The Sprint
Posted: Wed Oct 15, 2025 9:43 am
CHAPTER ONE: BETHANY
1.
The nights over Ridgewick were clear and cool. The evenings still carried a hint of winter, particularly when the Northerlies blew down from the Ranges towards the end of the day. With just over four weeks to go before Foundation Day, the town was abuzz with talk about the coming celebration. Festive lights were already being slung along The Drive all the way down to Memorial Park; local stores were stocking up on fireworks, trophies, and commemorative coins. Businesses all over Chamberlain County were gearing up for the annual invasion; the Chamber of Commerce was expecting a huge turn out this year. Tourists would be coming in from all points of the compass to take part in the Opening Ceremony.
Nor was the excitement confined only to the business sector. The Sprint had been the only topic of conversation for weeks now, ever since the days started to lengthen towards Spring. Libraries were thrashing posters onto every available surface, churches were running last-second cake stalls. Bands and orchestras were rushing helter-skelter learning new routines; scores of yammering children were busy decorating their schools with pennants, streamers and Chinese lanterns. And, most importantly, in a hundred different homes, in a thousand different rooms and yards and poolsides, young girls had started training.
Behind closed doors, secrets were taught and mysteries imparted as they had for more than six generations. Sometimes in private and sometimes in plain view, they worked on their drills and steps, counting down the hours until Century Day. It was like a fever that raged from house to house under cover of darkness, consuming every girl it touched with a kind of sweet, seductive madness. Some trained alone, some trained with friends, some trained in teams, and the fever swept on through street, square and avenue.
There were no easy victories, however.
Not everyone embraced the festival with open arms and willing hearts. Many girls viewed the Sprint with fear, anxiety, and not a little dread. Voices were raised in hopeless protest, tears were shed in hopeless petitions. It made no difference in the end; the date had been announced, the lots had been drawn, and The Race would be run. That was the tradition, and in Courtland County, tradition took precedent over law. Ridgewick girls had always run The Sprint regardless of how they felt. Some pleaded, some wept, some resisted with all their strength, but eventually, everybody succumbed.
Without exception.
2.
"Bethany? Could you set the table please?"
"Yes, Mom," Bethany Tyler replied, rising from the sofa and leaving her little sister with the remote. There was no sense in arguing; it was late in the afternoon, the streetlights were flickering on all over town and there wasn't much worth watching this time of day. Purple dinosaurs and dancing turnips may have snared little Kyra's attention, but they held little appeal for a girl Bethany's age.
Walking out to the kitchen, she was immediately overwhelmed by the aroma of slowly baking cookies. That was for after dinner; Cousin Irene was coming over for a meal and she had a fetish for homemade double-choc. Normally, Beth would have been looking forward to the visit, as Irene was her favorite crazy relative, but tonight she was feeling a little apprehensive. With only twenty-one days until The Sprint, Bethany had a healthy dose of the mysterious Ridgewick Jitters.
Pre-Race trepidation was reaching plague proportions around Bethany's school; most of her friends had already contracted the malaise. It was the same every year, Beth had seen it sweep through the student population on numerous occasions, although this was the first time she'd ever suffered the symptoms herself. That was mainly because she was now old enough to compete.
"Forks on the left, Honey," Carol Tyler said as Bethany opened the cutlery drawer.
"Okay," Beth replied, absently scooping out two handfuls of silverware out of the drawer. Laying the utensils out on the table, she glanced at her mother, wondering if she should broach the subject that had been on her mind the whole day. It was a topic she'd discussed numerous times at school, usually in those huddled, whispering conferences held in the library. Kendra Morgan had raised the matter earlier that day on the way to the cafeteria. Her voice had been low and kind of tremulous, betraying a nervous giggle behind her words, almost as if she was reluctant to ask the question in public. Bethany had understood her anxiety - the topic was practically taboo in Ridgewick.
Kendra had wanted to know if The Sprint was absolutely compulsory for girls their age.
It was a simple enough question, straightforward and logical, but nobody seemed to have an answer for it. Bethany suspected this was because no one had yet worked up the courage to ask their parents or teachers. Like Bethany herself, everybody feared what the answer might be. More than that, it was one of those topics better left unresolved, because - inexplicably - no one really wanted to know the answer.
Why?
Well, that was virtually impossible to explain.
Like many of her girlfriends, Bethany had experienced a kind of breathless, guilty exhilaration over the past few weeks. It was all that they could talk about around school: tittering little conversations held between textbooks in the classroom; secret, conspiratorial meetings at the bottom of the playground. Questions were asked, alliances were formed and pacts were made. None of them could have put it into words, but their apprehension was matched only by their anticipation. It was like the first time you climb onto the roller coaster. You're frightened, terrified in fact, but you still want to ride. Because it terrifies you.
As The Big Day approached, that sense of unwilling desire seemed to increase geometrically. Bethany knew that many of her classmates had already started practicing; mostly under their parent's tutelage. That was how it started: a sort of secret ritual shared by close family members; first in the bedrooms and living spaces, then later in the yards and playgrounds. Weeks of preparation and rehearsals, working up to the big event at Memorial Park.
"I've finished, Mom," Beth said, stepping back from the table, "does it look okay?"
"Looks fine," Carol said, adding another dash of spice to the Bolognese sauce she was simmering, "why don't you go wash up? Dinner's almost ready and Irene will be here anytime."
"Okay," Bethany replied, and walked toward the hallway. Reaching the archway, she stopped and looked back over her shoulder to where her mother was bustling about between stove and counter, a tall, attractive woman in faded blue jeans and a loose-fitting green sweater. Bethany wavered undecided for a several seconds, then called out to her in a soft voice.
"Mommy?"
"Yes dear?"
"Is the..." Pause. Edit. Amend: "Did you have to take part in The Sprint when you were my age?"
"Well, of course I did," Carol smiled ingenuously, "every girl in Ridgewick does."
And before Bethany could ask her next question, the doorbell rang, announcing Cousin Irene's cyclonic arrival.
3.
Irene Marshall was something of a celebrity on Mommy's side of the family, one of those rare, exotic black sheep loved by all and understood by none but the smallest children. A slim, bewitching girl with lustrous black hair and eyes the color of an autumn sunset, she had gained a footnote in Ridgewick history by trekking all around Europe and Asia before her nineteenth birthday. Her subsequent achievements were both impressive and considerable: an artist's studio in California; a section in the Venice Biennale; a traveling fellowship from the Churchill Foundation to name but a few.
More importantly, she had won The Prize during her youth, an accomplishment which in Ridgewick outshone all others. The triumph had been celebrated in newspaper clippings and photo albums across the entire clan; everybody seemed to own a memento from that glorious occasion (mostly pictures of Irene holding The Prize aloft before a wildly cheering crowd). Consequently, she was considered an authority on the subject of winning The Sprint - although from what Bethany could see, that was largely a matter of luck.
Not that Beth would have dared to voice such an opinion out loud. Irene's victory had attained a kind of mythical status during the intervening years, and any suggestion that it was the result of blind fortune would have been akin to blasphemy. The Prize had been won through skill and technique alone - and listening to 'Reenie's account of that earth-shattering event, Bethany wouldn't have doubted it for a second. Like many prize-winning veterans of The Sprint, Irene was a spellbinding talker when it came to recounting the defining moment of her youth.
All of it was related in immaculate detail: the pennants waving over the pavilions, the manic warbling of the calliope, the frivolous odor of cotton candy and licorice drifting down sideshow alley. Irene wove the tale in a cascade of dazzling images; the roaring of the crowds around the Pavillion, the prickling of the short cropped grass beneath their feet, the blasting of the horns as the Sprint began, the wild, careening rush beneath the endless blue skies. Bethany had listened utterly enthralled, her heart frequently soaring with awe and wonder.
And that was the strangest part was simply this: Beth had actually witnessed the event when she was six. It was her first trip to Memorial Park, her first encounter with The Sprint. It had been huge and bright and wonderful (as Foundation Day always was), and yet Irene's retelling was infinitely more thrilling. All of them sat entranced around the table, transfixed by the narrative. Even little Kyra, Beth's irrepressible younger sister, had been uncharacteristically silent throughout the story (a rare event indeed in the Tyler household, Mommy later commented).
The meal was half past finished when the conversation drifted onto this year's 'Silver Century.' By that time, Bethany had begun to suspect that 'Reenie's visit wasn't entirely coincidental. The timing was just too close, the atmosphere too jubilant to be just another family meal. She guessed - accurately, it later turned out - that this was one of the countless unspoken rituals connected with Foundation Day; the sharing of knowledge between mothers, sisters and family. The same initiation that Carol and Irene had undergone each in their turn a space of years ago.
And it always began with the same question.
"So - are you looking forward to The Sprint, Bethany?" Irene asked, sipping thoughtfully at her Swiss Blend. They were seated around the table, two girls and two women wreathed in a cloud of domestic bliss and homebaked double chock. Bethany looked up from her cookie, taken slightly off balance by the question. She dithered about for several seconds, not really certain how to answer. It wasn't something that could be easily put into words, even at the best of times.
"Well ... yeah, I guess so," she replied after a long moment, hoping they wouldn't notice the lack of enthusiasm in her voice. Irene traded an amused glance with Carol, then looked back to the girl.
"Feeling a little nervous?"
"Uh-huh." An obvious understatement: saying she felt nervous was like calling a hurricane a slight breeze.
"Well, that's completely normal. I had the worst case of Ridgewick Jitters when my turn came round; practically begged my mother not to make me run the Century."
"Really?" Bethany gaped, frankly astonished by this admission.
"Yes. Of course, yes. We all go through this when the time comes," Reenie told her nonchalantly, "one of my friends locked herself in her bedroom and didn't come out for two days. Another one tried to run away the night before. Girls go a little crazy when they know it's their turn to run The Sprint. By the time Foundation Day rolled round, every girl in my grade was practically climbing the walls, we were so hyped-up over the whole thing. It happens every year. You must've seen it down at your school."
It was true of course, Bethany had seen it. A lot of weird stuff had been going on around the playground lately. All the secret meetings, the huddled conspiracies, the endless, probing questions. A few of her classmates were trying to plea-bargain their way out of the Sprint, while others were almost desperate to practice in the school gym during lunch hours. Even now, three weeks down the road, you could feel the tension building up like some vast, high-pressure cable.
Irene leaned in close, lowering her voice to a vaguely confidential tone.
"Bet I know what everybody's talking about at school this week."
"Do you?" Bethany straightened her spine attentively, thinking of Kendra Morgan.
"You're all asking each other what you'll be wearing on Century Day."
Beth started in surprise, almost knocking her milk off the table. Not exactly the question Kendra had asked, but one she'd heard incessantly over the past five days; the question uppermost in everybody's mind this week. Everyone thought that clothing was the key to winning the Prize. She sat regarding her cousin with eyes the size of dinner plates. How could she have possibly known that?
Irene smiled indulgently, exchanging another glance with Mommy.
"Oh, I know how it is," she remarked airily, "I remember from when I was in school. Happens the same way every year, doesn't it, Carol?"
Mommy nodded her agreement, waving a dismissive hand. "Sure does."
"Right about now," Irene continued offhand, "everyone seems to think that the most important thing is whether you're wearing a skirt or a dress. Am I right?"
"Yes!" Beth answered immediately, sitting up a little straighter in her chair. Carla Daniels had asked her that very question only yesterday. So had Bianca Willoway, Serena Richards, and half a dozen others.
"Yeah, I know," Irene went on, "they're asking all sorts of embarrassing questions too, like what color your panties will be, or if your bra's going to clip up at the front or the back."
Bethany felt her cheeks start to pinken at the mention of her underwear. Beside her, Kyra giggled with innocent delight. Irene paused long enough to take a sip from her coffee, then resumed her discourse.
"Like any of that's going to help you win the race," she said with a throwaway gesture. "Well, let me set you straight on that, kiddo. The truth is, what you decide to wear is the least important thing in the Sprint. As a matter of fact, I already know what you'll be wearing to the Century."
Bethany leaned forward, utterly captivated by her cousin's down-home rhetoric. Everyone at the table seemed to be hanging on her next word, even Mommy.
"Want me to tell you?" Irene asked, as if there were any question of the matter.
"Uh-huh," Bethany replied without hesitation.
"OK, then. Stand up."
Shifting her chair back from the table, Bethany rose to her feet, absently smoothing her skirt with both hands. An odd sense of anticipation descended over her, making her pulse quicken slightly. A tiny flutter seemed to ripple through her belly, just like the time she danced solo at the school concert last year.
"All right now," Irene mused, tapping her chin thoughtfully, "take off your shoes, one at a time."
Bethany paused for a moment, glanced at her feet, then knelt down to unstrap her glossy black MJs. A few seconds later, she straightened up, glancing back to her cousin expectantly.
"Good. Now - take off you socks."
Another momentary hesitation, then Beth peeled off her white cotton knee-socks, wondering where this was leading. The kitchen had fallen oddly quiet, even Kyra was mute with curiosity. Bethany stood up, her bare feet cold against the smoothly varnished floorboards.
"That's right," Irene commented approvingly, "now, take off your t-shirt."
Bethany's eyes widened slightly. She looked over at her mother, lips parted with unspoken surprise. She suddenly understood precisely where this was going. It was a dress rehearsal, so to speak; a practice run for the Silver Century. Surely they weren't going to make her -
"Go on, sweet-heart" Mommy told her reassuringly, "we're all family here."
Bethany wavered for several seconds, then reached down to draw the t-shirt over her head. The neckline tangled around her throat for several seconds, then came free after a brief struggle. A fine, crimson blush began to spread through Bethany's features as she dropped the t-shirt to the floor. She was wearing a white polyester bra with a tiny pink bow between the cups, the kind worn by little girls when they first reach puberty. This was Bethany's hidden shame - her build was so delicate she had to wear a training bra. One of the straps had fallen over her left shoulder. Slipping it absently back into place, she turned back to her cousin.
Irene waved a hand towards her midsection, indicating her sheer cotton wrap.
"And the skirt too."
Bethany felt her breath catch in her throat. She was no longer a child; like most girls her age, she had become extremely self-conscious about her body. Her head began to swim with a dizzying blend of helpless arousal. Were they going to make her take off everything? Eyes darting from face to face, she reluctantly slipped her skirt down her thighs, struggling with her natural, adolescent modesty.
"Panties!" Kyra squealed delightedly as her sister's underpants went on display. Bethany's flush darkened several shades. A wave of gooseflesh hummed across her arms and shoulders; it was a cool night and the picture windows were wide open. Worse than that, her panties were the full-cut variety made for little girls. Decorated with a pretty floral print, they were the only kind she could wear. She downcast her eyes, feeling roughly six years old. Icy cold fingers seemed to be streaking the length of her spine.
"Cute," Irene smiled, running her gaze up and down the girl's petite figure, then instructed her cousin to remove the next article of clothing.
Bethany moistened her lips, stifling an anxious giggle, then reached back to unclip her plain white training bra. She fumbled the first two attempts, partly through inexperience but mostly through nerves. Two bright red spots stood out on her cheeks; Irene had never seen her topless. Few people had, since she'd started wearing a brassiere. Slipping the straps over her shoulders, Bethany discarded the tangled remnant and covered her tiny breasts with both hands. She could feel the nipples hardening against her fingers like sharp ruby pin-points. A deep, carmine flush had spread all the way down her bare torso by now. She knew what was coming next.
"And now the panties, Bethie-girl."
Pausing only long enough to prompt a nod from her mother, Bethany dropped her hands from her chest and slipped her thumbs through her flimsy cotton briefs. Her pulse was fluttering in her tummy like a swarm of teasing butterflies; her entire frame was trembling in kind of delirious anticipation. Drawing a long, calming breath, she peeled her panties all the way down to her ankles, her entire nervous system buzzing with electric fire. Chill evening air whickered over her naked flesh as she crossed her hands in front of herself.
She lowered her gaze as Irene and her mother admired her lush, perfect body. Her figure was slim but beautifully formed, her skin as flawless as polished alabaster. Cherry-red nipples thrust out from her small, ripening breasts; further down, an impertinent little belly-button poked out from a gently curving tummy. In time, she might fill out to more adult proportions, but for now, she possessed that rare, insubstantial beauty peculiar to adolescent girls.
"Very good," Irene said, taking another sip from her coffee, "now put your hands by your sides."
Beth looked up, her pale blue eyes glittering with a kind of demure, innocent shame. There was no sense appealing to her mother, she already knew what the answer would be. Slowly, hesitantly, she drew back her fingertips, humiliation spilling over her in warm, delicious waves. Standing before her family with her smooth, hairless dimple on open exhibition, she looked no more than twelve years old. She lowered her eyes once more, looking down at herself, her nipples throbbing in time to her cantering heartbeat.
Irene leaned forward in her chair.
"See what you're wearing now, Bethany? she asked, indicating the girl's faultless nudity, "that's what you'll be wearing for The Sprint."
1.
The nights over Ridgewick were clear and cool. The evenings still carried a hint of winter, particularly when the Northerlies blew down from the Ranges towards the end of the day. With just over four weeks to go before Foundation Day, the town was abuzz with talk about the coming celebration. Festive lights were already being slung along The Drive all the way down to Memorial Park; local stores were stocking up on fireworks, trophies, and commemorative coins. Businesses all over Chamberlain County were gearing up for the annual invasion; the Chamber of Commerce was expecting a huge turn out this year. Tourists would be coming in from all points of the compass to take part in the Opening Ceremony.
Nor was the excitement confined only to the business sector. The Sprint had been the only topic of conversation for weeks now, ever since the days started to lengthen towards Spring. Libraries were thrashing posters onto every available surface, churches were running last-second cake stalls. Bands and orchestras were rushing helter-skelter learning new routines; scores of yammering children were busy decorating their schools with pennants, streamers and Chinese lanterns. And, most importantly, in a hundred different homes, in a thousand different rooms and yards and poolsides, young girls had started training.
Behind closed doors, secrets were taught and mysteries imparted as they had for more than six generations. Sometimes in private and sometimes in plain view, they worked on their drills and steps, counting down the hours until Century Day. It was like a fever that raged from house to house under cover of darkness, consuming every girl it touched with a kind of sweet, seductive madness. Some trained alone, some trained with friends, some trained in teams, and the fever swept on through street, square and avenue.
There were no easy victories, however.
Not everyone embraced the festival with open arms and willing hearts. Many girls viewed the Sprint with fear, anxiety, and not a little dread. Voices were raised in hopeless protest, tears were shed in hopeless petitions. It made no difference in the end; the date had been announced, the lots had been drawn, and The Race would be run. That was the tradition, and in Courtland County, tradition took precedent over law. Ridgewick girls had always run The Sprint regardless of how they felt. Some pleaded, some wept, some resisted with all their strength, but eventually, everybody succumbed.
Without exception.
2.
"Bethany? Could you set the table please?"
"Yes, Mom," Bethany Tyler replied, rising from the sofa and leaving her little sister with the remote. There was no sense in arguing; it was late in the afternoon, the streetlights were flickering on all over town and there wasn't much worth watching this time of day. Purple dinosaurs and dancing turnips may have snared little Kyra's attention, but they held little appeal for a girl Bethany's age.
Walking out to the kitchen, she was immediately overwhelmed by the aroma of slowly baking cookies. That was for after dinner; Cousin Irene was coming over for a meal and she had a fetish for homemade double-choc. Normally, Beth would have been looking forward to the visit, as Irene was her favorite crazy relative, but tonight she was feeling a little apprehensive. With only twenty-one days until The Sprint, Bethany had a healthy dose of the mysterious Ridgewick Jitters.
Pre-Race trepidation was reaching plague proportions around Bethany's school; most of her friends had already contracted the malaise. It was the same every year, Beth had seen it sweep through the student population on numerous occasions, although this was the first time she'd ever suffered the symptoms herself. That was mainly because she was now old enough to compete.
"Forks on the left, Honey," Carol Tyler said as Bethany opened the cutlery drawer.
"Okay," Beth replied, absently scooping out two handfuls of silverware out of the drawer. Laying the utensils out on the table, she glanced at her mother, wondering if she should broach the subject that had been on her mind the whole day. It was a topic she'd discussed numerous times at school, usually in those huddled, whispering conferences held in the library. Kendra Morgan had raised the matter earlier that day on the way to the cafeteria. Her voice had been low and kind of tremulous, betraying a nervous giggle behind her words, almost as if she was reluctant to ask the question in public. Bethany had understood her anxiety - the topic was practically taboo in Ridgewick.
Kendra had wanted to know if The Sprint was absolutely compulsory for girls their age.
It was a simple enough question, straightforward and logical, but nobody seemed to have an answer for it. Bethany suspected this was because no one had yet worked up the courage to ask their parents or teachers. Like Bethany herself, everybody feared what the answer might be. More than that, it was one of those topics better left unresolved, because - inexplicably - no one really wanted to know the answer.
Why?
Well, that was virtually impossible to explain.
Like many of her girlfriends, Bethany had experienced a kind of breathless, guilty exhilaration over the past few weeks. It was all that they could talk about around school: tittering little conversations held between textbooks in the classroom; secret, conspiratorial meetings at the bottom of the playground. Questions were asked, alliances were formed and pacts were made. None of them could have put it into words, but their apprehension was matched only by their anticipation. It was like the first time you climb onto the roller coaster. You're frightened, terrified in fact, but you still want to ride. Because it terrifies you.
As The Big Day approached, that sense of unwilling desire seemed to increase geometrically. Bethany knew that many of her classmates had already started practicing; mostly under their parent's tutelage. That was how it started: a sort of secret ritual shared by close family members; first in the bedrooms and living spaces, then later in the yards and playgrounds. Weeks of preparation and rehearsals, working up to the big event at Memorial Park.
"I've finished, Mom," Beth said, stepping back from the table, "does it look okay?"
"Looks fine," Carol said, adding another dash of spice to the Bolognese sauce she was simmering, "why don't you go wash up? Dinner's almost ready and Irene will be here anytime."
"Okay," Bethany replied, and walked toward the hallway. Reaching the archway, she stopped and looked back over her shoulder to where her mother was bustling about between stove and counter, a tall, attractive woman in faded blue jeans and a loose-fitting green sweater. Bethany wavered undecided for a several seconds, then called out to her in a soft voice.
"Mommy?"
"Yes dear?"
"Is the..." Pause. Edit. Amend: "Did you have to take part in The Sprint when you were my age?"
"Well, of course I did," Carol smiled ingenuously, "every girl in Ridgewick does."
And before Bethany could ask her next question, the doorbell rang, announcing Cousin Irene's cyclonic arrival.
3.
Irene Marshall was something of a celebrity on Mommy's side of the family, one of those rare, exotic black sheep loved by all and understood by none but the smallest children. A slim, bewitching girl with lustrous black hair and eyes the color of an autumn sunset, she had gained a footnote in Ridgewick history by trekking all around Europe and Asia before her nineteenth birthday. Her subsequent achievements were both impressive and considerable: an artist's studio in California; a section in the Venice Biennale; a traveling fellowship from the Churchill Foundation to name but a few.
More importantly, she had won The Prize during her youth, an accomplishment which in Ridgewick outshone all others. The triumph had been celebrated in newspaper clippings and photo albums across the entire clan; everybody seemed to own a memento from that glorious occasion (mostly pictures of Irene holding The Prize aloft before a wildly cheering crowd). Consequently, she was considered an authority on the subject of winning The Sprint - although from what Bethany could see, that was largely a matter of luck.
Not that Beth would have dared to voice such an opinion out loud. Irene's victory had attained a kind of mythical status during the intervening years, and any suggestion that it was the result of blind fortune would have been akin to blasphemy. The Prize had been won through skill and technique alone - and listening to 'Reenie's account of that earth-shattering event, Bethany wouldn't have doubted it for a second. Like many prize-winning veterans of The Sprint, Irene was a spellbinding talker when it came to recounting the defining moment of her youth.
All of it was related in immaculate detail: the pennants waving over the pavilions, the manic warbling of the calliope, the frivolous odor of cotton candy and licorice drifting down sideshow alley. Irene wove the tale in a cascade of dazzling images; the roaring of the crowds around the Pavillion, the prickling of the short cropped grass beneath their feet, the blasting of the horns as the Sprint began, the wild, careening rush beneath the endless blue skies. Bethany had listened utterly enthralled, her heart frequently soaring with awe and wonder.
And that was the strangest part was simply this: Beth had actually witnessed the event when she was six. It was her first trip to Memorial Park, her first encounter with The Sprint. It had been huge and bright and wonderful (as Foundation Day always was), and yet Irene's retelling was infinitely more thrilling. All of them sat entranced around the table, transfixed by the narrative. Even little Kyra, Beth's irrepressible younger sister, had been uncharacteristically silent throughout the story (a rare event indeed in the Tyler household, Mommy later commented).
The meal was half past finished when the conversation drifted onto this year's 'Silver Century.' By that time, Bethany had begun to suspect that 'Reenie's visit wasn't entirely coincidental. The timing was just too close, the atmosphere too jubilant to be just another family meal. She guessed - accurately, it later turned out - that this was one of the countless unspoken rituals connected with Foundation Day; the sharing of knowledge between mothers, sisters and family. The same initiation that Carol and Irene had undergone each in their turn a space of years ago.
And it always began with the same question.
"So - are you looking forward to The Sprint, Bethany?" Irene asked, sipping thoughtfully at her Swiss Blend. They were seated around the table, two girls and two women wreathed in a cloud of domestic bliss and homebaked double chock. Bethany looked up from her cookie, taken slightly off balance by the question. She dithered about for several seconds, not really certain how to answer. It wasn't something that could be easily put into words, even at the best of times.
"Well ... yeah, I guess so," she replied after a long moment, hoping they wouldn't notice the lack of enthusiasm in her voice. Irene traded an amused glance with Carol, then looked back to the girl.
"Feeling a little nervous?"
"Uh-huh." An obvious understatement: saying she felt nervous was like calling a hurricane a slight breeze.
"Well, that's completely normal. I had the worst case of Ridgewick Jitters when my turn came round; practically begged my mother not to make me run the Century."
"Really?" Bethany gaped, frankly astonished by this admission.
"Yes. Of course, yes. We all go through this when the time comes," Reenie told her nonchalantly, "one of my friends locked herself in her bedroom and didn't come out for two days. Another one tried to run away the night before. Girls go a little crazy when they know it's their turn to run The Sprint. By the time Foundation Day rolled round, every girl in my grade was practically climbing the walls, we were so hyped-up over the whole thing. It happens every year. You must've seen it down at your school."
It was true of course, Bethany had seen it. A lot of weird stuff had been going on around the playground lately. All the secret meetings, the huddled conspiracies, the endless, probing questions. A few of her classmates were trying to plea-bargain their way out of the Sprint, while others were almost desperate to practice in the school gym during lunch hours. Even now, three weeks down the road, you could feel the tension building up like some vast, high-pressure cable.
Irene leaned in close, lowering her voice to a vaguely confidential tone.
"Bet I know what everybody's talking about at school this week."
"Do you?" Bethany straightened her spine attentively, thinking of Kendra Morgan.
"You're all asking each other what you'll be wearing on Century Day."
Beth started in surprise, almost knocking her milk off the table. Not exactly the question Kendra had asked, but one she'd heard incessantly over the past five days; the question uppermost in everybody's mind this week. Everyone thought that clothing was the key to winning the Prize. She sat regarding her cousin with eyes the size of dinner plates. How could she have possibly known that?
Irene smiled indulgently, exchanging another glance with Mommy.
"Oh, I know how it is," she remarked airily, "I remember from when I was in school. Happens the same way every year, doesn't it, Carol?"
Mommy nodded her agreement, waving a dismissive hand. "Sure does."
"Right about now," Irene continued offhand, "everyone seems to think that the most important thing is whether you're wearing a skirt or a dress. Am I right?"
"Yes!" Beth answered immediately, sitting up a little straighter in her chair. Carla Daniels had asked her that very question only yesterday. So had Bianca Willoway, Serena Richards, and half a dozen others.
"Yeah, I know," Irene went on, "they're asking all sorts of embarrassing questions too, like what color your panties will be, or if your bra's going to clip up at the front or the back."
Bethany felt her cheeks start to pinken at the mention of her underwear. Beside her, Kyra giggled with innocent delight. Irene paused long enough to take a sip from her coffee, then resumed her discourse.
"Like any of that's going to help you win the race," she said with a throwaway gesture. "Well, let me set you straight on that, kiddo. The truth is, what you decide to wear is the least important thing in the Sprint. As a matter of fact, I already know what you'll be wearing to the Century."
Bethany leaned forward, utterly captivated by her cousin's down-home rhetoric. Everyone at the table seemed to be hanging on her next word, even Mommy.
"Want me to tell you?" Irene asked, as if there were any question of the matter.
"Uh-huh," Bethany replied without hesitation.
"OK, then. Stand up."
Shifting her chair back from the table, Bethany rose to her feet, absently smoothing her skirt with both hands. An odd sense of anticipation descended over her, making her pulse quicken slightly. A tiny flutter seemed to ripple through her belly, just like the time she danced solo at the school concert last year.
"All right now," Irene mused, tapping her chin thoughtfully, "take off your shoes, one at a time."
Bethany paused for a moment, glanced at her feet, then knelt down to unstrap her glossy black MJs. A few seconds later, she straightened up, glancing back to her cousin expectantly.
"Good. Now - take off you socks."
Another momentary hesitation, then Beth peeled off her white cotton knee-socks, wondering where this was leading. The kitchen had fallen oddly quiet, even Kyra was mute with curiosity. Bethany stood up, her bare feet cold against the smoothly varnished floorboards.
"That's right," Irene commented approvingly, "now, take off your t-shirt."
Bethany's eyes widened slightly. She looked over at her mother, lips parted with unspoken surprise. She suddenly understood precisely where this was going. It was a dress rehearsal, so to speak; a practice run for the Silver Century. Surely they weren't going to make her -
"Go on, sweet-heart" Mommy told her reassuringly, "we're all family here."
Bethany wavered for several seconds, then reached down to draw the t-shirt over her head. The neckline tangled around her throat for several seconds, then came free after a brief struggle. A fine, crimson blush began to spread through Bethany's features as she dropped the t-shirt to the floor. She was wearing a white polyester bra with a tiny pink bow between the cups, the kind worn by little girls when they first reach puberty. This was Bethany's hidden shame - her build was so delicate she had to wear a training bra. One of the straps had fallen over her left shoulder. Slipping it absently back into place, she turned back to her cousin.
Irene waved a hand towards her midsection, indicating her sheer cotton wrap.
"And the skirt too."
Bethany felt her breath catch in her throat. She was no longer a child; like most girls her age, she had become extremely self-conscious about her body. Her head began to swim with a dizzying blend of helpless arousal. Were they going to make her take off everything? Eyes darting from face to face, she reluctantly slipped her skirt down her thighs, struggling with her natural, adolescent modesty.
"Panties!" Kyra squealed delightedly as her sister's underpants went on display. Bethany's flush darkened several shades. A wave of gooseflesh hummed across her arms and shoulders; it was a cool night and the picture windows were wide open. Worse than that, her panties were the full-cut variety made for little girls. Decorated with a pretty floral print, they were the only kind she could wear. She downcast her eyes, feeling roughly six years old. Icy cold fingers seemed to be streaking the length of her spine.
"Cute," Irene smiled, running her gaze up and down the girl's petite figure, then instructed her cousin to remove the next article of clothing.
Bethany moistened her lips, stifling an anxious giggle, then reached back to unclip her plain white training bra. She fumbled the first two attempts, partly through inexperience but mostly through nerves. Two bright red spots stood out on her cheeks; Irene had never seen her topless. Few people had, since she'd started wearing a brassiere. Slipping the straps over her shoulders, Bethany discarded the tangled remnant and covered her tiny breasts with both hands. She could feel the nipples hardening against her fingers like sharp ruby pin-points. A deep, carmine flush had spread all the way down her bare torso by now. She knew what was coming next.
"And now the panties, Bethie-girl."
Pausing only long enough to prompt a nod from her mother, Bethany dropped her hands from her chest and slipped her thumbs through her flimsy cotton briefs. Her pulse was fluttering in her tummy like a swarm of teasing butterflies; her entire frame was trembling in kind of delirious anticipation. Drawing a long, calming breath, she peeled her panties all the way down to her ankles, her entire nervous system buzzing with electric fire. Chill evening air whickered over her naked flesh as she crossed her hands in front of herself.
She lowered her gaze as Irene and her mother admired her lush, perfect body. Her figure was slim but beautifully formed, her skin as flawless as polished alabaster. Cherry-red nipples thrust out from her small, ripening breasts; further down, an impertinent little belly-button poked out from a gently curving tummy. In time, she might fill out to more adult proportions, but for now, she possessed that rare, insubstantial beauty peculiar to adolescent girls.
"Very good," Irene said, taking another sip from her coffee, "now put your hands by your sides."
Beth looked up, her pale blue eyes glittering with a kind of demure, innocent shame. There was no sense appealing to her mother, she already knew what the answer would be. Slowly, hesitantly, she drew back her fingertips, humiliation spilling over her in warm, delicious waves. Standing before her family with her smooth, hairless dimple on open exhibition, she looked no more than twelve years old. She lowered her eyes once more, looking down at herself, her nipples throbbing in time to her cantering heartbeat.
Irene leaned forward in her chair.
"See what you're wearing now, Bethany? she asked, indicating the girl's faultless nudity, "that's what you'll be wearing for The Sprint."