Authors: Aunt Dimity [14] Aunt Dimity Slays the Dragon
Aunt Dimity
Slays the Dragon
N A N C Y AT H E R T O N
v i k i n g
Aunt Dimity Slays the Dragon
also by nancy atherton
Aunt Dimity’s Death
Aunt Dimity and the Duke
Aunt Dimity’s Good Deed
Aunt Dimity Digs In
Aunt Dimity’s Christmas
Aunt Dimity Beats the Devil
Aunt Dimity: Detective
Aunt Dimity Takes a Holiday
Aunt Dimity: Snowbound
Aunt Dimity and the Next of Kin
Aunt Dimity and the Deep Blue Sea
Aunt Dimity Goes West
Aunt Dimity: Vampire Hunter
Aunt Dimity
Slays the Dragon
N A N C Y AT H E R T O N
v i k i ng
VIKING
Published by the Penguin Group
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Penguin Books Ltd, Registered Offi
ces:
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First published in 2009 by Viking Penguin,
a member of Penguin Group (USA) Inc.
Copyright © Nancy T. Atherton, 2009
All rights reserved
Publisher’s Note
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s
imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments,
events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING IN PUBLICATION DATA
Atherton, Nancy.
Aunt Dimity slays the dragon / Nancy Atherton.
p. c m.
ISB
N : 1-1 0 1-02 058-X
1. Dimity, Aunt (Fictitious character)—Fiction. 2. Women detectives—England—Cotswold
Hills—Fiction. 3. Cotswold Hills (England—Fiction). I. Title.
PS3551.T426A93448 2009
813'.54 —dc22
2008037297
Set in Perpetua
Designed by Alissa Amell
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For Claudia and Don Staff ord,
my next-door angels
Aunt Dimity Slays the Dragon
One
T he invasion of Finch began on a mild Monday eve ning in
late May. By the end of August, my peaceful English village would find itself at the mercy of rampaging brigands,
bullies, braggarts, and blundering louts. There would also be an
unexpected death.
None of us saw it coming. On the eve ning in question, my
neighbors and I were sitting quietly—some of us somnolently—in
the old schoolhouse that had for many years served as our village
hall. We were there to attend a village affairs committee meeting,
and nearly seventy of us had shown up because the annual May
meeting was widely regarded as the most important committee
meeting of the year.
The sole purpose of the May meeting was to finalize plans for
Finch’s many summer activities. It was, for the most part, an egregious waste of time, because everyone knew that the summer fete,
the bring-and-buy sale, the gymkhana, the art show, the flower
show, the dog show, and the tidy cottage competition would be run
exactly as they had been run for as long as anyone could remember.
Innovations might be suggested, discussed, and debated, but
they were never adopted. In the end, the same dates would be chosen and the same folding tables would be used, along with the same
frayed linen tablecloths, tarnished tea urns, and increasingly shabby
decorations. The summer fete would be held, as it had always been,
at the vicarage, the gymkhana would take place at Anscombe Manor,
and everything else—apart from the tidy cottage competition—
would be staged, as per usual, in the schoolhouse. In the eight years
since my husband and I had moved to Finch, the routine had never
varied in the slightest.
2 Nancy Atherton
The only thing that ever changed from one year to the next was
the assignment of menial tasks to volunteers. The glamorous jobs
had been snapped up as long ago as 1982 by women who would
defend to the death their right to wear big hats and flowery frocks
while opening the art show or graciously awarding ribbons at the
gymkhana. Competition was understandably less fi erce for the less
glamorous jobs. No one fought for the right to iron tablecloths,
empty rubbish bins, or pick bits of soggy crepe paper out of the
grass on the village green. Since such toil was essential to the success of any event, however, volunteers had to be found.
It was left to our esteemed chairwoman, the all-powerful Peggy
Taxman, to delegate the donkeywork, and it was for this reason,
and this reason alone, that the May meeting was so very well attended. Peggy had it within her grasp to favor us with the pleasant
chore of attending to the tea urns or to condemn us to the noxious duty of scrubbing the schoolhouse floor after the dog show.
We were agog to learn our fates.
“The meeting will come to order.” Peggy banged her gavel,
then pointed it accusingly at the room in general. “And if I catch
any of you napping, I’ll have you removed from the schoolhouse!”
Mr. Barlow, who had already dozed off, woke with a start.
“We done yet?” he asked sleepily.
“Just getting started,” Miranda Morrow murmured from the
corner of her mouth.
“Right.” Mr. Barlow yawned, rubbed his eyes, and lifted his
gaze to the fi ve committee members.
The members sat shoulder-to-shoulder on one side of the long,
linen-draped table that had been set up on the small stage at the
rear of the schoolhouse. Peggy Taxman occupied the middle chair,
a position which allowed her to loom menacingly over the assembled throng. Lesser villagers perched meekly on folding chairs on
either side of a central aisle leading to the schoolroom’s double
doors, through which Peggy would sweep magisterially after she’d
made her final pronouncement.
Aunt Dimity Slays the Dragon
3
No one would dare to stop her or attempt to dispute her decisions. An empire-builder by nature, Peggy ran two major businesses as well as the post office in Finch. She was a woman of
substance, both physically and financially, and her fierce sense of
civic duty drove her to rule the village with an iron hand, a steely
eye, and a voice like thunder. A reproving glance from behind
those pointy, rhinestone-studded glasses was usually all it took to
make the bravest among us quail. When the glance didn’t work,
she employed the voice, and although I’d never seen the iron hand
in action, I had no doubt that, if all else failed, she would use it.
The other committee members were much less daunting. Sally
Pyne, vice chair and tearoom owner, preferred gossip to governing
and was content to let Peggy rule the roost. George Wetherhead,
recording secretary and model train enthusiast, was so bashful that
he rarely raised his eyes from the laptop computer he used to
record the minutes. Mr. Wetherhead would no more think of
contradicting Peggy than he would of challenging her to a wrestling match.
Our treasurer, Jasper Taxman, had been a retired accountant
before marriage to our chairwoman had forced him to rethink his
definition of retirement. No professional career could have kept
him busier than his wife did. When he wasn’t minding the tills in
Peggy’s shops or selling stamps in Peggy’s post offi
ce, he was
keeping the books for Peggy’s myriad committees.
The last chair on the stage was assigned to the least important
member of the committee: me, Lori Shepherd—wife, mother, and
hapless draftee. I sat at the long table because, having made the
grave mistake of missing last year’s May meeting, I’d been appointed,
in absentia, to the post of sergeant-at-arms.
All things considered, I’d gotten off lightly. Although my title
was impressive, my duties were not. I was assigned to keep order
among the villagers during the meeting, and to distribute Peggy’s
work rosters after it. Since our chairwoman needed no one’s
help to keep the villagers in order, and since she wouldn’t release
4 Nancy Atherton
the rosters until she’d finished reviewing her copious notes, I spent
most of the eve ning staring absently into space.
“Item one,” Peggy began. “A few comments on fastening floral
swags to the art show tables. Safety pins are considered unsightly
and will not be used unless the following conditions apply. . . .”
As if by magic, my eyes stayed open while my mind floated out
of the schoolhouse. My first thoughts were, as always, of home.
Finch was nestled snugly in a verdant river valley set amidst the
patchwork fields and rolling hills of the Cotswolds, a rural region
in England’s West Midlands. I lived two miles south of Finch, in a
cottage made of honey-colored stone, with my husband, Bill, and
our six-year-old identical twin sons, Will and Rob.
Although Bill, the twins, and I were American, we’d lived in
England long enough to know the difference between crème fraîche
and clotted cream, and to develop an incurable addiction to the latter. Bill ran the Europe an branch of his family’s venerable Boston
law firm from a high-tech office on the village green, Will and Rob
attended school in the nearby market town of Upper Deeping, and
I divided my time between taking care of my family and serving my
community.
Until quite recently, we’d shared our home with the boys’ nanny,
the inestimable Annelise Sciaparelli, but she’d left us in mid-May to
marry her longtime fiancé, Oliver Elstyn, and her room had been
vacant ever since. With the twins attending primary school full-time, neither Bill nor I felt the need to hire another nanny, and we
agreed that Annelise was irreplaceable in any case.
“Item twenty-four . . .”
Peggy’s bellow jerked me out of my reverie.
“. . . the proper use of dust bin lids!”
I immediately sank back into a stupor shared by almost everyone in the schoolhouse. I couldn’t remember the last time I’d been
excited about a committee meeting. My life was in many ways
idyllic—devoted husband, healthy sons, happy
home—but I’d
lately begun to realize that it was also just a tiny bit . . . boring. I
Aunt Dimity Slays the Dragon
5
loved my friends and
neighbors—most of the
time—but their
faces had started to become a tad too familiar, their habits slightly
too predictable. The daily routine of village life, which I’d once
found so fulfilling, had recently begun to seem a little too . . .
routine.
As I scanned the faces assembled in the schoolroom, I acknowledged sadly that there wasn’t much I didn’t know about my fellow
villagers. Mr. Barlow, a retired mechanic, was in the midst of
cleaning the carburetor in a vintage Mustang he was restoring for a
wealthy and recently divorced client who lived in Tewkesbury. Although Miranda Morrow was a strict vegetarian, she spent hours
every day preparing the choicest cuts of meat for her cat. Lilian
Bunting, the vicar’s wife, was currently rewriting the third paragraph of her introduction to a book about stained glass. Dick Peacock, the local publican, had taken up pottery as a hobby, but the
consensus was that his handmade goblets would do little to improve the taste of his homemade wine.
And so on and so forth. I knew without asking whose dog had
fleas, whose roof had sprung a leak, whose grandchildren were
angelic and whose were not. If Finch had any surprises left for me,
it was keeping them well hidden.
“Item twenty-five: Flower show entry forms. Block letters must
be used when filling out . . .”