It’s funny. My favorite part of writing is capturing the universal truths we deal with generation after generation. Such as, a teen girl thinking she had it all figured out… (confession, I may have been that teen girl a time or two who struggled to listen to my elders’ wisdom *cough cough*)
XOXOXO Elizabeth Ann West
Chapter 13 - A Virtue of Marriage, a Pride and Prejudice Variation
The knocker at Number Twelve Grosvenor Square stood restored post haste of the Wickhams’ first outing to the theater. Georgiana Wickham admitted the most exalted ladies of the Ton, thinking herself the most proper social hostess in London. It was only on the third of such days that she suspected she was quickly becoming London’s biggest laugh behind ornate fans in every ballroom.
“Mrs. Wickham, I do beg your pardon.” Miss Sarah Milbanke, the niece of the formidable Lady Cowper, intently gazed at the young woman in front of her.
Georgiana looked up from staring at the tiny teaspoon stirring her tea. The silver Darcy crest on the end had captured her imagination. She had wondered at the level of the craftsman who fashioned such a true likeness to the three cinquefoils clearly distinguished in the field of crosses.
“Forgive me, you were speaking of my husband?”
“Yes. I was remarking on how quiet you managed to keep your engagement, and yet here you tell me you are married almost a year come this summer!”
Georgiana focused with all of her might to not squirm as a pupil under the interrogation of a tutor. She was the married woman in the room, though Miss Milbanke’s recent engagement to Lord Strange, the eldest son of the Earl of Derby, gave her an air of superiority over Georgiana. She had to hold the line of her matrimonial rank, even if she would never hold a courtesy title of peerage from her marriage.
“We kept it strictly a family affair and my George and I were married at the seaside. My brother Fitzwilliam stood up for George.”
It was a lie, but it was the falsehood Colonel Fitzwilliam and her brother had taught her for the day when questions of her marriage would arise. Confess to first a secret marriage, and that they had the second ceremony later for family in London.
“How is dear Fitzwilliam? I have not seen him since the Cowpers’ ball to end last Season. I heard rumors he killed some poor girl in the back country with his horse.”
Georgiana took a meditated sip from her now perfectly cool tea. She frowned about his trip to Hertfordshire, an event she still felt a strong signal that her brother did not truly care in the least for her. She had eloped and he had not come after her, not like her other guardian, Colonel Fitzwilliam. Georgiana decided a change in subject was warranted.
George had said Anne’s demise was nearing, and her last letter from her brother did relate even he thought the situation was dire. Surely there could be nothing wrong with finally telling the truth of her brother’s coming marriage and impending widower status?
“He is in Kent attending to our ailing cousin, Anne.”
Miss Milbanke feigned a small smile at the heroics of Darcy. She had never deigned to chase the elusive Dark Man of Derbyshire, but she had plenty of unattached friends who would crow for this information. “Dear me, I hope it is not too serious.”
“On the contrary, Anne is dying.” Georgiana added another biscuit to her plate, then scolded herself because it would be her third one this morning.
“I say, shouldn’t you also be there to tend to your cousin at this trying time?”
Georgiana shook her head, as her mouth was full from failing to resist the pastry. Miss Milbanke waited patiently as Georgiana washed down the remaining crumbs in her mouth with another gulp of tea.
“Brother wished for me and George to stay here. Our presence would not please my aunt, Lady Catherine, you see.” Georgiana cringed anticipating a question from the opening she just gave.
“Oh you poor dear, ordered away from your cousin that forgive me, we all knew suffered so painfully during her short life. It speaks very highly that your brother shows such family devotion.”
Georgiana inhaled a breath of relief that Sarah hadn’t asked her to clarify how she and her husband wouldn’t please her aunt. Without thinking, Georgiana eagerly corrected her impression of why Fitzwilliam was in Kent.
“But Fitzwilliam must be there! Anne is to be his wife, they are to marry any day now.” Finishing her biscuit, Georgiana missed the slightest signs of shock as Sarah Milbanke’s cheeks reddened and her nostrils flared.
After a few seconds of silence, Georgiana glanced at the clock to see if the hour was near to end tea. She had tired of Miss Milbanke’s company even though George was most earnest to receive an invite to a dinner party next week to be hosted by Lord Strange.
“George Wickham,” Sarah Milbanke mused. “Isn’t he the heir to the Duke of Devonshire?”
On impulse, Georgiana giggled. How could this woman not know that it was the Cavendish family who fulfilled the dukedom? Even she, nearly sixteen, wasn’t so base as to not study the peerage lines.
“While His Grace is an acquaintance of my family, my husband is much closer in familiarity. His father was my father’s steward.” Georgiana beamed with pride that her husband had been mistaken for the heir to a dukedom. She would be sure to tell him about the funny mistaken identity.
“Pardon me, once more, but did I hear correctly? You married your steward’s son?”
Georgiana’s bubble of pride popped. “Er, no, Old Mr. Wickham was a steward to my father, but not our current steward. George was educated at Cambridge with my brother. He is a gentleman in all that matters!”
Sarah Milbanke snorted as she placed her cup of tea on the small consort table before her. As she donned her gloves, Georgiana noticed the clear cue that the social call was over and she knew George would be upset with her that she hadn’t obtained an invitation to the Stanley family dinner party. Summoning up her courage, Georgiana made one last desperate move to please her husband.
“Miss Milbanke, I thought to host a dinner party and hoped to send you and Lord Strange an invitation.”
As Miss Milbanke rose, she tightened her lips into a most displeasing line, though her eyes showed a small amount of sympathy to the young woman before her treading water far deeper than her head. “I’m sorry, I believe we have a previous engagement that evening. You understand, with the wedding a mere two months away, my calendar is full to the brim since the Earl of Derby and his family’s connections are so vast.”
“Certainly, such a lengthy engagement must be a taxing social endeavor. I was never formally out before finding my true love, and thankfully spared your burden.” Georgiana showed sympathy back to the older woman before her, hoping her comment didn’t offend.
“I shall bear my burden with the bravest face . . .” Sarah Milbanke paused to walk towards the foyer and turned around as they reached the door “and the loveliest gowns!” Both women laughed at her tease, though Georgiana’s laughter was forced politeness.
It wasn’t until after Sarah Milbanke was handed into her carriage with the most scandalous intelligence of the Darcy family and Georgiana climbed the stairs to rest in her suite that she realized her invitation was spurned without a set date. Concrete she was too stupid to even notice a cut as it hit her during tea time, Mrs. Wickham collapsed onto her bed and cried.
Chapter 14- A Virtue of Marriage, a Pride and Prejudice Variation
Dawn greeted Elizabeth Bennet with a mission. Rising with the sun, she set out to learn the truth behind the mystery of the chickens only producing a fraction of the eggs one would expect from the brood the parsonage kept. Wrapping herself in a shawl and wearing her weathered boots, she tiptoed from her guest room. Now three days since her arrival, it was the first morning she felt confident of the household routine to escape unnoticed.
The young maid Eileen cleaned and assisted in the parsonage, but as her elder sister worked at Rosings, Elizabeth felt that she could not trust the young lass to agree to her plan to stalk the chicken coop. Rather than test the girl, Elizabeth saved her from ever making a choice by keeping the maid as much out of her affairs as was humanly possible. And Anna, being a guest servant, but not quite truly Elizabeth’s own maid, did not need to get into any mischief. No, the chicken investigation would by necessity be a one-woman operation.
With the early glow on the horizon, Elizabeth waited in the dusky shades of the retreating night in a darkened corner of the hencoop. She had to stoop low, but her small frame allowed her to enter the vile smelling cranny with minimal fuss from the chickens as she was not above collecting their labors herself shortly after the sun rose. Animals know a person accustomed to their keep and care.
Her stealth paid off in but minutes when a young boy of about eight poked his head right in and lifted an egg from a vacated nest right in front of her eyes.
“Ooooo! So you’re the thief!” Elizabeth chuckled but scared the poor boy right out of his wits. After making a startled yelp, the boy began running away. “Wait!”
All of the commotion caused an uproar in the previously docile chickens, making them flap and squawk and attack Elizabeth as she tried to maneuver out of the small coop. Feathers and muck flew in the air. Gashing her hand against the rough wooden frame on her way out, she paused a second to see which way the boy ran, and seeing some tall weeds moving rapidly to her east, she also took off running.
Years of walking and occasionally, unladylike running, made Elizabeth far faster than the poor boy and she caught up to him just as he was crossing a glebe field and dashed into the small copse of woods that lined the southern edge of Rosings. Elizabeth had never ventured in this direction before, as she had yet to meet the tenants of the glebe lands. Barred from her “rambles” as both a practical rule and one of the great indignities Mr. Collins imposed to exert control over his cousin, the unfamiliarity of the lands began to worry her conscience more than the senseless rule.
“Please, wait, I shall not hurt you. But I am unfamiliar with these parts and I will become lost without your aid.” She called after the boy who paused and looked surprisingly at Elizabeth so close behind him.
“You run fast, miss!”
Elizabeth smiled. “We haven’t been properly introduced.” Elizabeth wiped her hand on her apron and noticed the nasty gash between her thumb and her forefinger. A healthy amount of blood mixed in with the dirt and likely chicken droppings smeared on her hand, making even Elizabeth repulsed at the idea of touching it. She shook her hand loosely and nodded to the boy. “I am Elizabeth Bennet. My cousin is Pastor Collins, the manager of these lands.”
“Peter Holbein, ma’am.” He gave a small bow and grinned, showing missing teeth in the top of his mouth next to his front two teeth.
“Mr. Holbein, may I count on you for assistance? I injured my hand back there and need desperately to clean the wound.”
“Our cottage is just around here.” He pointed further into the copse of trees, and Elizabeth tried to follow the direction of his hand, but it was pointless. All she could see was the forest becoming denser and a narrow footpath before her.
“Well, I should have to trust your lead, sir.”
Peter grinned at Elizabeth and marched on at a quick pace, though not trying to lose her, but just urge her to hurry with him towards help. Before long, they stood in front of a modest home with the prettiest brook off to the northern edge of it. Elizabeth recognized at once where she was as she saw the drive lead through another copse of woods back toward the main road to the proper village of Hunsford. She remembered the bridge crossing on her arrival, but had no idea this picturesque cottage lie just minutes away and on lands controlled by her cousin.
“Hurry inside, miss. Mama is a right good healer. She takes care of all my scrapes.” Peter gave another broad grin, still holding possessively to the one egg he managed to nick that morning.
Elizabeth took notice of his stolen treasure, reminding herself she wasn’t completely happy with this boy and had to speak with his parents about his thievery of Charlotte’s eggs, but first she needed to clean her hand as quickly as possible before it made her ill.
“Perhaps you should go inside first and let your Mama know I have called.” Elizabeth shifted her weight from foot to foot, feeling far more the horrific stranger for calling at such an ungodly early hour and not as a gentlewoman related to the manager of the lands the Holbeins leased.
Peter nodded and ducked his head inside the plain wooden door. He had hardly closed it when he heard him yell for his mother. In a few moments, the door swung open quickly; revealing a woman not too much older than Elizabeth with long, thin auburn hair and a belly full with child. Her dress was clearly on a turn and looked to be nearly ready for the rag pile.
Elizabeth quickly dropped to a curtsy for the woman who did her best to respond, though given her condition managed not much more than a slight knee bend.
“Oh please, I am so sorry for the inconvenience. You see I ran into young Peter at my cousin’s chicken coop this morning and I injured my hand…”
“Come in, come in Miss Bennet.” The woman smiled much like her son, and Elizabeth couldn’t help but be calmed by the resemblance, though Peter’s hair was a dark brown. “Petey told me all about it and I must say, I’ve been so very thankful for the work your cousin be letting him do.”
Confused, Elizabeth followed Mrs. Holbein into the snug home that consisted of a main open room with a single door on the back end. Stairs led to a lofted area above, where she supposed Peter slept. A young girl, perhaps two or three, sat on a ratty rug in front of the fireplace and sucked on her two first fingers on her right hand in comfort. Mrs. Holbein stooped down and scooped the young girl up, turning to present her to Elizabeth.
“This here is my youngest, Mary Jane.”
Elizabeth was delighted to hear the young girl’s name and shared she had two sisters of those very same names. The young girl pulled out her fingers and gave a toothy smile and then shocked Elizabeth by responding.
“My name is for my aunties who are in heaven.” The young girl promptly returned her fingers to her mouth and Elizabeth raised an eyebrow. Perhaps she was not so young as she was just simply small.
Mrs. Holbein poured some of the water set to boil for breakfast into a basin and added cool water from the pump. A small sliver of lye soap on the sink joined the bowl at the plain wooden table and Mrs. Holbein directed Elizabeth to it.
“Mrs. Holbein–”
“Please, call me Diana.”
Elizabeth smiled and then grimaced as the woman plunged her hand into the basin and began vigorously scrubbing at the dirt and grime caked onto the skin. She sucked in her breath and then felt an odd sensation on her leg. She looked down and saw the petite hand of Mary Jane touching her knee to calm her as the girl looked up dolefully from the floor, her fingers of comfort still in place. Before Elizabeth could say anything, the sharp pain stopped as Diana had wrapped her hand in a fresh towel and beckoned Peter to dispose of the water outside.
Protectively holding her hand, as it still stung from the fresh cleaning, Elizabeth addressed the woman and thanked her for her help.
“Twas nothing, Miss Bennet. The least I could do for all of your family’s generosity.”
“Now, you must call me Elizabeth if I’m to call you Diana.” Elizabeth paused; slightly perturbed at the number of liberties she was breaking by first imposing on this woman at such an early hour and now calling her by her Christian name, but was rapidly making up for it in reciprocating the offer. While she had fully planned to take Peter to task for his misdeeds, the family living inside of the cottage made her pause before jumping to a decision. But she felt most unpleasant there was a falsehood afoot about the source of eggs Peter was bringing home, and she would remedy reality to the truth, one way or the other. “Is your husband already at work in the fields?”
“Nay, he’s still resting but should awake in an hour or so when the drink wears off.”
Again shocked by the honesty of Mrs. Holbein, Elizabeth squirmed at the mention of Mr. Holbein’s drunkenness. “I am so sorry to hear of his affliction.” She looked down at the table, trying to formulate a solution to her current predicament.
“Oh no miss, he’s no devil of a man. The ale lets him sleep what little comfort he can. Last fall, a tree fell on him, as he’s a logger. It nearly killed him. Broke his back, I say. He’s been stuck up in a bed for months and the pain just makes him moan and moan. I worked as a launderer until I became too far along with this one, the babe the Good Lord blessed us with before my husband turned ill. Our last I suppose, as my good John cannot walk on his own.” Diana rubbed her protruding belly as she told her tale and Elizabeth felt heartsick.
“Forgive me, but what has your family subsided on?” Elizabeth naturally reached down to little Mary Jane, still playing at her feet and planted the young girl onto her lap. Mary Jane twisted around and looked up at her new friend with the trust only a child can bestow. With a happy sigh, the little girl rested her head against Elizabeth’s shoulder.
“We had some money saved up, and there was the firewood John had cut for us that I was able to sell. I wrote to his cousin Peter as well, as some of John’s family came to England before we did, and I suspect he will send some aid soon.”
Mrs. Holbein began to pour in oats to make a large bowl of porridge when Peter came running in, releasing his stolen treasure to his mother.
“Sorry Mama, I only collected one this morning before bringing Miss Elizabeth to get help for her hand.”
Diana patted his head and took the egg as a most precious cargo. She cracked it gently and dropped it in the boiling water before wiping her hands on her apron. Her work made Elizabeth remember she would be missed before too long and had to leave.
Spying young Peter shift nervously at the corner of the kitchen area, Elizabeth sat up taller as she realized how she could help. She caught his eye and winked, making the boy with a gaunt face, now that she took proper stock of him, open his mouth in a surprised ‘o’ shape before pressing it closed again.
“If you can spare Peter for a little more time this morning, I have a few more tasks he can help me with Mrs. Holbein.” In her fib, Elizabeth forgot to use Diana’s Christian name, but hoped the flaw wouldn’t be noticed.
“Absolutely, Miss Bennet.” No such luck and Elizabeth realized her mistake re-established her superior social class to the Holbeins though that was not her intention.
Diana turned to Peter to address him after opening the larder to hand him the moldiest piece of bread Elizabeth had ever seen. Forgetting she might offend the woman further, Elizabeth stepped in to promise to break Peter’s fast at her own kitchens as soon as they arrived.
With nothing more to do than to take her leave, Elizabeth marched back across the fields soaked in dew with young Master Holbein at her side. Her anger at the poor family’s situation rose as a bitter taste in the back of her throat, but she refused to let it rule her reasoning.
“Mr. Holbein, while I appreciate the measures you felt necessary to save your family by stealing my cousin’s eggs, nevertheless a thief holds no honor. You may have eggs and other food as they can provide, but you will report here each morning to help with the chores in payment for the assistance.”
Peter’s eyes lit up. “You are offering me work, Miss Elizabeth?”
“Well no, not a permanent position, but there will just be no more stealing food that rightfully belongs to Mr. Collins. You may earn food to eat, but never take.” Elizabeth noticed the young boy walking a touch taller in response to her admonishment and assignation of enough age to earn his keep. Her own stomach gave a lurch from the hours of consciousness with no nourishment, and she wondered if the Holbein children only received one meal a day, as it would not be inconsistent with the state of the larder she saw.
Approaching the parsonage, Elizabeth could see heavy smoke rising from the chimney, telling her the kitchen staff of two was awake and well. She motioned for Peter to follow her through the small herb garden to the side door and wait for her on the stoop.
Cook promptly assisted Elizabeth as soon as she stepped in the door with the removal of her shawl, deference Elizabeth always appreciated from her one ally in the home.
“Missus, you would not believe! Eileen found six eggs this morn, the chickens are healed!”
Elizabeth rolled her eyes and washed her hands in the basin near the sink just for this purpose. “It was less the chickens than a hungry family.”
Cook’s eyes widened at the threat of treacherous theft, but Elizabeth approached the older woman and patted her arm.
“All is well. But please, gather any food and supplies we can spare until Charlotte and I go to market tomorrow. Give them to the young boy outside the door as quickly as you can.” Elizabeth smoothed her work dress and debated if she should retire upstairs to try and clean up further or just wait until later when she was to visit Anne de Bourgh with Charlotte. “We have a Christian duty to uphold.”
On this last proclamation, Mr. Collins appeared in the doorway to the kitchen, inquisitive to his cousin’s health. As she replied in the positive, he next asked her about the Christian duty she was most involved in this morning by her conversation with Cook.
Elizabeth expertly gave a slight nod to reinforce her pleas and escorted her cousin to the dining room where they joined his wife Charlotte to take their breakfast together. As she poured herself a cup of tea, she decided fortune favored the bold and asked Mr. Collins about the Holbein family. Perhaps he was unaware of how dire their predicament truly stood.
“Ah, the recusants. Have no fear Cousin Elizabeth, Lady Catherine and I are hard at work on removing their non-conforming family from the haven of our lands so that a more deserving family might benefit from the magnificent bounty of the Rosings.”
Elizabeth nearly dropped her cup, but recovered well enough to make it to the table and sit down. Her head was spinning. The poor family she met only this morning was to endure more hardship, and at the hands of her bombastic cousin? Her kin? No, no it could not come to pass!
“But the father of the family is gravely ill, he broke his back last year in your service! Surely allowances must be made for their lack of attendance at church services.” Elizabeth had no doubt with the last name, they were likely Catholic. But still, she had to hope that with proper guidance and encouragement, they could convert. After all, they left their homeland to live so far away; surely their plan was to conform before John Holbein’s accident.
“They failed to make their rent payments last quarter and Mr. Hobbs informed me earlier this week they have not paid this quarter’s and have no intention to settle their debts. An eviction notice is underway.” Mr. Collins calmly opened his napkin as the breakfast dishes arrived to the table from the kitchen and he dug into his simple omelet with abandon.
Usually disgusted by her cousin’s lack of table manners, Elizabeth sat more appalled at the fate to befall the Holbein family. She picked at her breakfast, despite being very hungry earlier.
“Remember we are to read to Miss de Bourgh this afternoon, Lizzie? She finds such comfort in the sermons.” Charlotte tried to change the subject but she was too late. Mr. Collins interjected his own investigation.
“How did you come to know of the Holbein family? And why is there a bandage on your hand?” Mr. Collins did not wait to swallow his food before interrogating his cousin as to her whereabouts that morning.
“I was collecting eggs from the coop when I met their son, Peter, looking for work in exchange for food.” Elizabeth lied, but also revealed a truth to her cousin. “I told him I would gladly see he could perform chores for food and I accompanied him home to learn the situation of the family for myself, to ensure there was not more help we needed to offer.”
“You walked across two fields and the woods to their cottage?”
Elizabeth nodded, knowing she was forbidden to take such a ramble without informing her cousin, but decided it to be better for her to take on the transgression than to reveal young Peter’s lack of morality.
“Well, I am astonished, my cousin, that again, you would directly disobey me.” Mr. Collins wiped his mouth with his hand before pounding his fist on the table. “I am already confirmed that my gross negligence of your manners and behaviors has led to Lady Catherine’s extreme displeasure in your reputation.”
Elizabeth perhaps should have winced if she had felt a true shame for her love of Fitzwilliam Darcy, but as she did not, she didn’t feel any guilt towards a scandalous affair that had yet to occur. Her lack of repentance, while a great mark towards her lack of practice in deception, was a less than encouraging sign to Mr. Collins.
“It appears you need further reminder that in this household, you are expected to behave with the highest modicum of propriety. That as a parson’s relation, and under my protection, you may not traipse about the countryside as some country miss without a responsibility in the world– ”
“But Cousin Collins, I felt a responsibility to the family on your glebe lands. I did not know you were in the process of evicting them from their cottage, though it pains my sensibilities to see children so hungry.”
Elizabeth had miscalculated. She did not know the upbraiding Mr. Collins experienced from Lady Catherine over her mere arrival at Rosings and the apparent warning of her clear moral failings her disappointment represented. To interrupt her cousin, while never an acceptable behavior, but one he had overlooked in the past when she played missish to his words and not his intent, pushed him over the edge.
“Mr. Collins—” Charlotte tried to speak, but he held his hand up and his wife, knowing better, obeyed.
Mr. Collins stood up and leaned over the table with both hands on either side of this plate, his knuckles white. “Elizabeth Bennet, you are on the precipice of damnation with your sins against this household, our esteemed patroness Lady Catherine, and God himself. I am remiss in my duty as your nearest male relation and pastor of this flock if I did not take a strong hand with you to correct your ways.”
Elizabeth sat in shock at the man before her. Mr. Collins always held a healthy dose of the ridiculous in him, but never had she ever anticipated him to actually act the brute! The nature of this conversation was alarming indeed, and she lacked the skills to thwart it, as her father had never so much as scolded her aside from laughing at her expense.
Staring down at her plate appeared to have some effect on Mr. Collin’s tirade of Scripture and other sermon notes about a dutiful woman’s place in the world. In all honesty, her panics prevented her from listening further and instead assess her current limited options. If she raised the alarm now, all would be for naught. The Archbishop would not arrive for another four days’ time.
“As ultimate responsibility falls to me for your very salvation, I believe you shall spend the day in your room without meals until tomorrow to finally accept your new place in the world as a poor relation reliant upon the generosity of your betters. And to consider the ramifications of your actions when you act without your family’s approval and therefore the approval of the Divine.”
Elizabeth’s involuntary smirk was ill-timed, as even she could not believe this man truly believed she considered him, a distant cousin she had never met until last year, to represent her father’s authority.
“You may begin now.” Mr. Collins pushed himself away from the table and stood to brook no argument from Elizabeth, but that did not stop her from trying.
“I am to read to Miss de Bourgh today, surely you do not wish me to dissatisfy Lady Catherine . . . ”
“I have no doubt the magnanimous Lady Catherine will applaud this intervention as she has pressed upon me the need to curtail your headstrong ways before they make me the laughingstock of the neighborhood.”
Elizabeth had no choice but to serve out this ridiculous penance for a transgression she would never repent, but considered the days of goodwill she should reap from her cousin in granting him this one day of false obedience. After all, it’s not obedience if one is compelled to comply.
“Please send my regret to Miss de Bourgh and her cousins if you visit Rosings today.” Elizabeth looked to Charlotte, whose face was paler than freshly laundered linens. As Charlotte’s lips trembled, Elizabeth blew out a quick breath in a whistling motion to signal all was well. Disappointment finally displayed on Elizabeth’s face as she truly desired to visit with her Mr. Darcy whom she had not seen in two days.
“I most certainly shall, and remember dear cousin, excel in this to show me you acknowledge your place and you may perhaps visit the illustrious Rosings tomorrow.”
As Elizabeth took each step slowly, still in shock she was in truth being sent to her room for disobedience like a child, each lifted foot reinforced that she would never have survived a marriage to this man. Furthermore, if she couldn’t have survived, she had to find a way out of this disastrous union for Charlotte. Near the top of the stairs, Elizabeth comforted herself that her prison was to be her room where she had a novel, letters, and most importantly a lock on the door.
As she entered the room and swiftly turned the key to keep her meddling cousin from any second thoughts or lectures of her behavior, a deep rumble echoed in Elizabeth’s belly. She was hungry, and for today, she would suffer those pangs in careful fasting for the plight of the Holbein family, who she vowed to see to happier times before rescuing her knight, Mr. Darcy.
For the Love of a Bennet
What if Elizabeth Bennet traveled with Lydia to Brighton?
A reimagining of Jane Austen’s most beloved tale, Pride & Prejudice, join author Elizabeth Ann West as she writes the romantic adventure story she always wanted! When Lizzy and Lydia arrive in Brighton, it’s very clear that the younger Bennet sister came with very serious plans towards Mr. Wickham. Thankfully, an old ally is also in town, with problems of his own to solve. After Mr. Darcy, himself, is summoned to Brighton to hopefully solve two dilemmas with one wealthy member of the gentry, the whole militia is thrown into an uproar by Wickham’s most dastardly deed, yet. Together, Elizabeth Bennet and Mr. Darcy have to save Lydia from her own undoing, or it will mean more than just mere reputations are ruined.
For the Love of a Bennet is a novel length story, currently being posted chapter by chapter on Elizabeth’s author site. This story was originally conceptualized in 2019 as a part of the All Go to Brighton challenge.
Chapter 15 - A Virtue of Marriage, a Pride and Prejudice Variation
Charlotte Collins’ somber expression immediately deflated the jubilant mood of her friend Miss Anne de Bourgh. Charlotte bit her lower lip as Anne craned her neck to look for the arrival of Charlotte’s particular friend.
“Miss Elizabeth?” Anne asked.
Charlotte slowly shook her head. “She pushed Mr. Collins too far, I’m afraid, and he ordered her locked in her room.”
Anne’s mouth dropped in horror at such treatment for a guest, even if she was a relation to Mr. Collins. But more than that, Anne knew they must hide Elizabeth’s fate from her cousin, Mr. Darcy. Unfortunately, Anne had no time to explain the matter to Charlotte before a maid carrying refreshments entered her bedroom, followed by her cousin, himself.
Darcy bowed elegantly to the ladies and did his best to hide his own furtive glances around the room; realizing one of the ladies he expected to be in this room was not present.
“Mrs. Collins, I hope you do not mind I have taken the liberty to order some refreshments for your visit. I am afraid my aunt has been too distracted at times to offer proper courtesy to the guests of this home.”
“Thank you, Mr. Darcy. I am certain your selections for comfort are very fine, indeed,” Charlotte answered.
Anne took a deep breath and concentrated in speaking with a steady tone. “Mrs. Collins was just explaining to me of how her friend, Miss Bennet, came down with a rather nasty headache this morning and has decided to spend the day resting in her rooms.”
Darcy looked quickly between the two ladies, concern creased in the wrinkles of his forehead. Charlotte looked to Anne for some sign of what to do about this blatant falsehood, and why on earth was she lying to Mr. Darcy about Elizabeth? Thankfully, Charlotte Collins was a smart woman and more pieces of her friend’s mystery mission began to fall into place. However, now was not the time to inquire further, so instead, Charlotte continued the charade.
“Yes, I’m afraid my friend did come down with a slight ache to her head, but I cannot be for certain it was not at least minorly exacerbated by perhaps some of the mannerisms of her own kin.” Charlotte smiled and hoped Mr. Darcy would not think worse of her for speaking ill of her own husband. Instead, the man seemed to understand.
“Did your friend mention anything about wishing to visit Rosings later in her visit? I only ask because I know my cousin is most anxious to meet the woman I nearly killed with my horse. Thanks to my cousin Richard, it’s become a bit of a famous story.” The usually reserved Mr. Darcy nodded with a smile in his eyes for Anne who rapidly clapped her hands in appreciation.
“Yes, and Richard Fitzwilliam and I played the most delightful card game I am told she taught my sour cousin while he paid penance for his stupidity. Racing the horse on a public road, it’s what you’ve always been warned about.”
Charlotte nodded noncommittally and that seemed to be enough to soothe Mr. Darcy’s inquiry. Still, with such easy manners between the man and woman presumed to wed as soon as may be, Charlotte felt uneasy that such a serious question somehow involved her friend.
As a silence descended the room, Darcy realized he had been blocking the door for the poor maid stuck standing there, looking down at the carpets, during this entire conversation that did not include her. The poor little mouse did not dare to ask the great man to move out of her way, and Darcy’s cheeks slightly reddened. “I believe I have overstayed my welcome, ladies, please. Please enjoy your novel, and know that hopefully more than a chapter or two might be read today.”
“Fitzwilliam, how so?” Anne asked, before suffering a small coughing fit.
“Richard has invited the parson to the library for drinks. He doesn’t believe me how utterly ridiculous the man can truly be.” Darcy gave his cousin a sly wink and bowed once more to exit the room.
No sooner had Anne watched the door close than Mrs. Collins began to fret and wring her hands in front of her.
“Whatever is the matter, Charlotte? Don’t worry, they will keep him occupied as they say.”
Charlotte shook her head. “You don’t understand. My husband will boast about bringing his Cousin Elizabeth in line to her ladyship’s expectations. He will boast that he is starving her all day today and I’m afraid of what Mr. Darcy might do.”
Anne de Bourgh’s stomach felt hollow as she considered the significance of Charlotte’s fears. While Charlotte only suspected a tendre existed between Mr. Darcy and her friend, Anne knew for certain. Placing her fingertips to her forehead, she pretended to swoon.
“Anne!”
Peeking her eye open, she winked at Charlotte. “Go! Tell them I fainted, I can’t possibly be read to today.”
“But—” Charlotte looked confused.
“Darcy loves Elizabeth. If your husband tells him he locked her up, there will be violence. Go!”
Charlotte didn’t need any further encouragement. She darted out of the room and rushed down the stairs, feeling her lungs struggle with the sudden exertion. Breathless, she came upon the gentlemen in the library looking a pure fright.
“Mr. Darcy! Anne has fainted.” As Charlotte leaned on the doorframe for support, she observed it wasn’t Mr. Darcy that first jumped up. It was the Colonel. And the man who did not move from his comfortable chair was her own husband, who instead looked more like a deer hearing a gunshot. Charlotte caught her breath and moved out of the way so that Mr. Darcy could also leave the room, and for a brief moment, she wondered the joy she might have in widowhood if Mr. Darcy had killed her husband.
You’ve been reading A Virtue of Marriage
Book 2 of The Moralities of Marriage, continuation of the saga from By Consequence of Marriage.
With Fitzwilliam Darcy hopelessly tangled in his family’s lies and deceit in Kent, reinforcements are on the way in the form of his cousin, Colonel Richard Fitzwilliam, and his secret fiancee, Elizabeth Bennet. Two generations of the Fitzwilliam family clash at Rosings and the matrimonial futures of both Darcy and Richard hang in the balance. When Lady Catherine goes on a rampage, and the Bennets become swayed by the vicious gossip swirling the Darcy family, both Elizabeth and Fitzwilliam learn you inherit each other’s family drama by virtue of marriage.
A full-length novel, A Virtue of Marriage continues the three-part Moralities of Marriage series.
A Virtue of Marriage, Book 2 of the Moralities of Marriage
a Pride and Prejudice novel variation series
Release Date: March 31, 2015
308 pages in print.
+ 23 additional Pride & Prejudice variations are available at these fine retailers . . .
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Do not worry. Mr. Collins gets his.
XOXOXO Elizabeth Ann West
Oh my goodness, what a predicament Elizabeth is in with Mr. Collins and what a situation for the poor Holbein family. Hope Elizabeth and Darcy can help them. with Charlotte now that Anne too is on their side it looks like.