[CENTER]Chapter 10 Part 1[/CENTER]
It had taken the men nearly four hours to rescue the beast, but now they couldn’t stop laughing, and it was all Master Philip’s fault.
Since taking over as estate manager, he had got into the habit of checking the boundaries a section at a time, and visiting the residents and workers in each particular area while he was there.
Today he had headed over on foot to the North-West part of the estate to check on Mr and Mrs Hardcastle, who had a five-acre smallholding. They kept hens and ducks, and usually visited the manor at least once a week to sell eggs, and sometimes other fresh produce, but hadn’t been seen for ten days.
Philip found the couple hard at work in their vegetable plot, fighting the weeds that had sprung up due to heavy rains followed by several days of bright sunshine.
Having determined that all was well, Philip began walking South along the Western border of the estate, looking for damaged fences and hedgerows as he went, as well as anything else untoward such as a stray or injured animal.
Climbing to the top of a tumulus, he noticed movement in a hollow to one side of a stream. In heavy rain, the stream would overflow and run through the dip forming a grassy island, before it re-joined the original watercourse.
When the rains stopped and the water level reduced, the hollow would become first a long thin pond, then a bog, before eventually drying out completely.
Philip normally carried a small satchel on his walks, and today was no different. Inside it was a notebook and pencils, a small flask of water, and a map of the estate. It also contained a small brass bring-em-near, and it was this he used to see what had first caught his attention in the hollow.
Ged Morris had a herd of British White-Cross Friesians because of their high milk yield, and two Guernsey cows that were prized for their cream.
When Philip had been twelve, he and his brother had found a disused Ice-House built into the side of a hill to the North of the manor house. Albert had organised several estate workers to clear it and make it safe, and said that anyone from the estate or the village could use it as long as they helped to fill it with ice and snow each Winter.
Ged and his wife would take several boxes of ice to keep their dairy produce cool when they went to market, and made a decent profit selling cold milk in Summer, as well as keeping fresh their cheeses, and clotted cream made from the milk produced by the two Guernsey cows.
Through his telescope Philip could see one of these cows had got itself stuck in the muddy dip, and several men were trying to dig or pull it out, but so far, all their efforts had failed.
When Philip arrived at the muddy morass, he was told that someone had gone to fetch Clem and the Blacksmith. Clem was good with animals, and Geoff Prentice was both intelligent and strong.
Both men arrived a few minutes apart some twenty minutes later, bringing several more men with them, and a cart loaded with things they thought might be useful including shovels, sacking, ropes, and wooden planks.
Several suggestions were made and tried, but it was eventually decided that the only practical option really was to dig away as much mud as possible, then try to pull each hoof out in turn and slide wide boards underneath to spread the weight, whilst a couple of the strongest men pushed upwards on the cow’s hip bones and Clem soothed and pulled the cow with a swiftly made halter and bridle.
Unfortunately, the cow was most uncooperative, and kept sliding its hooves off the planks every time the men tried to lift the next one.
Eventually though after another two hours, the beast was finally dug free and pulled out using the rope-bridle.
“Thank heavens it was a Guernsey and not a Friesian” commented Ged’s friend, Arthur. “We would never have got one of your bigger cows out ’till th’Autumn Equinox.”
By this time, all the men were plastered from head to toe in mud and clay. It was at this point Master Philip began to laugh quietly. When asked what was so funny, he stood up and said in an exaggerated false upper-class voice,
“Ay em inveyted to the Palmer-Montegue’s summer ball this fine eve.”
Indicated his mud-spattered frontage, including a wide, dark sash of cow-pee diagonally from shoulder to hip, he made a dandy-like leg and held out his hand to an imaginary lady, saying, “Mey Ay hev the pleasure of this daaance?” He then proceeded to pull his imaginary partner to him, making a squelching noise with his mouth as he did so, then performed a dance with “her” around the field, to hoots of laughter from the other men.
It was some minutes before the laughter subsided, and then Philip declared that he really must go because he really had been invited to a summer ball.
The Palmer-Montegues had “requested the pleasure of Albert and Sarah Marsden’s company” along with both their sons, but Philip’s brother was unable to attend as he had just become a father for the first time a few days earlier.
Albert was actually convinced their invitation would be cancelled because of Philip’s involvement in his friend Charlotte’s scandalous marriage, but nothing had been said, so the arrangements were made for the three remaining family members to attend.
Because it was so far away, they would be spending the night, as would two maids and a carriage driver. The maids would tend to the Marsden family’s needs, and were also expected by the hosts to help serve food and drink to the hundred or so guests
© February 2021