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XOXOX Elizabeth Ann West
Chapter 17- If Mr. Darcy Dared
For two days the weather held and Mr. Darcy and Mr. Bingley made it a point to spend as much time at Longbourn as they could manage. Not even Mrs. Bennet’s enthusiasm for Mr. Bingley and Jane’s wedding could deter the gentlemen from their interests. Still, Elizabeth and Jane offered their beaus respite with the offer of an afternoon stroll in the garden. Neither Mrs. Bennet’s wedding plans nor their younger sisters’ meddling could interfere.
“Did you truly only come to Netherfield Park solely to aid your friend in learning how to run an estate?” Elizabeth asked Mr. Darcy as they strolled at least half a dozen paces behind Charles and Jane.
Mr. Darcy’s posture stiffened, and Elizabeth skipped a step when she felt it, though they quickly fell back into a comfortable cadence. “That was one of my intentions, yes. Though I suppose our current interests may have lost the target, our aim shall prove true. I’m still able to help him understand the spring plantings, and I am confident that with a good steward, Netherfield will flourish again even under a leasing tenant.”
“What about your own home? Do not misunderstand; I’m certainly not wishing you away, sir–” Elizabeth smiled and turned away from him.
“Fear not, I did not believe that is what you meant,” he said
Elizabeth turned back, her cheeks still red from the cold weather and their exercise. “I am merely curious. I’ve helped my father many a year and I agree with you that it is a great deal of enterprise.”
Mr. Darcy cleared his throat. He wished to say something to the effect of how it was his observation Longbourn would be increasingly miserable without Elizabeth’s guiding hand. Her father seemed less interested in running in an estate than a first son joining the Royal Navy. But his opinion would neither endear Elizabeth to him nor contain any facts to support his position. At least not until he whisked her away to become his Mrs. Darcy and Longbourn sank or floated as they said, under the management of its owner.
“You’ve grown quiet. I must have said something to shock to you,” she charged.
Mr. Darcy shook his head as he escorted Elizabeth down a different path than the one chosen by Charles and Jane. This winding path would take them into the back gardens, along the edge of the forest. They would not remain out of sight from the main house for long, but long enough for Darcy’s aims.
When at last they reached a place where the hedge grew taller than their heads, it was Elizabeth who pushed Mr. Darcy’s more substantial form to the side so that she concealed their actions. As Mr. Darcy bent down, Elizabeth stood on her tiptoes. Their lips met in an urgency of affection too long pent up in the drawing room under watchful eyes.
Elizabeth’s hands found their way beneath his coat, pressing her gloved hands against the back of his lawn shirt, gripping the fabric and wishing she could remove it from its tuck. She broke away from the kiss to rest her cheek against his shoulder as his kisses continued down her jawline, neck, and further still. With one hand, he expertly unhooked her Spencer then the same hand cupped her right breast, rubbing and tormenting her over her clothes. When she gasped in shock, his lips took her own once more, and they equally groaned into the kiss as Elizabeth pressed her form against his with eager desire. Her hands left the back of his coat and traced their way around the seat of his breeches to the front. Her grasp met his firm bulge, and she pressed her fingers around his form.
Not expecting Elizabeth’s touch, Mr. Darcy Fitzwilliam released her breast and reached down to still her hand. Immediately, she began her apologies and shame.
“I’m sorry, I thought–”
“No, please do not apologize. It is I who must apologize. I began something when I cannot offer either one of us a satisfying conclusion.”
Elizabeth sighed and rested her cheek against his chest, directly over where she imagined his heart to lie. Since the afternoon in Netherfield’s library, she understood very well what he meant,; it would be unfair of her to tease him further. She wanted to bring him to the same pleasures he had brought her, to witness it for herself this time. But then she remembered, there was no change of clothing for Mr. Darcy, nor a plausible explanation.
“Are you still able to walk?” she asked gently, raising her eyebrow in a challenge.
Mr. Darcy laughed, then offered his arm as he discreetly used his other hand to adjust his breeches. “I believe I am free to do so, at your leisure, madam.”
The time had come for them to walk to the end of the row and back in the direction of the house. Elizabeth looked around the garden but could not find any sign of Jane or Mr. Bingley.
“I wonder if they went inside. It is rather cold,” Elizabeth remarked. Mr. Darcy, with his taller stature, was able to see a small movement of hedge up ahead, and he swiftly turned Elizabeth around so that they might go back the way they came.
“Fitzwilliam?” Elizabeth asked.
“Would you have been mortified for your sister to have found us just now?” he asked.
Elizabeth gasped in shock, and he nodded. But they were not three steps more before Elizabeth began to giggle.
“And what has caught your humor, Elizabeth?” Darcy asked, smiling down at his intended.
“We are absolutely the most horrible chaperones for one another,” Elizabeth stated, and Fitzwilliam joined her in her laugh as he had to agree. But unlike other areas of his life where he might seek to correct his poor behavior, he found being a poor chaperone for his friend in equal measure of their chaperoning skills to be quite convenient.
As they reached the doorway, Elizabeth paused and turned to halt Fitzwilliam in his tracks.
“Will you be here for dinner on Friday?” she asked.
“I would not miss it unless you have other plans, dearest.”
Elizabeth bit her lower lip. “I do not, I just thought . . .”
“Yes?” he asked, bowing lower to hear her as her voice had dropped in volume.
“When we are married, we will most often be seated across from each other.” She batted her eyelashes as Mr. Darcy struggled to find her meaning. Suddenly, he gulped, and Elizabeth grinned watching his Adam’s apple reveal that he caught her meaning.
“And on Friday, we are to sit next to one another?” he asked.
She wrinkled up her nose and dashed up on her tiptoes to peck his lips in response. Then she turned around and opened the door, so he could not pull her in for a much longer affair.
She might not be able to physically tease his person like they had in the library. But she could at least plant the wanton thoughts that plagued her every moment since she spied her mother’s seating chart.
Chapter 18 - If Mr. Darcy Dared
The canteen tent for the soldiers transformed in the evenings to a small den of gambling and vice. As the quarter payment was not due for a few more weeks, most of the regiment no longer held extended credit in the village. So the men had taken to gambling amongst themselves both for promises to pay, boot polishing and other menial duties to swap, and finally outrageous pranks and feats of folly for the loser. Officers and enlisted alike participated, though if Colonel Forster had been present, he would have put a stop to the mixing. As the most senior officer in the regiment, he and Mrs. Forster were quartered with Mr. and Mrs. Phillips. By the time the sun had begun its descent in the sky each day, Colonel Forster had turned over the regiment to the able leadership of his lieutenants and Captain Carter.
“You can’t have three queens again! You just had that hand!” Private Holt grew flustered at a turn of luck against him.
“Are you calling me a liar or a cheat?” Lieutenant Wickham asked, not allowing the young private’s brash accusations to irritate him.
“Be careful, Sam,” Private Matthews warned his friend. “I don’t think he had the same hand.”
“Dash it, but he did! Sure as my name be Samuel Holt! No man wins this many times!” The young private’s face grew very red and he suddenly stood up from the table, glaring at Lieutenant Wickham with a menacing look.
Across the tent, Lieutenant Denny and Captain Carter could almost sense when their friend Wickham was in over his head. They had long ceased playing cards with the man, for though they could never prove it, they were certain the accusations were true. The man was a cheat.
Regardless, if the corps broke out into a brawl, it would be Captain Carter who held the responsibility. For that reason alone he thumped Denny hard with the back of his hand across his chest, and tilted his head in the far direction. Denny spied what Carter saw, and the two marched forward to flank Lieutenant Wickham on either side.
“Lieutenant, just the man I was looking for! Come have a drink with Denny and me,” Captain Carter said nonchalantly.
“But Captain, sir, he’s not playing fair and he’s taking all the winnings,” Private Matthew spoke up as his friend seethed, still standing over the table.
Denny proposed a truce. “How about you let the good Lieutenant leave with the money he put in to start with and the rest can be divvied up amongst you before you start another hand.”
As Denny made the proposal, he grabbed three coins that he knew were the buy-in for the enlisted tables and picked up the rest of the coins to scatter them to the table. Meanwhile, Captain Carter’s hand on Wickham’s shoulder made any question of the man remaining seated hold little doubt. Wickham placed his hands flat on the table and slowly stood, pursing his lips in irritation.
“It’s been a pleasure,” he said offhandedly and followed his handlers over to the makeshift bar the regiment had set up. The selection was poor, though it was better than ale. And as the captain poured Wickham a drink, Denny began yapping away.
“You have to be more careful, George. It’s okay to win a bit of coin here and there, but you can’t take all of their earnings,” he cautioned.
Wickham took a healthy swig, then considered his friend with narrowed eyes. “It was not I who played their cards for them. If they are too stupid to hold onto their money then what am I to do?” Wickham lifted his elbow in an exaggerated manner to take another draft that caused his coat to pucker. Captain Carter’s swift hands reached forward and snatched a playing card from Mr. Wickham’s breast. He flicked the offending queen of hearts between his fingers holding it up to Wickham’s face.
“And how do you explain this? I can bring you up on charges for behavior not befitting an officer.”
Wickham shrugged. As far as he was concerned, all of the marching and drilling and rules and especially the constant yelling were far from the interesting adventure they had been when he first began. And with Darcy in the neighborhood, he wasn’t even able to continue his favorite pastimes of company with the fair sort and charming his credit lines to befit his style of living. But one of Wickham’s instincts was to survive, so he knew what he had to do.
Immediately, he bowed his head and pretended to struggle with his emotions. Denny and Carter looked at each other utterly bewildered but dragged Wickham out of the tent. Carter held no real intention of turning Wickham in, or else he’d probably have to turn in half of the regiment for lying and stealing from one another.
“Come on, Lieutenant Wickham; let’s walk it off.” Captain Carter began as he and Denny steered the overcome man back towards his tent.
Denny, in his utter stupidity, came up with the worst idea to cheer Wickham up. “I know, tomorrow night, George! Croft can run the post. You should come with us to dinner at the Bennets. Mrs. Bennet sets a fine table, and she never says no to another officer!”
“I couldn’t bear it,” Wickham said, sullenly.
Captain Carter laughed a hollow laugh and clapped Wickham harshly upon the back of his shoulder blade. George lurched forward and turned around to scowl. But he didn’t raise a hand to his superior.
“No more about this disinheritance business again. You don’t win any friends around here with your tales of woe. All the lads have older brothers who inherited it all and they had to find their way,” offered Carter.
Wickham stopped dead in his tracks. He had never thought how his misrepresentations about Darcy keeping his inheritance would play to this audience, but it did not prevent his next gamble.
“That is merely the story I tell for polite company. If you knew the truth, well, you would understand why I cannot bear to be in a room with that scoundrel.” Wickham clenched his fists and playacted his hate for Darcy as a channel for his current frustrations with a particular captain in his presence.
Reaching Wickham’s tent that he shared with Denny, Captain Carter crossed his arms in front of his chest. While he was skeptical, Denny asked earnestly for more, worse than a mother hen clucking for gossip. Wickham obliged.
“It is true I was meant for the church; that is what old Mr. Darcy wanted. More than that, it so happened last summer Miss Darcy, and I fell violently in love. She’s a shy, quiet young woman. Virtuous beyond all compare. And when Darcy learned of it, he took her away,” Wickham ended, allowing his voice to crack with emotion.
With a look of concern, Denny reached out his arm and clasped Wickham’s shoulder in solidarity. “That’s treacherous. You’ve never mentioned being in love with Miss Darcy to me.”
Captain Carter began to laugh so hard that his sides ached. He hastily took a step away from the two men. Wickham narrowed his eyes at Carter while Denny looked between the two men utterly confused.
“Pip Pip, we shan’t kick a man when he’s down! Captain?” Lieutenant Denny cried.
Captain Carter blew out a breath and shook his head. Once he’d regained his composure, he spoke. “I’ve seen you with too many a lady to believe you heartbroken over a young heiress her family was likely right to secret away. Get some sleep, Lieutenant, as I expect to see you report for kitchen duty after morning muster.”
“But that’s not duty befitting an officer,” Wickham spat.
Carter shrugged. “Consider it your path of penance. Denny?” Carter waited for Lieutenant Denny to look directly at him. “Keep him out of trouble for the rest of the night.”
The two men retired, and to Wickham’s chagrin, Lieutenant Denny took his confession of being in love with Miss Darcy as permission to drone on and on about his infatuation with Miss Catherine Bennet. It was Denny’s drollness and continued complements of the young woman that finally bored Wickham to sleep with dreams of somehow escaping the militia with a fortune of gold lining his pockets.
Chapter 19 - If Mr. Darcy Dared
Hertfordshire boasted many a fine family, but none could complain about the generous spread of Mrs. Bennet’s table. Expanded to accompany not only the intendeds of Elizabeth and Jane, the Friday night dinner for the Bennets also included Captain Carter and Lieutenant Denny as well as Mr. and Mrs. Phillips, and Mrs. Long with her two nieces. To accommodate the imbalance of women to men, Elizabeth and Jane sat across from each other on their father’s end of the table, while Kitty and Lydia flanked their mother at the opposite end. Ever the shrewd matchmaker, Mrs. Bennet sat Captain Carter and Lieutenant Denny next to her daughters and Mrs. Phillips and Mrs. Long on their other sides. With Mr. Darcy and Mr. Bingley already engaged to her eldest daughters, Mrs. Bennet had successfully blocked the two eligible soldiers from conversing with the Long nieces.
Although the county had expressed confusion over the odd courtship of Mr. Darcy and Elizabeth Bennet, the explanation of a special license and a marriage in London had spread through the surrounding neighborhood. Instead of doors being shut, Elizabeth soon found herself with many invitations to dinners and evenings of playing cards that she coordinated with Jane to attend only when they had been invited together along with Mr. Bingley and Mr. Darcy.
Since their afternoon at Netherfield Park, the couples had spent an evening at the Longs, which necessitated their reciprocal invitation on that particular Friday. But they’d also been invited to the Byngs and attended, with all enjoying the now comical confusion over the carriages. The neighborhood felt happy to see two of its most eligible daughters engaged to marry wealthy bachelors, even if some jealousy arose in families with eligible daughters themselves.
Elizabeth beamed at Mr. Darcy as she offered him a plate of steamed asparagus with hollandaise sauce. She used the tongs to serve a helping of spears onto her plate and held the dish out expectantly to Mr. Darcy.
“Thank you,” he said, as he turned to hand the plate to Miss Miranda Long without taking any asparagus for himself.
As Elizabeth used her fork and knife to cut her spears into more ladylike bites, she made a note to inquire as to Mr. Darcy’s particular tastes. “You do not eat cooked carrots, not even candied. And you do not care for asparagus. Pray, what vegetables do you eat, Mr. Darcy?” Elizabeth asked as she helped herself to a mouthful of her meal. Unlike dining in others’ homes, as she was at Longbourn, a hearty dinner could cause no inconvenience.
Mr. Darcy squirmed slightly uncomfortably in his seat as he reached for the quail eggs poached with parsnips. “I am told I was never fond of eating vegetables since I was a child. I can usually tolerate root vegetables when stewed with meets, but prepared individually I find I pass them along more often than partake,” Mr. Darcy clarified.
To make conversation across the way, Elizabeth asked the same of Mr. Bingley.
“And what about you Mr. Bingley? Do you have a particularly favorite vegetable? Or are you of the same persuasion as Mr. Darcy and avoid them altogether?” She gave a sly smile in the direction of Mr. Darcy as he interjected to state that he enjoyed some vegetables. But Elizabeth had enjoyed many meals with her future husband, and she had never noticed him eat any. It would be a challenge she would rise to conquer when they, at last, lived together.
Mr. Bingley stopped staring at Jane when she repeated her sister’s question for him to hear. Mr. Bingley laughed at his faux pas and addressed Elizabeth directly.
“I enjoy many labors of the garden, though I am most happy when they are covered with a sauce.” Mr. Bingley answered.
After three courses of dishes, polite discussion all around, and perhaps some wandering hands that misplaced their serviette, the time came for the gentlemen and ladies to separate for a short period. Mrs. Bennet led the promenade of ladies to the parlor where coffee and tea awaited their arrival. Elizabeth and Jane were two of the last to leave the room, and could not help turning to take one last look at their respective grooms. The other men in the room did not miss the pointed attentions of the Bennet sisters, and as soon as the door closed scarcely waited before teasing both bachelors.
As Captain Carter availed himself of the chamber pot, Lieutenant Denny walked over to Mr. Darcy and Mr. Bingley where they stood very close to Mr. Bennet and Mr. Phillips.
“Pardon me for saying so, and though it is said to let there be no impediment to true love, you are uncannily lucky, Mr. Darcy. I can see now why you compromised Miss Elizabeth at the ball to force Mr. Bennet to accept your suit.” Denny laughed as though such ribald speech would not be considered immensely rude by the father and uncle of the lady he shamed.
“Do not get any ideas, Lieutenant Denny, concerning my other daughters. I am keeping a close eye on you,” Mr. Bennet scolded the silly soldier who appeared to shrink back, looking to Captain Carter for assistance.
Mr. Darcy frowned. “I do not understand the point you are making, sir. I did not fear Mr. Bennet’s disapproval, and I can honestly say my behavior with Miss Elizabeth, while uncharacteristic, was not conducted through manipulation but from overwhelming emotion.”
“Aye, gentlemen like you have nothing to fear like a poorly soldier,” Denny said wistfully as he eyed the cabinet for the chamber pot, but Mr. Phillips had already taken the place to be the second to avail himself. Denny suddenly stood a bit taller as he thought of Mr. Bennet’s warning and a mutual sympathy for himself and Mr. Wickham. It was the way of the world, but a man of little means could play none.
“I did not think you well acquainted with Miss Elizabeth, Lieutenant Denny. Surely you are not saying you hold hope for Miss Elizabeth when you so eagerly court Miss Catherine?” Mr. Bingley asked, crossing his arms in defense of Jane’s sisters. He might not be a brother to the Bennet girls yet, but only by the wait of ten days’ time.
Lieutenant Denny held up his hands and waved them to signal his defeat. “No, no, not me. But Mr. Darcy here turned down Lieutenant Wickham when he wished to marry his sister. I only wondered if the experience influenced his behaviors.” Denny finally walked over to the chamber pot to relieve himself, leaving the men utterly astonished at this information about Mr. Wickham and Mr. Darcy.
Finished with his business, Mr. Phillips returned to stand next to his brother-in-law as Mr. Bennet gave a sharp condemnation of the young lieutenant but spoke looking solely at Mr. Darcy.
“What’s this? Are you alleging, sir, that Mr. Wickham made an honorable suit to Mr. Darcy’s sister and he was denied?” Mr. Bennet found himself feeling slightly the fool if such reports were accurate. He had allowed that perhaps passion between his daughter and Mr. Darcy had unduly influenced their conduct at Mr. Bingley’s ball. But if Mr. Darcy’s sister had been treated with proper respect by a suitor, and Mr. Darcy had to play the protective guardian, Mr. Bennet did not feel as though he wished to give Mr. Darcy the benefit of the doubt over his behavior in comparison. Why should Mr. Darcy demand a better standard of conduct for his sister and then not offer such to his daughter?
“There is nothing honorable whatsoever in a day of Mr. Wickham’s life. My sister is not yet fifteen!” Mr. Darcy spat.
Lieutenant Denny’s eyes widened as Captain Carter came around the table to join the conversation.
“So young? That is distressing, indeed.” Captain Carter looked to Mr. Phillips for assistance, but it was Mr. Darcy who spoke again.
“I cannot predict what fantastical story Mr. Wickham has shared, but am I to understand that the regiment here is now well acquainted with his tale regarding my sister?” Mr. Darcy asked.
The two representatives of Colonel Forster’s men nodded.
“Mr. Bennet, I wonder if I might ask for a private audience with you and your daughter, Elizabeth, in your study. These developments are distressing, and I’m afraid I must leave for London in the morning,” Mr. Darcy said.
“Of course, of course,” Mr. Bennet agreed to Mr. Darcy’s request as he soon thought of his youngest daughters, Kitty and Lydia. Though he had permitted Lieutenant Denny to sit next to Kitty, he could not imagine either girl marrying. They were far too silly for that! He had raised enough daughters to know such silliness was typical of the age and so therefore safely assumed Miss Darcy could not be of the same maturity of his elder daughters. A slow burn of anger began to form in Mr. Bennet’s belly as he wondered if Mr. Wickham had tried to compromise any of his daughters.
As Mr. Phillips and Charles interviewed the two soldiers for more of Mr. Wickham’s tales, Mr. Bennet led Mr. Darcy to the parlor, where they nearly ran into Elizabeth in the hall.
“Kitty just told us!” Elizabeth warned as the grim expressions on both her intended and her father’s face grew longer. “What kind of a monster—”
“That is enough, Lizzy. Mr. Darcy has asked to speak to us in my study, and I believe we should listen.”
You’ve been reading . . . If Mr. Darcy Dared, a work in progress by Elizabeth Ann West.
If Mr. Darcy Dared
a Pride and Prejudice variation novel
Direct Preorder Release Date: March 23, 2018
Wide preorder: March 30, 2018
As Charles Bingley and Fitzwilliam Darcy prepare for the Netherfield Ball, a gentlemen’s challenge develops between them to secure their future happiness . . . with the two eldest Bennet sisters! But when things do not go as expected for Mr. Darcy, Hertfordshire society is in an uproar over the pursuit of one of their favorite daughters by such a wealthy gentleman.
Despite being claimed by Mr. Darcy as his future bride, Elizabeth Bennet has no plans to wed the proud and disdainful Mr. Darcy, no matter what her father says! At her sister’s urging, she agrees to give him a chance, if only for Jane’s sake. But there are others with an interest in breaking a match between Fitzwilliam Darcy and some country miss. . .
The stakes are high and romance strong as two of Jane Austen’s most beloved characters dare to declare their feelings, dare to defy family, and dare to trust each other!
If Mr. Darcy Dared is a steamy romance for fans of Elizabeth Ann West’s other works, especially those readers who love their drama cranked to a ten!
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Oh, No! Georgiana’s secret is out?
I can’t wait to see what happens next! as usual, I’m thoroughly enjoying this story, and can’t wait to see how it continues.
Oh no!