This
compilation of notes continues my efforts to study Lady Constance, said to be
the world's most dominant woman. Having researched D/s relationships for many
years in my capacity as a clinical psychologist, my initial undertaking was to
better understand the relationship of Lady Constance and 'boy', a trained subjugant. Taking a sabbatical from my university, I spent
many weeks interviewing those concerned with 'boy's' care and training. My
efforts included a flight to Europe for additional background information and
have been summarized in a treatise termed 'Lady Constance'.
These notes are an
addendum to that effort, arising mainly from a trip, at Lady Constance's
suggestion, to her exclusive Caribbean island.
As with the 'Lady Constance' treatise, this draft also results from
organizing my notes for a paper to be submitted to the American Society for
Behavior Modification.
I have a two-hour wait in the Berlin
airport for my plane to Aruba. My flight from Munich arrived early, another
tribute to German efficiency.
The
time between flights provides me with an opportunity to read background
material on my ultimate destination, Constancia
Island.
Since
Lady Constance surprised me with the airplane ticket to Aruba, I had little
notice concerning this extended leg of my trip. But I was able to perform some
quick research before leaving and located, deep in the bowels of a New York
research library, old magazine articles from the 1920's. Other articles were
found, and I copied all and placed them in my brief bag without reading them,
having to spend the remainder of the day packing.
In
the following summaries, the italics are my editorial clarifications.
Esquire, May 25, 1923 "Baron Esterhoven Purchases an Island"
The wealthy Baron Esterhoven (great grandfather to Lady Constance) has
purchased a small, secluded island near Aruba. Past ownership, of the
uninhabited two-mile by seven-mile island, has been disputed by three
countries, Netherlands, France and Spain. Thus it was only someone such as the
influential Baron, with access to the halls of world leadership and with immense
wealth, who could finally negotiate the ultimate status of the secluded strip
of tropical greenery.
The solution..., for undisclosed
sums paid to all three countries, it now belongs to him. Therefore, a new
principality has been created with the Baron and his wife becoming defacto King and Queen of what, by signed agreement, will
be recognized as a separate country.
The Baron was not available for
interview, but associates close to the family suggest that the driving force
behind the expenditure of considerable time and money, was the beautiful, young
Baroness. Noted for her skills as an equestrienne, it seems she has long sought
a private facility for training and breeding. Knowledgeable breeders ponder the
effect of tropical heat and thus the usefulness of the island as a facility for
horses.
Eccentricity is the privilege of
wealth.
International Construction (a trade journal) June 1924
"Baron Esterhoven Proceeds with Construction"
Baron Esterhoven
has engaged a sizable construction crew and provided them with their own ship
to facilitate conversion of his recently acquired island into a habitable
utopia.
The SS Bohemia, leased by the Baron
for one year, recently sailed from Savannah, Georgia after taking on earth
moving equipment, building material, and a diverse crew of engineers,
carpenters, plumbers, electricians.
Plans for the island are secretive,
but dock workers report that the equipment and materials are considerable and
could be used to build a city.
Time, October 15, 1925 "A New Nation?"
Stories are circulating in eastern
Africa that the Baroness Esterhoven, said to be
Europe's most beautiful socialite, has been offering to hire and relocate
members of a small African tribe to her island paradise.
Many Baganda
tribe members, noted for their unusual decorative bodies, were seen boarding
the Esterhoven yacht in Mombasa. Mostly young women
with a few men, it is rumored that their destination is the small island
purchased and recently made habitable at the cost of many dollars by the Baron Esterhoven.
As reported in many society
publications, the Baron Esterhoven is effectively a
King, having acquired the small island in such a manner as to assure its
sovereignty as an independent state. So, a King needs subjects, and the
impoverished members of the tribe have apparently been personally interviewed
by the Baroness for employment and relocation.
Long known for her riding skills,
the Baroness, some thirty years younger than the Baron, has applied much energy
in completing the unusual project, said to be a vacation home with stables and
training facilities.
No one is on record as having seen
the island after the two-year renovation. Located some twenty miles from Aruba,
all construction workers apparently had lucrative contracts which included
secrecy and non-disclosure clauses, thus society circles are abuzz with rumor
and innuendo. And with the proclivities of the young Baroness the subject of
much past gossip, it is no wonder that the reclusive world of the fabulously
wealthy is 'champing at the bit' for a glimpse of the world's newest
country.
New York Times, May 23, 1936 "The Most Exclusive
Voyage"
With the economy still reeling,
socialite Baroness Esterhoven, widow of the immensely
wealthy Baron Esterhoven, has chosen New York as the
port of embarkation for her annual soiree to the Caribbean. The Esterhoven yacht, dwarfing many cruise ships, stands ready
to sail from the 42nd Street pier.
Is it a newly found duty of the rich
to bolster the country's staggering level of employment? In a curious instance
of noblesse oblige, help wanted advertisements have been attributed to the
Baroness and her planned voyage. The ads seek 'healthy young males' for what is
described as 'well paid manual labor' with 'no skills required'. There is
certainly no end to such a pool of labor.
Interviews for an undeterminable
number of jobs were said to include a rather extensive medical examination,
which the Baroness personally supervised with nurses and the noted urologist,
Dr. Emily Reinhold.
Bon Voyage to those fortunate few
who met the criteria.
New York Times, February 5, 1937 "Missing Persons
Investigation Stymied"
A Federal judge effectively
terminated today an investigation into the disappearance of several young men.
New York police had requested a broad search warrant, which the judge declined
to issue citing sovereignty issues, and the right to question Baroness Esterhoven on her exclusive Caribbean island, which the
judge declined to issue without comment.
Allegations that four young males
embarked on a ship to the island last spring, never to be seen again, have been
pressed by distant relatives. Authorities could find no witnesses to their
departure from New York and attorneys for the Baroness have denied that the
four young men were among those making the journey.
The Baroness declined to comment,
referring reporters to her legal counsel.
"Last spring the Baroness did indeed
hire many men to engage in manual labor on her island. The four men in question
were not among them. For the New York Police Department to attempt to expand
their investigatory powers to a foreign country is a violation of international
law," argued Margaret Dowd, the eminent attorney for the Baroness.
Time, June 23, 1970 "A New Queen"
The Esterhoven
dynasty continues with the birth of a daughter to Sir Reginald (grandson of the Baron and his wife)
and Lady Jane Esterhoven. The arrival of the
daughter, Constance, was celebrated with the announcement that the secluded
family island near Aruba would be renamed in the daughter's honor.
But it's not just an island. It's
actually a small country, which by Sir Reginald's decree will henceforth be
called 'Constancia'. By his action, there is no doubt
that Sir Reginald is anointing his new born as its future Queen and ruler.
The resources of the Esterhoven family, substantially reinvigorated by Sir
Reginald, are reportedly vast, with the peculiar island nation as the only
remaining symbol of the old-world wealth. Sir Reginald capably realigned all
other family holdings into a new-world investment power, with controlling
interests in several fast growing industries including energy, drugs and
electronics.
So the new Queen will have no
shortage of monetary resources.
***
My
flight is announced. I carefully fold the articles and place them in my bag.
The flight to Aruba is long but I intend to sleep.
As
I wait to board, my mind reviews the island's chronology. It is interesting
that the age-old family of Lady Constance has been tinged with scandal and
innuendo for so many years. Proposed horse breeding in the searing heat of the
tropics, secretive construction, recruitment of Bagandan
women, missing young men..., suddenly my thoughts jump! The Bagandas!
A
cloudy portion of my memory begins to clear. Research from my masters' thesis
comes into focus. The African tribe is recalled.
The
Bagandas were noted for stretching various parts of
their anatomy. On females it was most common to stretch the inner labia since
large, exposed lips were considered symbolic of a very highly sexed woman. On
inferior males it was common to stretch the scrotal sac. A very long, low
hanging scrotal sac was deemed humiliating, and recalcitrant tribe members were
thus altered.
This
tradition of stretching expanded over the centuries and the tribe developed
exotic lotions and methods for slowly and systematically stretching the skin of
nubile daughters so they could attract the best husbands and of young males to
emasculate for behavior modification purposes. The sophisticated knowledge
acquired by the Baganda, which remains as a tribal
secret to this day, lies in stretching the flesh in such a manner so that no
scar tissue forms, which would tend to desensitize and deform the stretched
area. Thus, if the labia are stretched too far too fast, the female loses
sensitivity and a degree of sexual desire. In the male, an abbreviated
stretching process causes scarring, which would detract from the desired
sensual view of smooth, pink flesh.
Another
unusual facet of the Bagandan culture was their
relationship with neighboring villages. Whereas the history of Africa is
replete with countless wars and battles among bordering African cultures, the Bagandas were for the most part peaceful. There was little
motivation to expand their territory, but when attacked, they were noted for
their most brutal retaliations.
But
what particularly demotivated opposing warriors was the treatment of prisoners
by the Baganda. The possibility of being captured by
the Baganda made potential attackers very reluctant
to proceed, and eventually no opposing leader could muster the needed warriors
to stage an attack. For it was well known that all prisoners were turned over
to the Bagandan women, who, it was suggested by
numerous accounts, practiced their stretching skills with zeal and without
mercy. Also over the years, the younger women were trained by their elders to
have a complete disdain for non-Bagandan males, which
became ingrained into their psyche. I recalled reading descriptions provided by
nineteenth century explorers who when encountering the tribal village deep in
the African jungle, observed captured natives being treated as beasts of burden
by the Bagandan women, pulling carts and plows, with
various anatomical parts modified not only for amusement, but to facilitate
restraint.