CHAPTER 1
The other day, late one afternoon, I was walking along a quiet path in the park, when suddenly I experienced what the French call a Coup de Foudre, which literally translates into English as a Bolt of Lightning. Of course I had not been struck by lightning; otherwise I should not be here to tell this story. Metaphorically, Coup de Foudre also means falling in love at first sight. But in my case I have given it a slightly different meaning, which I will, in due course explain to to you, but which still depends on the immediacy of the expression. But before I get to that first let me introduce myself and tell you something about myself and then then all will become clear.
My name is Maxim Alexander Carrington, known to all and sundry as Max. I am twenty-seven years old and I am gay and I make no secret of the fact that I lead a very active gay sex-life which I thoroughly enjoy. I had the misfortune to lose both my parents in a car accident when I was just twenty.
My father, Alexander David Carrington, had been a stockbroker. I had always known that as a family we were quite well-off, but until the wills were read, just how well-off, I had had no idea. My father had owned outright the stock-broking firm of Carrington and Crawley. At some stage, my father had bought out his then partner, Francis Crawley and had thereby become the sole owner of the brokerage. Later he had sold the firm and at the time of his death was enjoying his retirement. We had never lived in a house but always in a huge apartment on the south side of the park, which is where I now live in solitary splendour. I choose for the moment to live alone, as I have not yet met anyone with whom I wish to share my daily life and, of course, my bed. But I am by no means lonely, as I have lots of friends and lead a very active, gay social-life. So I am quite happy with my lot in life; or so I was until the lightning struck.
My father, with whom I had never been very close, had had the foresight to make early provisions for his ultimate demise. He had taken advantage of every legal possibility to ensure that as much of his wealth as possible came to me and did not fall into the hands of the tax-man. And so, on my parents' somewhat untimely demise, I found myself a very rich young man. I owned the family flat and I found myself a millionaire many time over, even after all inheritance taxes had been paid. So all in all, I found that I did not need to work for a living as I could easily live on the income from my capital, which was managed by a firm of investment advisors and accountants.
At the time of the accident I was in my second year at Cambridge, reading history. I went on to graduate aged twenty-one (a lower second, in case you are wondering) and thereafter moved permanently back to live in the family flat south of the park, where I now lead a life which might best be described as foot-loose and fancy-free; and believe me, when I tell you that my fancy really is free. I have the wherewithal to indulge my tastes and that is what I do. A hollow life you might think, but I am not unhappy. But let me tell you a bit about my earlier life and the milestones which conditioned and influenced me.
Like most boys of rich families, I was sent first to a prep school, Frogmore Court, and then on to a public school, Frogmore Academy for Boys. Both schools were way up north near York, but as my father, my grandfather and my great grandfather before me had gone there, it was practically engraved in tablets of stone at my birth, that I too would also suffer the same fate in the name of a proper education.
Before I was shipped off up north to be educated, I had been a day-boy at a very up-market, private day-school within walking distance of our flat on the south side of the park. My nanny, whom I loved dearly and knew much better than my mother, used to take me and bring me home on a daily basis. At school, I was called Max both by the teachers (all young females) and my classmates and there was not even a whiff of corporal punishment of any kind. As those of you reading this who have had the pleasure (sometimes preceded by the epithet: doubtful) of an upper-class public school education, will already know, all that changed dramatically the moment I entered prep school. My nanny accompanied me on the train up north and saw me settled in the school and I confess I did not want her to leave me there and wept bitterly to be left by myself in this new place where I knew no one
I cannot say with any conviction that I really liked school and I was never, throughout my entire scholastic career from age eight to going on nineteen, a very industrious pupil. Numerous masters said, with some justification, that I lacked application, a most important quality, in their eyes and that if I applied myself, which I never did, I could do well academically. But it was precisely this lack of application, already evident aged eight, coupled with a tendency either to disobey or ignore instructions, which led me to my first encounter with what was to become a constant companion throughout my entire school life: the dreaded rattan cane. The birch, thank God, was already a thing of the past, but the cane was omnipresent and in daily use throughout my school career.