hope that it would not come to this. Allow my first caning some semblance of dignity; allow me to absorb the proffered, unfamiliar, strokes to my tender bottom with a degree of decorum. Not bare, not naked, as they did in Victorian times, as they did in prisons. As they did with juvenile felons, with birch and tawse. But it was not to be and I sensed that any unnecessary delay would fuel the earlier anger. I allowed my trousers to drop to my ankles and, with little fuss, pushed my underpants down to my knees and then, belatedly, to my ankles. Without bidding I bent over the back of the small chair and held on to the sides of the upholstered seat. It was a classic position and even though I was not familiar with it in reality it had a strange natural order. Perhaps all boys are programmed for such matters from birth. I closed my eyes and closed them even tighter when I sensed my shirt being lifted and rolled up my back. There were no illusions now. My bottom was upturned, naked, and waiting. My twin cheeks twitched slightly in nervous anticipation. I sensed him standing slightly to the left of me, adjusting his position, moving his feet, absorbing a view that many headmasters over many centuries had seen and dealt with. And then the cane, the cold stiff wood, touched my naked skin and threatened its attack. It tapped twice, gently across both my cheeks and I steeled myself for a pain I had never experienced. Only imagined. Six strokes, he said. Six strokes. Do not get up. That was all he said and I sensed nothing in his voice other than a desire to complete the task. I willed myself to bear it, willed myself to suffer the pain, to not cry out, or rise, or beg. I willed myself to take the six strokes decreed across my naked bottom, six strokes of the cane that I had, for the first time, truly earned. It was a few seconds after that desperate willing that I uttered the first of many screams.

 

As boys do we compared our stripes the following day. Our bottoms may not have been very resilient but our spirits were and all of us, Baker and Mallon and me, had recovered much of our composure by the morning. We took the opportunity between two lessons to visit the toilets and see our respective damage. I still think to this day that if we had been seen, by any knowing master, they would have guessed and understood. It is the way of such things and even those no longer boys remember their own canings. And ours was pretty high on the school’s scale so would be well known to many. But no one challenged us and in the cloister of an outlying toilet we lowered our pants and displayed our damage. Mallon’s and Baker’s marks were black and bluish and I was convinced they would never fade. All six strokes were evenly spaced, no more than two or three inches from top to bottom, across both of their cheeks. If I thought Baker’s looked the most severe, his bottom was smaller and whiter than Mallons and the marks created a vicious contrast with his untouched skin, I gleaned an utmost respect for the wielder. There was nothing wild about these chastisements. Unsurprisingly both agreed, comparing with each others, that mine looked far worse. As I had probably cried more than either of them the previous day I took this as some comfort, a belated and bizarre certificate of achievement. They said I had probably been caned harder, a first timer is still saveable if you truly lay it on was their opinion. Perhaps I was but, equally, I have an even smaller and softer behind than Baker. Or did so then. And like me, they admired the wielder of the cane. My marks were evenly spaced across both my cheeks within that short raised area of every boy’s bottom. Or so they said. And they were the blackest and bluest of the three of us. None touched the ridges of any other, all had fingered our own in ceaseless fascination, and as we collectively pulled up our pants it was clear we held no grudges. Neither against each other, or the headmaster who induced our discomfort. Such are the rituals of boyhood.

 

I screamed as the fire blazed across my behind. If I had any breath in my body that first stroke of the headmaster’s cane expelled it. How I resisted the burning fiery line as it invaded my brain I do not know. I should have risen, clutching my bottom and begging for no more of a cane I had long imagined but, until now, never felt. Tears were already filling in my eyes when the second stroke of the headmasters cane flashed across my bottom. Any shame I felt at the lifting of my shirt and the baring of my lower body was eclipsed by the intensity of my caning. I gripped the sides of the chair and, in some strange form of relief, howled with intensity as the third stroke cut across the centre of my cheeks. Anyone passing the headmaster’s study would be well aware that a boy was being caned, and caned severely. I steeled myself for the fourth lash of my chastisement but, for a moment, it did not come. Instead there was a gentle tapping against my burning and lacerated backside. Perhaps he sensed, given my rising distress, that a further stroke delivered too readily would undo any remaining resolve. Therefore he waited, waited until my agony subtly subsided. I had no illusions that I would be let off the last three, the gentle tapping of the cold wood against my skin signalled that there would be no reprieve. But the slight hiatus heightened the shame of my position. Bent over a chair, at fourteen years of age, with my trousers and underpants around my feet and my naked bottom exposed and beckoning. A bottom, until those first three strokes of his cane, that was as pure and unblemished as the petals of the softest pink rose. And now, as a rising and ceaseless throbbing indicated, it was marked for all time. Marked in the time honoured way of all schoolboys. The tapping ceased and I screwed my eyes and held my breath. It only took a second or so but the fourth thrash of the cane seemed to capture my entire behind. Pain shot through all my being and I screamed, I am sure I did, I screamed and screamed. The last two strokes quickly followed, no more than a couple of seconds apart, and tears fell copiously as I struggled to stay in position. It was all so quick, this last three, it took me a few moments to realise that my punishment was over. I think he had sensed that I would not remain bent for much longer, and a boy rising and clutching his bottom before completion would indicate failure for both. The man doing the caning and the boy on the receiving end. So if the start was slow and deliberate, the end was quick. But quick or slow each descending arc of his cane had found its intended target. Six fiery strokes across my virgin behind. I would not be sitting down for a while.

 

He said that as I was dressing. You will not be sitting down for a while. I had remained in position for a few moments, convinced that my caning had ceased but unwilling to risk any further wrath. The sting in my behind seemed to grow in intensity and the unfamiliar and involuntary throbbing in my cheeks echoed the uncontrollable sobs I continued to emit. He tapped my shoulder and I hesitatingly rose to a standing position. Thankfully my risen shirt, of which I was strangely unaware, fell to cover my nakedness. I pulled up my underpants, still in the grip of my uncontrolled sobs, and then slowly did the same with my trousers. It was only when I was fully dressed did I allow my hands to rub my now covered behind in the vain hope of easing the stinging pain. It brought little relief. It was then he said that I would not be sitting down for a while. I mumbled something, I do not know what it was, I only know that my fervent wish was to be elsewhere. As I was leaving he repeated something he said earlier. Not with any relish or malice, his demeanour had been with classic head masterly demeanour throughout my chastisement. Or seemed so to me. It was just a statement as I was heading for his door. I rarely cane a boy’s bare backside, he said, but this, I am afraid, was truly earned. I trust you will learn from it. If the stinging in my behind had been less, if the constant throbbing and burning in my nether cheeks had subsided a little, if my sobs had been under control, if all or any of these things I might have said something. Something profound and manly. As it was all he got from a boy who had screamed and howled not five minutes before was a weak smile. I had nothing to say, just then, to a man who had just given me my first caning. Trousers down.

 

I left the school four years later to go to University and in the interim period never got caned again. Trousers up or down. Whether Mallon or Baker did I do not know. Mallon, I am sure, our firecracker lad, would be unlikely to escape unscathed. But I did learn my lesson and, even though I came close a couple of times before my sixteenth birthday, I never again suffered scholastic pain to my backside. But I never forgot, you cannot totally expunge from your mind a first and only caning of that intensity and in that manner. If it had been with my trousers up, or even just on my underpants, the memory may have faded along with the marks. But not being caned on the bare behind. That is the ultimate, and I experienced it on the first and only time I bent over in the traditional manner for the traditional schoolboy justice. I saw that headmaster many years later. We both attended some civic function and he, although by now quite elderly, still retained that special aura that his chosen profession imbued. He didn’t recognise me but I felt it would be churlish not to remind him who I was when our paths crossed during the proceedings. He smiled at the mention of my name but whether in remembrance I did not know. Someone, I cannot remember who, realising we were erstwhile schoolboy and headmaster asked him if he ever caned me. He looked at me and I think then he did remember. I think he remembered it all. Me, Mallon, Baker, caned on our bare backsides. Trousers and everything down. It wasn’t that common, even if those days. The look he gave me told me he did remember. I smiled at him and he smiled back.  Possibly, he said, possibly I did cane him. We did such things in those days. And then he smiled again.  And if I did, he said, I am sure that it was truly earned.

 

Alfred Roy (2014)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Saturday 13 September 2014

The Saxon Horse of Edwin Cart (M/m) - a birching story


I first started writing CP stories around ten years ago when recovering from an operation. Missing the pleasure of active participation it was my form of intellectual wanking. I posted much of my early work on the Malespank website, they are still there, and still receive feedback from appreciative readers. This story, one of my first, has always been one of my favourites. I make no excuses for belatedly posting it on my own site. I am really far too old to live this particular fantasy but it doesn't stop me occasionally trying. The birch is an awesome and very special instrument. Alfred Roy.


The Saxon Horse of Edwin Cart.

Christopher Watson-Haynes poured himself another drink and read the letter in his hand for a second time. It had been some time since anyone had communicated with him. So long in fact that he was firmly convinced that most people would be of the opinion that, if he was not dead, he must be living out his few remaining days in one of those dreary nursing homes which populate the south coast of an increasingly dreary country. Hardly surprising. He was only officially listed in two books, the dry and humourless ‘The Complete History of Saxon Manor School’ and the grubby and idiosyncratic tome ‘The Graveyards of Suffolk’. He was in the former because he had served at the school, both as housemaster and headmaster, from 1958 to 1989. His inclusion in the latter was, presumably, because of a short treatise he had written on a famous Victorian murder case in which, regrettably, a member of Saxon School had played a prominent part. In both these, long out of print, books his date of birth was inadvertently listed as 1912. A quick calculation therefore placed his current age as 93. An age eminently qualified for the worst excesses of any self respecting nursing home. Christopher Watson-Haynes inwardly shuddered. He may not be in the incipient flush of the age of innocence and energy but, at 73, he still had his moments of joy and expectation. Years of pureed peas and hot and milky evening drinks thankfully remained as distant threats.

Those two publications had incorrectly listed his year of birth. If the first was one of those natural, but irritating, mistakes which happen from time to time, the second was merely a lazy repetition. A short phone call would have elicited the fact that the Christopher Watson-Haynes in question was born in 1932 not 1912. Such was illusory fame. Whenever he went to his grave, history would record that he had enjoyed, or suffered, twenty more years than nature had determined. And these tangential thoughts brought him back to the letter he held in his hand. The style of the writer did not suggest he was writing to a person in advanced stages of senility and, equally illuminating, they did not particularly suggest that they were interested in the historical perspective of either the sadly declining ‘Saxon Manor School’ or the long forgotten ‘The Latin Master and the Downstairs Maid’. They merely referred to the fact that the recipient of the letter was ‘A much revered author of his particular genre’ and the writer was keen to make his acquaintance. So Christopher Watson-Haynes had poured himself another drink and sat down to read the letter for a third time. And, having read it and digested all its implications, he picked up his elegant pen and composed a small and precise reply.

‘Mr Christopher Watson-Haynes was delighted to receive your recent missive and, to assist you in your current research project, takes pleasure in accepting your request for an interview. Hopefully Saturday the 13th instant at 3.00 pm would be acceptable. Kindly telephone the below listed number if the date and/or time is inappropriate.’

 

*****

 

‘He bought it.?’

‘If by that you mean Mr Watson-Haynes has kindly agreed to my request, then yes.’

David Lacey insouciantly waved the letter in the air and, folding it neatly, placed it in the top pocket of his immaculate blazer. He and his friend Kevin Johnson were on their way to first classes at the start of the new term and, having received the letter over the weekend, Master Lacey was keen to advertise his small success.

‘Does he know you are only fourteen?’

‘It is not relevant Johnson. I am a researcher. My age is immaterial.’

Kevin Johnson pulled his friend’s tie, the garish lime green and sky blue of a Saxon Manor School forced into modernity, and quizzically screwed his face into anticipatory contortions.

‘Remember how you found him. Your Mr Watson-Haynes was probably a bit of a cane wielder in his day. I should watch your bum.’

And with that final, telling, point David Lacey’s friend laughed uproariously and made his way to his own class. As he disappeared into the distance, graphically rubbing his backside in a childish illustration of scholastic pain, David Lacey considered both his unexpected letter and its implications.

He had found Christopher Watson-Haynes on the internet. His project for the term was ‘Secret Histories of Saxon Manor School’. Along with his fellows he had been given a free hand to explore any aspects of its past which particularly appealed. There were no rules. They could pick any incident or angle from the years and develop it as they saw fit. ‘Think outside the box.’ That is what their housemaster kept saying. Initiative could score as many points as literary eloquence. David Lacey had no idea how he would play this particular project. He instinctively knew that a recording of dry facts would both bore himself and his audience and, more pertinently, was unlikely to glean many bonus points. In desperation for a spark of individuality he had typed the names of all the headmasters of Saxon Manor School into his computer and with Christopher Watson-Haynes he had struck unexpected gold.

Initially the short piece flagged up had not seemed particularly promising. Christopher Watson-Haynes was headmaster of the school from 1976 – 1989. Born in 1912 he had joined the school, in those days a private establishment, in 1958 as a teacher of history and drama and achieved the headship in 1976. He had published two books relating to the school in the 1960’s and, following the publication of a third book in 1988, had retired early to continue a literary career. David Lacey was just about to pass over this unpromising material to read an unfortunate piece on Mr Watson-Haynes’s successor, appointed 1989 and drowned in a fishing accident in 1992, when his inherent mathematical skills arrested his cursory search.

If Christopher Watson-Haynes was born in 1912, then he was 64 when he achieved his position as Headmaster of Saxon Manor School and 77 when he retired. That suggested both an unlikely late appointment and an exceptional stretching of the phrase ‘early retirement.’ The dates were clearly wrong. Christopher Watson-Haynes had retired early, following the publication of a third book, and that book was not listed in the bibliography details. The internet piece helpfully listed both ‘The Complete History of Saxon Manor School (1961)’ and ‘The Graveyards of Suffolk (1967)’ but made no mention of the third book, published in 1988.

Fourteen year old David Lacey was clearly a boy for whom the phrase ‘Think outside of the Box’ was invented. He did exactly that. He abandoned the internet search and, at the first opportunity, took himself off to the offices of the local paper. It took him half an hour to master the old fashioned disciplines of microfiche and a further fifteen minutes to find the relevant local paper from 1989. But when he did he knew that Christopher Watson-Haynes, whether he liked it or not, was going to be the all consuming subject of young David Lacey’s latest project. For buried amongst the variety of local affairs was the small, but illuminating, fact that the revered Headmaster of a most prestigious local school had reluctantly resigned following the publication of an historical document entitled ‘The Saxon Horse of Edwin Cart.’

The book was published in 1988 and, six months later, a very successful Headmaster of a most prestigious school, had quietly retired. And at 57 years of age. David Lacey closed down the old fashioned microfiche and sat in the offices of the local paper for a further fifteen minutes. He did not rise and respectfully thank the staff until he had determined his next step on the quest to find more about his Mr Watson-Haynes and, of more immediate import, to secure a copy of his 1988 book.

 

*****

 

‘I congratulate you on your perseverance.’

‘The dates didn’t make sense sir.’

David Lacey was sitting in the splendid reception room of Christopher Watson-Haynes equally splendid flat. He had accepted the small sherry as if to the manor born and, feeling unusually warm, had readily offered the details that his amiable host had been eager to extract.

‘And you tracked down the book that caused me a little difficulty. I am impressed.’

‘Google helped sir.’

‘Google?’

‘It’s a search engine.’

‘Ah.’ Mr Watson-Haynes made this exclamation as if he understood. ‘A search engine?’

‘Yes sir. I put in your name again and found it listed a number of times.’

‘The Victorian murder case no doubt.’

‘Yes sir. Your piece on that Latin Master crops up in various anthologies.’

‘And, presumably, the history of Saxon School?’

‘Yes sir. 1882-1961.’

David Lacey paused before hesitantly voicing the full reference.

‘The Complete History of Saxon Manor School. From Edwin Cart to the present day.’

‘Ah.’

‘It was only after my visit to the local newspaper that the name Edwin Cart became especially significant. So I looked him up.’

Christopher Watson-Haynes rose from his chair and poured himself a second glass of the medium dry sherry. He did not offer his fourteen year old companion a refill. The boy had hesitantly sipped his first glass and, politely placing it on the small table at the side of his chair, had shown no inclination to continue. His one, tentative sip, had induced an effect he had no desire to increase. Christopher Watson-Haynes eyed the boy intently. He was carefully considering how he should let this interview develop. The boy was clearly extremely intelligent. But he was, nevertheless, a boy. No more than fourteen or fifteen. Watson-Haynes was seventy three. The fifty nine years between them should give him the slight edge in the conversation stakes. But talking to this boy, hearing what he had to say, the gap in years had perceptibly narrowed. The retired Headmaster had received an initial shock when he opened his door to a writer he had expected, from his letter, to be at least twenty years of age. The mousy haired and freckled face fourteen year old, clutching an impressive file, simultaneously raised and crushed an inward smile.

‘You found a copy of the book?’

‘No sir.’

‘But you are aware of its contents. Its subject matter?’

‘Yes sir. Edwin Cart was the first headmaster of Saxon Manor School

‘1882 – 1893’

‘Yes sir.’

Christopher Watson-Haynes sat himself down in his large leather chair and asked the question to which he already suspected the answer.

‘And you wish to use Mr Cart, Mr Edwin Cart, as your school project?’

‘No sir.’

The retired headmaster and author patiently waited. This boy may be immature in years but he was very self assured. The silence would not be long in being filled. David Lacey cleared his throat and took a second sip of the intoxicating sherry.

‘I have decided to call my project ‘The Changing History of Saxon Manor School Discipline.’

‘1882-2005?’

David Lacey missed the amusing irony in his host’s voice. Either that or he was warming, courtesy of the sherry, to his theme.

‘Yes sir. And you are an important person in it. I realised that when I read the newspaper article on your 1988 book.’

‘The book that got me into an awful lot of trouble.’

‘Yes sir.’

‘Do you know why?’

‘No sir. I have not read it. But I gather it was explicit.’

‘Too much so, I am afraid. You are far too young for it. Mr Cart took great pleasure in thrashing his charges over the Saxon horse and, according to the school governors, I clearly got too much pleasure writing about his disciplinary deeds.’

‘So they asked you to leave?’

‘Yes.’

‘Even though it wasn’t published under your own name?’

‘Everyone knew. The local paper was dropping enough hints.’

David Lacey, an increasingly nervous David Lacey, considered carefully before continue his interview.

‘I looked Edwin Cart up on the internet sir.’

‘So you said. The internet is clearly a useful tool.’

‘Yes sir. There was little information that I did not already know. But it did list a couple of books. One of which was ‘The Saxon Horse.’

‘I rather liked that title.’

‘And it listed the author. Christopher Baker.’

‘My mother’s maiden name.’

‘So I looked up Christopher Baker.’

‘On the internet?’

‘Yes sir.’

‘Ah.’

‘Yes sir.’

‘And what did it say?’

‘Christopher Baker wrote four books on Victorian and Edwardian Educational methods. ‘The Saxon Horse of Edwin Cart' was the first of a series’

‘Ah.’

‘The last of the four was published in 1997. They are all out of print.’

‘Yes.’

‘But as you are Christopher Baker I was hoping you may have copies that I could borrow.’

Christopher Watson-Haynes eyed the self possessed boy sitting in the other leather chair. It was so large it dwarfed his slender frame. If his admiration for the self assured young man was increasing by the minute he was nevertheless aware that he needed to tread carefully to elicit the full, complex, motives for his unexpected visit.

‘And that is why you wanted to see me?’

‘Partly.’

‘So there is more than one reason?’

‘Yes sir’

‘Discovering that I am Christopher Baker is not enough?’

David Lacey blushed to a bright beetroot colour. It occurred to him that his amiable host may consider that the rich and warming sherry was the cause, so he was not duly concerned. He was not yet ready to reveal his second reason. That required considerable courage and a careful choice of the appropriate words.

‘I was hoping that I could read the books and then consider how I wish to develop the project.’

‘It would be an awful lot of reading.’

‘We were given three months to complete sir. And at the end we need to write a paper and deliver a short lecture.’

‘To the whole school?’

‘No sir. Just to the project class. There are twenty five of us.’

‘All fifteen year olds like you?’

‘I am fourteen sir.’

So Master David Lacey was fourteen years of age. Never had Christopher Watson-Haynes met such an assured fourteen year old. Modern youth was clearly frightening. His letter had intrigued. A successful thirty year career at a prestigious private school had been brought to an abrupt end because of a book that some considered highly salacious. ‘The Saxon Horse of Edwin Cart’ had released a peculiar passion and provided a lucrative income. The school governors were uncomfortable with Mr Baker’s detailed revelations of Victorian bare bottom birching at their revered, expensive, establishment. And knowing, or suspecting, that the author was none other than the expensive establishment’s current headmaster created undeniable ripples. So he had resigned and, by the skin of his teeth, avoided a major scandal in both local and national papers. The author of ‘Edwin Cart’ was never officially revealed at the time. And now, seventeen years and three other books later, this boy had written to him. He stretched his legs and walked, purposefully, around the spacious reception room of his large flat. He reached the full length double window which, framed by expensive green velvet curtains, overlooked the town’s principal park. Two small boys were chasing an equally small dog and, in the distance, a woman was pushing a perambulator. Other than that the park was unusually quiet. And that silence echoed the silence in Christopher Watson-Haynes flat.

He turned and looked at his young companion. David Lacey’s eyes had followed him around the room and, judged by the expectant demeanour, was eagerly awaiting a decision.

‘So let me get this clear. This project is some form of competition. There is a prize no doubt?’

‘Yes sir. The winner gets a shield. And £200.’

‘Ah.’

‘The best five essays are selected by our housemaster and the winners read them out to the whole school.’

‘I see.’

‘And the school votes for the winner from these five.’

‘All very democratic. Are there any rules?’

‘We have to think outside the box.’

‘Sorry?’

‘That’s what Mr Fraser says. He’s our housemaster. He is looking for the unexpected.’

‘But it must be relevant to the school?’

‘This year. Not always.’

‘And you decided on Saxon Manor School Discipline. Interesting.’

‘Not initially sir. I got that idea from reading about you.’

‘And now you want to read my books?’

‘Yes sir.’

‘It would certainly make for an interesting lecture. Assuming you reach the final five.’

‘Yes sir.’

‘Certainly thinking outside the box.’

Christopher Watson-Haynes came to a decision. It may have seemed instant but he had been musing on it for the last half an hour or so.

‘All right. I will lend you my books young man. All of them, except the one on Edwin Cart. It is my only copy. The others are almost as explicit and you are probably too young for them, but they will certainly give you an insight into the changing disciplinary methods of the last hundred years. I hope you have a strong stomach.’

‘Yes sir. Thank you. There is one more thing sir.’

David Lacey stood up, in preparation to leave, and instantly regretted his two small sips of the sherry. He knew that what he had to say would increase his nervousness and an alert mind was crucial.

‘We have to think outside the box sir.’

‘So you said.’

‘To win the prize the talk must contain elements of surprise, be unexpected. Grip, entertain, inform and educate.’

‘You sound as if you are quoting your housemaster?’

‘I am sir.’

‘I am sure you will. You are an intelligent boy.’

‘Thank you sir. But it needs something else. Something special. Something to lift it above all the others.’

‘And what is that Master Lacey?’

‘Forgive me for saying this sir.’

‘Saying what?’

‘School discipline has changed since your day.’

‘Some would say that is no bad thing.’

‘Corporal Punishment was abolished in 1990.’

‘So?’

‘I would like to describe a caning, or a birching, in my lecture.’

‘You will find many descriptive passages in my books.’

‘No. I have thought about this.’

David Lacey paused and his face flushed an even deeper red. He cursed the seductive sherry.

‘I have thought about it for a long time. Ever since I read that piece in the local paper. It showed a picture of the book’s subject.’

‘The Saxon Manor birching horse?’

‘And then I found out more on the internet and I knew what my project would be. That’s why I wrote to you.’

‘And I was flattered. I still am. At my age you get few visitors.’

‘I wanted to meet you. And I wanted to read your books.’

‘And so you shall. Wait here while I get them.’

Christopher Watson-Haynes smiled at his engaging young guest and prepared to leave the room. What David Lacey said next stopped him in his tracks. Perhaps it was the sherry; perhaps it was the fact that his host was amiable and relaxed. Or perhaps David Lacey realised that this was the moment. But whatever the cause, the words uttered froze in the air and halted the retired headmaster’s exit.

‘And I want you to discipline me.’

His host stopped his departure and turned to face the boy. David Lacey enlarged on his strange request.

‘As they did in the old days.’

‘You want me to cane you?’

‘Or birch me. As they did in the old days. I think it would add that extra element of surprise to my lecture. I have been thinking about it for a long time.’

‘Thinking outside the box?’

‘Yes sir. To describe the actual experience would be unexpected.’

‘Grip, entertain and inform?’

‘Yes sir.’

Christopher Watson-Haynes laughed. It started quietly and then, slowly, built up to raucous and almost manic levels. And it went on for a good two minutes. And when he finally subsided and, apologising, wiped the tears from his eyes he bade his young guest to sit down again and left the room to find the various books attributed to Christopher Baker of Edwin Cart and his Saxon Horse fame.

 

*****

 

‘You must have been mad.’

Kevin Johnson poured the rest of his orange drink into his glass and, precariously turning the bottle on its head, looked in amazement at his friend. He and David Lacey were filling in a lazy couple of hours on an equally lazy Sunday afternoon. The town café was one of the few places not out of bounds to idle fourth formers.

‘What did he say? Assuming he could speak.’

‘He turned me down.’

‘I should bloody well think so. What an earth possessed you?’

‘I thought it was a good idea. I still think so.’

‘Well you will have to come up with something else to win the £200.’

‘Not necessarily.’

Kevin Johnson paused in his attempts to balance his upturned bottle and eyed his friend carefully.

‘Oh. Why do you say that?’

‘Because of what Mr Watson-Haynes said.’

‘After he stopped laughing?’

‘He fetched me the books and said that I had a week to read them. And as I was going he said that my request, ingenious as it was…..’

‘Mad more like it.’

‘…..ingenious as it was, lacked verisimilitude.’

‘What?’

‘Verisimilitude. It means truth. He pronounced it very carefully and then told me what it meant.’

‘And?’

‘In other words to comply with my request, I would have to give him a reason. A reason for disciplining me.’

‘Bloody hell.’

That eloquent expression from Kevin Johnson was almost the last word on David Lacey’s recent interview until they had left the café. If Master Lacey had the assurance of a boy bent on a purposeful mission, his friend was a restless mixture of bewildering confusions. It was clear to David Lacey, already forming an incipient plan, that Kevin Johnson was silently arranging a number of questions into some form of sensible order. They had reached the edge of the river, a quarter of a mile from the school, before he spoke. His first question would clearly set the tone for the rest of the walk. Kevin Johnson, therefore, chose carefully.

‘Why do you want him to thrash you?’

‘I don’t want him to thrash me, as you call it. I just want to experience a small taste of old fashioned discipline.’

‘Same thing.’

‘There is a distinction.’

Kevin Johnson didn’t think so but refrained from further argument on this debatable point.

‘But why do you want him to ‘discipline’ you?’

‘I told you. I think it will help me to win the prize. Last years winner spent a night in the local cells as part of his project.’

‘That’s different.’

‘Is it?’

‘They didn’t thrash him.’

‘They locked him up. Rather clever I thought. Pretending to be an illegal immigrant and drunkenly attacking cars.’

‘Irresponsible Lacey, Irresponsible.’

David Lacey laughed at his friend’s rather good imitation of a particularly po-faced master. Not everyone was enamoured by the previous winner’s escapades. But he had thought outside the box and, having done so, produced a blinding piece on prejudice, isolation, and desperation. David Lacey was convinced he could do the same.

‘He grabbed everyone’s attention with a piece of true theatre and his eloquent prose did the rest. You need both elements to win.’

‘And you reckon being thrashed will do it for you?’

‘Yes. How many more times do you need telling?’

Kevin Johnson sensed his friend’s irritation and ambled down towards the river. One burning question could wait. As a group of ducks hopefully swam towards him in the expectation of a late afternoon snack, he raised another consideration.

‘It has occurred to you that, assuming you got what you want, your Mr Watson-Haynes could be done for assault?’

‘No one will know. Besides I intend to do it as a dream sequence. A boy, researching school disciplines from the past, finds himself the recipient of an hundred year old whacking. The experience will be described. Vividly. Ambiguously. The question of whether it did or did not happen will tantalisingly hang in the air.’

‘You really have thought about this, haven’t you?’

‘Yes.’

And with that David Lacey continued his walk to the school. Having teased the ducks Kevin Johnson caught up his friend and delivered a lighter, but more relevant, question.

‘And how do you propose to get him to thrash you? Remembering our old friend Vera Similitude?’

David Lacey laughed again. You could never remain too serious for too long with Kevin. That is why they had remained friends for so long. His own sombre nature needed the refreshing blow of a Kevin Johnson. And, having found him in their junior years, he had steadfastly clung to a relationship severed by dividing academic paths.

‘For that I may need your help.’

‘Oh?’

‘I need to think it through. There is plenty of time.’

They had arrived at the school gates and, being in different houses, this was where they split. They would meet in the week and David Lacey would discuss his plans and, having read the various borrowed books, would update his friend. For all his negative questioning, Kevin Johnson was fascinated by the strange turn this school project had taken. Before they parted he had one final, burning, question. He touched his friend’s shoulder and, as he turned, quietly aired it.

‘And you will get no pleasure from it?’

‘The project or the plan?’

‘Don’t be obtuse. The thrashing?’

‘No. What makes you think that?’

‘People do, apparently. My brother is a bit of a fan of Swinburne. Showed me his poems.’

‘We’ve all heard of ‘The Whippingham Papers’ Johnson. It’s nothing new.’

‘But being thrashed is. Especially if your Mr Watson-Haynes does it in the old fashioned way. Trousers down on the bare bum. Have you considered that?’

‘One must suffer for one’s art.’

‘So you have considered it?’

‘Of course.’

‘And you don’t mind?’

‘You ask too many questions. See you tomorrow.’

And with that David Lacey squeezed his friend’s cheek, a little harsh in Kevin Johnson’s opinion, and sauntered off to his dormitory. Kevin Johnson watched him depart and aimlessly wondered where this particular project was going. He was still wondering along these lines when, three days later, he found himself standing nervously in the spacious flat of Christopher Watson-Haynes. An extremely annoyed Mr Watson-Haynes, meticulously re-capping the events which led to Master Johnson’s presence.

 

 

*****

 

‘So let me get this right. David Lacey, your friend, has been in the process of devising a plan which would incur my wrath.’

‘Yes sir.’

‘Do you know why?’

‘Yes sir.’

‘I see.’

‘And having, very wisely, abandoned an initial plan to steal my car, he decided to break into my flat and steal some of my books.’

‘Only one sir.’

‘The Saxon Horse of Edwin Cart?’

‘Yes sir.’

Christopher Watson-Haynes smiled. Such a theft in such circumstances had a delightful piquancy. He sat down in the most comfortable chair in his flat and, crossing his legs, eyed the standing and nervous boy. When he finally spoke again, he did so very quietly.

‘So how come, returning unexpectedly, I find you in my flat?’

Kevin Johnson took a deep breath and filled in the illuminating details.

‘David reckoned that it did not matter who actually broke in and stole the book. You would automatically assume it was him. It was meant to be a symbolic crime.’

‘That sounds like Master Lacey.’

‘It was sir.’

‘So how were you given the task? The broken window will cost you a pretty penny.’

‘I volunteered sir.’

‘You volunteered?’

‘Yes sir.’

Christopher Watson-Haynes waited, convinced that there was more to come.

‘He is my friend. He wanted to give you a reason to thrash him, but his heart wasn’t in it. The project is very important to him. So I volunteered.’

‘He must be a very special friend for you to make such a sacrifice.’

‘I didn’t expect to get caught sir.’

‘No.’

And with that final comment Christopher Watson-Haynes rose and paced around the room. He spent a good five minutes explaining to Kevin Johnson that he had landed himself, and his friend, in a good deal of trouble. He could call the local police and have him arrested for breaking and entering his flat. The complex reasons were immaterial. He then spent a further five minutes outlining the considerable financial cost to Master Johnson’s purse. Not only was a large window pane broken but, on entering the flat, a valuable ornament had been irretrievably cracked when falling to the floor.

But he was not an unreasonable man and it was unlikely that the local police would understand all the subtleties of this particular drama. So he would not call the authorities and he would not either press charges or insist on re-imbursement for the damage done. But such generosity of spirit carried its own particular price. And Christopher Watson-Haynes spent a final five minutes outlining in some detail the exact scholastic value of that price.  And as he nervously bent down, with his trousers firmly around his ankles, Kevin Johnson painfully discovered that some friendships carry unexpected burdens. Protected only by a thin pair of light coloured underpants, Kevin Johnson’s small behind twitched and danced to an implement that had been long in retirement.  It was two days before he was in any condition to apprise his friend of the dramatic details and, disconcertingly, to pass on his departing message.

 

*****

 

‘Twelve strokes of his cane. On my bum. All for a bloody book.’

‘You could have refused.’

‘Could I?’

David Lacey considered this retort, still redolent of his friend’s experience. They were sitting in the local park, not more than the proverbial stone’s throw away from Mr Watson-Haynes ground floor flat. They had met after lessons earlier in the day and Kevin Johnson had, mysteriously, taken his friend to the toilets and lowered his pants. David Lacey had gasped at a wealed behind which told its own story and, in the following silence, they had made their way to the park. Sitting on the grass, away from any prying ears, Kevin Johnson had filled in the dramatic and graphic details.

‘I’m sorry Kevin.’

‘Not as much as me. You are the one who wanted a thrashing. I can assure you it ain’t much fun.’

‘No.’

‘I was gob smacked. When he went to his bureau and brought out the cane I thought I was going to wet myself.’

‘But you went through with it.’

‘I had no choice. The alternative was both of us in clink. Anyway it’s your turn now.’

‘What?’

‘Don’t look so surprised. It is what you wanted. Well you have got your wish. He wants to see you.’

‘When?’

‘This Saturday. Tomorrow. And I reckon you may be in for more than me.’

‘Why do you say that?’

‘Something he said when I was leaving. I hardly took it in. Do you know how much your bum throbs after a caning?’

David Lacey ignored this comment.

‘What did he say?’

‘He said I took it well. He hoped that Master Lacey, meaning you, would show the same fortitude. Especially as you had earned considerably more. And now I must go. Your project has got me into enough trouble.’

David Lacey watched his friend depart, ruefully rubbing his backside. A couple of weeks ago this picture of scholastic pain had been joyful mimicry, now it was a sore and burning reality.

Kevin Johnson had suffered a special indignity and it was all David Lacey’s fault. So his impending thrashing was doubly deserved. It had started out as an oblique twist to an interesting lecture. An artificial experiment in old fashioned values. But circumstances had determined that, when he was thrashed, David Lacey would realise the many genuine reasons for it. He slowly walked back to his school thinking both of Mr Christopher Watson-Haynes and, more fearfully, the twelve vivid red weals across the bare backside of his special friend.

 

 

*****

 

If David Lacey got very little sleep that night, his prospective chastiser could not have been more relaxed and cheerful. It had been a long time since Christopher Watson-Haynes had thrashed a boy’s bottom. He may have had some sympathy for Johnson’s predicament but he did break into his flat and he did cause considerable damage. A caning, rather than involvement of the police or his school, seemed a satisfactory outcome to both parties. And in spite of a few tears Kevin Johnson did not appear to carry any ill will towards him. If his smarting bottom engendered any feelings of injustice they were clearly directed elsewhere.

And now David Lacey was due to visit him and this meeting would be considerably different from the first. He liked the freckled faced David Lacey. He was a bright and personable boy. And he was impressed by his project and the manner in which he had approached it and researched it. His parting request was, to say the least, unusual and Christopher Watson-Haynes had lightly dismissed it. In all his years as a schoolmaster no boy, to his knowledge, had ever requested chastisement. A few may have displayed a certain inner excitement prior to being beaten, but none had bent their form willingly. David Lacey did not strike him as a boy fulfilling a strange, unspoken, need. His quiet assurance suggested no more than an intelligent boy determined to succeed in his chosen task. If his strange request for the rod had been granted he would have realised, even with a light application, that theory and reality occupied widely differing territories.

But now he was to come to him, at three o’clock, and the stakes were somewhat different. Not only had David Lacey abused his friendship, he had allowed his schoolfellow to undertake a grave risk on his behalf. He would, therefore, achieve his intended aim. But his thrashing would be no gentle demonstration of a distant, forgotten, art. There would be no friendly chat, no objective discussions of methods, and no indication of equals conducting an experiment. No thinking outside the box. When Christopher Watson-Haynes thrashed David Lacey he would do so with true scholastic venom and a feeling of necessary justice. Before he rose back to a standing position the boy would painfully realise that old fashioned discipline, justly applied, could never be experimental. And with that thought Christopher Watson-Haynes poured himself a small sherry and sat down in his comfortable leather chair to await the arrival of his young, most welcome, guest. Fifteen minutes later he found himself in familiar, and old fashioned, flow.

‘It must come as no surprise to you that I find recent events singularly disappointing.’

‘No sir.’

‘I do not play games Master Lacey. I had no intention of being an active participant to your research project. If my amusement conveyed otherwise, then I regret it. You are an intelligent boy. It should have been obvious that lending you my valued books was as far as I was prepared to go.’

‘Yes sir.’

‘But, given the circumstances, I have changed my mind. I shall accede to your request. But I very much doubt that you will be in any condition to make mental notes for your lecture. I suggest that we waste no more time on this sorry affair. Come with me.’

And with that final, peremptory, comment, Christopher Watson-Haynes rose from his chair and, taking off an immaculately cut jacket, made his way to the far door of his flat’s reception room. As David Lacey nervously followed he quickly, and disturbingly, noted two small details. The first was that his indignant host was purposefully rolling up the right sleeve of a glistening white shirt and the second, registering only a moment behind, was that he had not gone to the bureau in which resided the implement of Kevin Johnson’s chastisement. Either that cane was already waiting for him in an, hitherto, unknown room or a different weapon was bound for scholastic exercise. David Lacey instinctively knew that this was the moment of no turning back.

He could run of course. He could charge out of Mr Watson-Haynes flat and refuse ever to return. There was a risk that the police, or his school, could be brought into the proceedings. But that was unlikely. Kevin Johnson had already been caned. Mr Watson-Haynes would not risk that small fact being brought to the attention of the authorities. But David Lacey, anxiety rising, would not run. To do so would deny both a project bent on a vicious twist and the painful, unnecessary, sacrifice of his beloved friend. On both counts David Lacey would, therefore, have to take the best, or worst, of what Christopher Watson-Haynes was preparing to offer. He inwardly sighed and, head bowed, followed his host into a separate part of his spacious flat. It should have come as no surprise to find, on entering a small, carpeted, windowless room, that the main and dominant item was an imposing, brown leathered, vaulting horse. As David Lacey stared, absorbing its modernistic gleam, he was acutely, and painfully, aware that the sight that met his watering eyes was, undoubtedly, a very special piece of equipment. In the centre of that room, prepared for a special mounting, was the highly prized and fearfully threatening Saxon Horse of a certain Mr Edwin Cart.

 

*****

 

Christopher Watson-Haynes pleasingly registered the increase in anticipatory tension.

‘You could say that this was my special retirement present. But I doubt, at the moment, that the history of this piece is your greatest concern. It has played host to many unwilling bottoms. It awaits yours, Master Lacey. Remove your clothes.’

David Lacey continued staring at the leather horse. It stood about three or four foot off the ground on four short and sturdy wooden legs. Attached to each of those legs, around eight inches from the ground, were equally sturdy leather straps. There could be no doubt of its purpose. And then David Lacey stared at the man standing at the side of this horse and, for the first time, became sickeningly conscious of the disparity of their ages and position. The tall distinguished and shirt sleeved gentleman of some seventy three years was about to embark on the thrashing of his small, not so assured, fourteen year old acquaintance. The exquisitely bound birch rod in his hand, a dozen long and thin twigs tantalisingly splayed, signalled a careful preparation. The mousy haired youth and the grey haired schoolmaster and sometime author were a long way from civilised, sherry filled, conversations.

‘I said remove your clothes.’

‘All of them sir?’

David Lacey heard himself speak but the sound that emerged was beyond normal recognition. His throat was dry, his legs shook and his stomach lurched with sickening fear. He would go through this ordeal and he would desperately try to remember the details. But the enormity of what was to come bombarded his fevered brain. The horse, the straps, the birch, all threateningly combined for an attack on his fragile body. And all orchestrated by a man, cold tones contrasting the warmth of their initial engagement, patiently waiting for his acquiescence.

‘All that is necessary, Master Lacey. You have read my books. You, of all boys, should be aware that a birch is always applied to the bare behind. I see no reason to make an exception.’

‘No sir.’

‘Then do as I say and we can bring these unpleasant proceedings to a close.’

‘Yes sir.’

And with that final, dutiful, response David Lacey removed his jacket and placed it on a convenient chair. He then carefully removed both his shoes and his socks and, hesitating only slightly, his lime green and sky blue school tie. The removal of the tie was unnecessary, both in the room knew it was merely a diversion from more important matters, but its divesting indicated a boy readying himself for total submission. And that boy stood fearfully before an impatient, but understanding, Christopher Watson-Haynes. As the latter absorbed the revealing picture of his fourteen year old acquaintance, now down to crisp white shirt and long grey trousers, he inwardly sighed. The best was yet to come. And slowly it did so. David Lacey delayed for only a moment, perhaps giving his chastiser a fleeting second in which to reconsider, but no reprieve came forth. Reluctantly, and with heavy resignation, David Lacey’s trembling fingers undid the buttons on his trousers and, pushing them to his feet, cast them aside and, with watering eyes, waited further instructions.

‘Take off your underpants, Master Lacey. I did say that this birching would be on you bare behind. Your friend was allowed some small protection from my cane. You are neither granted, nor deserve, that privilege. So please remove them. Now.’

‘Yes sir.’

‘And when you have done so, come here and bend over the horse. As you are about to find out it is especially designed for the bottoms of boys who need to learn a hard lesson.’

David Lacey put his fumbling hands underneath his shirt and, nervously finding the waist, pulled his small cotton pants down to his ankles. The action took only a moment but the effect was electrifying. As he placed this meagre covering of his most private parts with his other discarded garments he became painfully aware of his vulnerability. Not wearing a vest, only his crisp and cool white school shirt covered his nakedness. A nakedness that was firm, and smooth and pale, and unsullied. A nakedness soon to suffer an anguish for which, in spite of that easy assurance of a first meeting, he now realised he was ill prepared. He made one final, despairing, plea.

‘Please don’t birch me sir. Couldn’t I have the cane instead?’

Christopher Watson-Haynes, on the cusp of a chastisement he could not be denied, relished both the naked fear and the heady anticipation. His voice, thick with expectation, remained outwardly calm.

‘No Master Lacey. Think yourself fortunate that you are not getting both. I did consider it. But I reckoned that eighteen strokes of this birch, delivered with some force to your bottom, will be more than enough. So when you are ready.’

 

*****

 

It was at this moment that the trembling David Lacey openly cried. The enormity of what was about to happen finally got to him. Perhaps it was because of standing there dressed only in a shirt which barely reached to a small but obvious penis. Perhaps it was seeing the impatient flick of the birch in Christopher Watson-Haynes hand, or registering the alarming way his backside suddenly started to twitch uncontrollably. Or perhaps it was a combination of all three. But whatever the reason David Lacey started to cry and begged to be spared his ordeal. He was still crying when Christopher Watson-Haynes gathered him by the head and led him to the horse. He continued to cry and plead as he was laid prone and tied, first by the hands and then by the legs, to the four feet of that uncompromising horse. And when Christopher Watson-Haynes lifted his shirt up his back to expose his small and round buttocks he cried even more. His bare behind was now only a moment from the kiss of a much discussed birch. The subtle downward slope of the horse meant that all parts of a boyish importance were raised unusually high. As he felt the gentle touch of splaying twigs on his nether regions, he cried, pleaded, and begged for an understanding mercy. But it made no difference. Any chance of reprieve was lost in this defining moment. Merging into the boyish landscape of the curved back and unblemished legs was a bottom gifted from heaven. Two delightful, fleshy, peaches of unfreckled purity glistened tantalisingly below the crumpled shirt. Was ever such a behind fashioned by nature for such a birch? The twin cheeks begged scholastic atonement. Christopher Watson-Haynes raised that birch and finally, remorselessly, and with exquisite skill, lashed it down across the upturned naked cheeks of a boy regrettably, for him, designed for such attention.

It had been many years since Christopher Watson-Haynes had thrashed with such aplomb. Apart from Kevin Johnson he had not waved a cane across a boy’s backside for nearly twenty years. And birching a boy was clearly the heady stuff of ageing fantasies. But here before him, bottom bare and reddening, was a boy who virtually offered himself. He had asked to be disciplined. And circumstances had designed such matters in a way that meant his birching could be justly, and seriously, applied. And Christopher Watson-Haynes was not to be denied his opportunity. The more David Lacey screamed the more he lashed the unrelenting birch across his arched backside. Each combined thrash of the twelve individual twigs found every inch of the boy’s delightful mounds.

By the fourth stroke David Lacey was lurching both to the left and the right. By the eighth stroke, realising that unremitting straps held his naked frame firmly in place, he screamed and begged for release. On the twelfth stroke he registered a leaking bladder and, sobbing uncontrollably, stared at the distant wall in the vain hope that the remaining swings of the unrelenting birch would spare both his more tender places and crumbling dignity.

‘Please sir, no more sir. Please.’

The fourteenth stroke of the birch caught the underside of David Lacey’s buttocks.

‘Please sir, my bum, my bum,’

The fifteenth stroke revisited, for the final time, the top of the writhing, restless, cheeks.

‘No more. Oh god, no more.’

The sixteenth and seventeenth strokes lashed across the dividing curves of a young and, still smooth, backside that cried out for the worst that this birch could do.

‘No more. Oh god, please sir, please sir. No more sir. Please no more. I’m dying.’

The eighteenth stroke, firm and true, fell hard across the centre of all that had gone before.

‘Aaaagh. Oh god. Help me.’

Christopher Watson-Haynes birch had done its work for the final time. The last stroke embedded itself in the bare flesh of the young boy and, having left a final mark, dragged down the outstretched legs and reluctantly rested. The restrained positioning of the bending boy had meant that his two, small, testicles were fetchingly exposed, but not once had the birch strayed from its determined course. David Lacey may scream, as he continued to do so, but only his buttocks would emit any lasting tenderness. The upturned behind displayed, at its centre, a true manifestation of a delightful boy. But not a single twig had strayed. Mr Watson-Haynes could not help thinking that Mr Edwin Cart would be well pleased.

 

*****

 

David Lacey gradually ceased his screaming but continued to sob and bleat. Even that faded away to nothingness till, eventually, an eerie silence and stillness enveloped the room. Only the picture of a beaten boy, stretched virtually naked across an old fashioned vaulting horse, remained. Christopher Watson-Haynes studied his handiwork and then gently lowered the boy’s shirt. It did not totally cover the wealed buttocks but it returned a degree of dignity and, satisfied, the boy’s tormentor left the room. He did not return for ten minutes but, when he did, a still and exhausted boy had resumed his quiet sobbing.

David Lacey did not finally leave Christopher Watson-Haynes flat for another two hours. On his return the man who had mercilessly birched his bottom gently released the restraining straps and, equally gently, lifted him off the horse. For a moment he felt unbalanced and dizzy but, as the man put a steadying hand on his shoulders, his own hands moved to ease his burning rear. Neither said anything. Still clutching and rubbing his stinging behind, and dressed only in his flapping school shirt, David Lacey was taken to the bathroom. Christopher Watson-Haynes turned on the shower, lifted the shirt over the boy’s head and, handing him a large bar of expensive soap, instructed him to take a very long and hot shower. In spite of his total nakedness David Lacey felt no tremor of embarrassment. Even at the tender age of fourteen he instinctively knew you could have few secrets from a man who had just birched you on your bare behind. He gratefully took the soap and, as Christopher Watson-Haynes left, he stepped into the shower and willed the hot water to ease his pain. Twenty minutes later, adorned in a very large and splendid towelling robe, he was hungrily devouring a lavish afternoon tea. Only the reddened eyes indicated a recent brush with savage Victorian pain.

 

*****

 

‘Eighteen strokes with a birch. On your bare bum. God, I think I would have screamed my head off.’

‘I did.’

‘But you don’t want to report him?’

‘Not now, no. He was right to do it.’

‘Your eyes are still red.’

‘So is my bum, but I shall recover. That birch shall have no repercussions.’

David Lacey and Kevin Johnson were sitting in a corner of the school’s spacious library. It was a quiet Sunday afternoon, the day after David’s ordeal, and Kevin Johnson was eager to catch up on events.

‘Can I see the marks?’

‘Not here you can’t.’

‘Ho, ho, ho.’

‘It’s not like yours. More thin stripes than thick weals.’

‘So I got it worse then?’

 ‘It stung like hell, but it’s going off now. Doubt if I will be able to shower for a few days.’

‘I did. Friday. After sports. Owington asked me who had been thrashing me.’

‘Is it still that obvious?’

‘You saw.’

‘.What did you say?’

‘I told him that I went home for the weekend and Grandpa applied some old fashioned discipline.’

‘Your Grandpa’s dead’

‘So is Owington. From the neck up. By the time he realises I shall have a behind like driven snow.’

‘Very unfashionable this season, Johnson.’

‘So it would seem.’

Kevin Johnson closed the book he had been pretending to read and abandoned direct discussions on their respective beatings.

‘So. What are you going to do?’

 ‘I shall continue to work on the project. I’ve lots of spare time next week. And next month Mr Watson-Haynes is going to read my first draft.’

‘You are going to his flat again?’

‘Why not?’

‘Careful.’

‘Why?’

‘He might have got a taste for you. You are a very attractive boy, Lacey.’

David Lacey laughed at his friend’s pompous impression of a particular teacher who, in their opinion, spent far too long in the changing room after games.

‘And you are an ass, Johnson. Besides I need to return his special book.’

‘Which one?’

‘Can’t you guess?’

‘The Saxon Horse book?’

‘Yes.’

‘The book that got me a caning?’

‘The very same.’

‘Well knock me down with a birch rod. So we suffered for nothing.’

‘Definitely not. I earned that book.’

‘We earned that book.’

Kevin Johnson rose and ambiguously rubbed his backside.

David Lacey closed his own book, equally unread, and made for the library exit. There was still an hour or so of the afternoon to kill and a walk along the riverside would do them both good. They had been walking aimlessly for around ten minutes before either spoke. It was Kevin Johnson who dropped the bombshell.

‘David?’

‘What?’

‘Can I see?’

‘What?’

‘You know. Your marks. Can I see them?’

‘Here?’

‘There’s no one around. We might not have another chance.’

‘I’ll show you in the toilets when we get back.’

‘No here. Let me see them now. I showed you mine.’

David Lacey stared at his young friend. There was an unfamiliar urgency in his voice and his face was very flushed.

‘Please David. I think you owe me this.’

David Lacey looked around him. Kevin was right. There was no one around. It could do no harm. He fumbled with the buttons on his trousers and, undoing them, pushed them and his underpants to his knees. He turned away from his friend and lifted his shirt high to enable him to have a close look. They were shielded by a large tree and David’s face was pressed so close to the bark he could smell it.

He stood there for about five seconds conscious of the gentle wind brushing both his naked behind and his dangling penis. It was not unpleasant. And then, very lightly at first, and then more roughly he felt Kevin Johnson’s small hands explore the contours of his buttocks. He held his breath as exploring fingers traced the line of a particular stripe of yesterday’s birch. And then Kevin Johnson quietly sighed and, still gently cupping David Lacey’s left cheek, his right hand moved around the naked thigh to discover the true shape and texture of his friend’s virgin prick and balls. David Lacey drank in a tiny moment of the ensuing sensation, flirted briefly with a growing awareness of undiscovered pleasure, and then hastily pulled up his clothes. He sat down by the trunk of the tree and looked anywhere but at his standing friend. Neither spoke. After a few silent moments David Lacey rose, checked the respectability of his attire, and started to walk towards the school. Kevin Johnson followed, initially a couple of feet behind, but eventually falling in beside his companion.

‘Sorry.’

‘Don’t apologise.’

‘I don’t know what came over me.’

‘Forget it.’

‘I’ve never done anything like that before.’

‘It doesn’t matter.’

‘It does.’

David Lacey stopped and turned to his friend. He had a serious intense look on his small and freckled face.

‘Kevin. It doesn’t matter. You touched my bum. So what. I let you do it.’

‘I touched more than that.’

‘So. I encouraged you.’

‘Did you?’

‘I thought that was obvious. I stopped you because I was enjoying it, not because I thought it was wrong. Now do what you are best at and make me laugh.’

Kevin Johnson pulled a silly face and Master Lacey delivered a friendly punch.

‘Not that. Tell me a joke.’

‘Shan’t.’

‘Or give me one of your impersonations. I desire normality Johnson.’

‘Not until you answer the most puzzling question in the universe.’

David Lacey screwed his face. His friend was giving a very good impression of a particularly tiresome philosophy teacher.

 ‘What are you on about Johnson?’

‘Promise you’ll answer?’

‘Oh, all right.’

 ‘How come you haven’t got any freckles on your bum?’

David Lacey laughed all the way up to the school. In that moment of schoolboy flippancy a heavy burden magically lifted.

In their separate beds that night both boys reflected on the events of the last week, especially their small moment of unexpected intimacy. Kevin Johnson had become increasingly aware of his growing sexuality since his caning. He had not enjoyed it and did not desire a repeat but he could not deny that the throbbing in his bottom had churned his emotions and the continuing line of weals had provided an unexpected fascination. No wonder corporal punishment had been abandoned in schools. It carried too much unhealthy baggage. And seeing David Lacey’s birch striped bum was an irresistible temptation. He fell asleep resolving, in the immortal words of his father, to take lots of cold baths. In a separate bed, in a separate room, David Lacey was having a number of thoughts of his own.

 

*****

 

‘Thank you for returning my book so promptly. I was sorry you were unable to stay. I was hoping to read the first draft of your lecture.’

‘Yes sir.’

‘And now it is too late. The competition must be over by now.’

‘Yes sir.’

‘Well?’

‘What sir?’

‘Aren’t you going to tell me how you got on? I assume that is why you are here.’

‘Yes sir.

‘Well?’

Christopher Watson-Haynes looked eagerly at his young guest. David Lacey took a deep breath before answering.

‘I didn’t enter, sir.’

‘You didn’t enter?’

‘Well, to be more precise, I withdrew. Mr Fraser was not very pleased.’

‘I am sure he wasn’t.’

Christopher Watson-Haynes rose from his chair. He and young Master Lacey were having a Saturday afternoon tea. It was only the second time he had met the boy since the fateful day of his birching. The following month he had returned the Edwin Cart book, and hastily departed pleading an unexpected visit from a wealthy aunt. And then nothing. Two months had passed and from a boy who had both delighted and thrilled, not a word. The seventy three year old retired headmaster was on the verge of consigning the memory to history when, unexpectedly, he had received a phone call requesting an invitation. And two days later they sat down to one of Christopher Watson-Haynes splendid afternoon teas. On the last occasion the boy was, naturally, in some discomfort but this latest visit reminded of the assured fourteen year old who first graced his spacious flat.

‘Why did you withdraw? I think you had a winner. Definitely thinking outside the box.’

David Lacey inwardly flinched at this reminder of a promising project which had come to naught.

‘So why did you decide to abandon it?’

David Lacey took another deep breath.

‘Kevin Johnson, sir.’

‘Kevin Johnson?’

‘The boy you caned.’

‘Ah.’

Christopher Watson-Haynes allowed his mind to wander for a second to the day he had swished twelve strokes of a much loved cane to the upturned backside of a schoolboy burglar.’

‘That was well deserved.’

‘Yes sir. We both deserved our respective punishments.’

‘I am glad you say that. Even in my headmaster days I never disciplined without good reason.’

 ‘It was as I planned, even if the way you did it was much more real than I thought it would be.’

‘Verisimilitude?’

‘Yes sir. But Kevin’s caning was different. It changed us. It….’

‘Yes?’

 David Lacey blushed, the brightest beetroot his freckles could engender.

  ‘It made us aware of our bodies. Especially Kevin.’

‘Ah,’

‘He got very depressed. His parents transferred him to another school a couple of weeks ago. They said….’

‘Yes.’

Christopher Watson-Haynes was aware that this conversation was becoming painful for his guest. He said the word quietly and, sitting down again, waited.

‘Go on.’

‘They said that I was becoming a bad influence on him.’

‘And were you?’

‘No sir. But he had clearly told them something. And I think your name came into it.’

‘Ah.’

David Lacey’s host paused, carefully choosing his words.

‘Did he tell them that I had caned him?’

‘No sir. He assured me of that. But he did tell them about your books.’

‘He had seen them?’

‘I showed them to him when I was working on the project.’

‘Not a sensible idea. He is not as intelligent as you.’

‘No sir.’

David Lacey had the grace to blush.

‘And so you did not write your lecture to save me further embarrassment.’

‘I had already written it. But I destroyed it.’

‘Because of your friend, Kevin Johnson?’

‘Yes sir.’

‘You thought your project, your lecture, might get all of us in considerable trouble. Because of the effect on your friend. Is that about it?’

‘Yes sir.’

‘Finish your tea and I will make some more.’

Christopher Watson-Haynes gathered up the teapot and prepared leave the room.

‘Pity you destroyed it though. I would have been very interested to see what you made of your experiences.’

‘It hurt sir.’

‘A birch on a bare bottom usually does’

David Lacey flinched as his host, gently smiling, left the room. When he returned, ten minutes later with a fresh pot, his young guest had painstakingly re-ordered his other thoughts into a clear and precise order.

‘That is not my main reason for coming to see you today. I thought of writing. Apologising for not contacting you earlier. But it would not be fair. What I have to say needs to be said in person.’

‘Go on. I am listening’

 ‘It was your book that started all this off sir.’

‘The Saxon Horse of Edwin Cart?’

‘Yes sir. I knew nothing about him until I discovered you.’

‘And he fired your imagination.’

‘Yes sir.’

 ‘He was a strange man.’

‘Yes sir. But he was more than that. To me.’

‘Really’

‘Yes sir. He was my Great Grandfather.’

‘What?’

‘Edwin Cart was my Great Grandfather.’

‘Your Great Grandfather?’

‘Yes sir. I have always known that. But I never knew about his Saxon horse.’

‘Until you found that piece in the local paper?’

‘Yes sir.’

Christopher Watson-Haynes leant forward and poured the fresh pot of tea. As he did so, idly watching the stream of liquid escape the gleaming pot, he quietly spoke.

‘For that deception, Master Lacey, you almost deserve a second birching.’

‘That wouldn’t be fair sir.’

‘Oh. And why not?’

‘Even you indulge in deception.’

‘Do I?’

‘Yes sir.’

‘Go on.’

‘Your book on that Victorian murder case. I researched that as well.’

‘The Latin Master and the Downstairs Maid?’

‘Yes sir.’

Christopher Watson-Haynes handed the boy his tea and waited.

‘And?’

‘His name was Baker. Nathaniel Isaac Baker.’

‘And she was a downstairs maid.’

‘He was your Grandfather, sir. And a great friend of Edwin Cart.’

‘Ah.’

‘Google is very helpful sir.’

‘Yes.’

‘So I was thinking of doing that case as my lecture next year. With your permission’

For a moment Christopher Watson-Haynes said nothing. His mouth opened desperately to form a suitable response but, failing, he ended the nervous silence with a gentle laughter which perceptibly grew and filled the room. Before too long David Lacey had tentatively joined in.

Alfred Roy (2006)