It wasn’t always the bike sheds. Sometimes it was the tennis pavilion. Or, in winter, the air vent near the boiler room. We fondly imagined that the teachers had no idea, of course, that it was here that we congregated to gossip, apply illicit lipstick, smoke forbidden cigarettes or meet one of the boys from the neighbouring school. It was here that romance lurked in the shadows…or occasionally in the bushes… where the abhorred cherry-red beret, otherwise worn at the regulation angle, was discarded and where the horrid white socks were exchanged for more womanly hosiery before we left the premises.
Whilst the majority of the girls still studiously spent their time on more acceptable pursuits in the library or debating society, we were the rebels… the bad girls of the Grammar School… the ones who would be regularly hauled in front of the terrifying deputy headmistress for our perfidy…
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just wanted to let you know that I’ve recently read your “Sword of Destiny” and loved it! Have left a short review on it at Amazon…!
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Oh, thank you,Freya! I’m so glad you enjoyed it!
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Enjoyed this thoroughly, Sue. You certainly have a gift for words. 🙂 Loved this particularly: “socially accepted mediocrity” oh how true that is!
On Tue, Aug 18, 2015 at 1:08 AM, Daily Echo wrote:
> Sue Vincent posted: ” “
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Thanks, Eliza . we do seem to be pushed towards that so often .
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