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Elizabeth Bennet's Deception: A Pride and Prejudice Vagary

Page 18

by Regina Jeffers


  “Unless, we two were engaged,” Darcy finished her thoughts. Swallowing his anxiety, he continued, “You are too generous to trifle with me. If your feelings are still what they were last April, tell me so at once. My affections and wishes remain unchanged, but one word from you will silence me on the subject forever.”

  Elizabeth’s eyes widened. She did not expect such a public proposal. Yet, she remained Darcy’s customarily magnificent opponent.

  “Tell me how you know we will suit, Mr. Darcy,” she demanded.

  “That is simple, Miss Elizabeth.” His lady regarded him with suspicion. “Some things you see with your eyes. Some things you know with your heart.”

  Tears misted Elizabeth’s eyes.

  “Why must you always possess the perfect response, Mr. Darcy?”

  “I await your answer, Miss Elizabeth,” Darcy insisted.

  The common awkwardness and anxiety of their situation must have impressed her. With a startled blink, a smile of delight claimed Elizabeth’s lips.

  “Very well,” she said with a shift of her shoulders. “I shall not leave you to pubic disdain without joining you in the merriment.” Darcy watched as Elizabeth swallowed her fears. “My sentiments, Sir, have undergone so material a change since the period to which you alluded, as to make me receive with gratitude and pleasure your present assurances.”

  Darcy’s lips twisted with wry humor. He elicited a promise from Elizabeth before a crowd of witnesses. Something like embarrassment rippled over her handsome countenance as Darcy extended his hand in her direction, but Elizabeth accepted the symbolic offer.

  “Finally,” Darcy whispered as Elizabeth joined him. From the other side of the ballroom, a round of applause accompanied Bingley and Miss Bennet’s entrance to the dance floor, but Darcy thought it could just as easily be meant for him: He won the game and claimed his prize.

  Chapter Sixteen

  The crowd pressed close about them, and Darcy was most uncomfortable by the recognition, but Elizabeth thankfully took pity upon him. She set the mood for their courtship.

  “Oh, Lizzy!” Mrs. Bennet appeared at Elizabeth’s side. The woman’s famous nerves were all aflutter. “Why did you not…?”

  Thankfully, Elizabeth broke through her mother’s effusions.

  “No well wishes, Mama,” Darcy’s bride-to-be declared. “There will be time enough for your joyful congratulations when we reach Longbourn. This moment is Jane’s, not mine. Mr. Darcy and I shall gladly wait our turn. Jane is the dearest of sisters, and Mr. Darcy is Mr. Bingley’s most loyal friend. Neither of us wishes to rob our loved ones of the fondest memories of their joining.”

  Elizabeth spoke loud enough for those about them to hear her determination. To the few who meant to ignore her caution, she added in firm tones.

  “Mr. Darcy and I would take umbrage with anyone who did not accept our wishes.”

  Darcy certainly did not object. To no longer be the center of attention pleased him. For a brief moment, he wondered what those who sought his attentions in London would think of his public proposal to Miss Elizabeth. Most would likely term the rumors “impossible” for Darcy held the reputation of a man who kept his cards close.

  Elizabeth turned her mother’s shoulders to face the dance floor.

  “Is Jane not lovely, Mama? She is the prettiest among us, and the most kind.”

  “The prettiest girl in the neighborhood,” Mrs. Bennet declared with pride, and many in the crowd nodded their agreement.

  Darcy was of a different mind, but he kept his opinions to himself. Miss Bennet’s beauty was too perfect for Darcy’s tastes. Moreover, the eldest Bennet daughter lacked the depth of character found in his Elizabeth.

  “All our daughters possess great beauty,” Mr. Bennet said as he joined his wife among the well-wishers. “And they will be excellent stewards of their husbands’ households.”

  Mr. Bennet’s eyes misted over, as he looked first upon Miss Bennet and then upon Elizabeth. The removal of the two eldest daughters from his manor left the gentleman visibly moved.

  When Bingley motioned his guests to join him, Darcy directed Elizabeth’s steps to the dance floor.

  “Thank you,” he whispered.

  “For what am I to know your gratitude?” Elizabeth teased with a beguiling smile.

  “For making me the happiest of men.” Darcy brought the back of Elizabeth’s hand to his lips.

  “Is that all?” Elizabeth’s breath hitched faster.

  Darcy set her in the line forming on either side of Bingley and Miss Bennet.

  “And for realizing one public spectacle was enough for the evening.” Darcy winked at her as he stepped to the gentleman’s line.

  The dancers nodded their heads in time to the music and when the pattern repeated, Bingley raised his hand to gesture their participation, and they each stepped into the form. Darcy and Elizabeth circled each other: Their eyes locked in a loving gaze. Darcy never knew such happiness: He claimed a priceless jewel as his wife to be. The barren pain of desolation would no longer shadow his existence. Of late, Darcy accepted the turmoil gnawing at his insides as love, but now a gentler emotion spread through his chest. The realization of loving Elizabeth Bennet was all that was delightful.

  He and Elizabeth parted, and Darcy found himself opposite his sister. It startled him to realize he forgot Georgiana was even among the dancers.

  “Your countenance glows with happiness, William,” Georgiana said with a girlish giggle. “You truly love Miss Elizabeth.”

  He turned Georgiana in a tight circle.

  “Elizabeth is home,” Darcy told her. “I have no other means to explain it.”

  When the first dance of the set ended, Darcy caught Elizabeth’s hand and tugged her along behind him.

  “I must assist Jane,” she declared, but Elizabeth did not resist his machinations. “Where are we going?”

  Darcy slowed their steps. He met Elizabeth’s questioning gaze with a smile.

  “To the terrace. We have unfinished business.”

  “Oh,” she whispered as a flush of color claimed her cheeks.

  “Come along,” Darcy announced in firm tones. With a smile, Elizabeth nodded her agreement.

  When they reached the shadows of the terrace, Darcy turned Elizabeth into his embrace.

  “At last,” he whispered as Darcy caressed the curls framing her face. “I missed you.”

  “And I you.” Elizabeth laid her cheek upon Darcy’s chest.

  The early autumn night was cool, but when Elizabeth moved into his embrace, Darcy would swear the blackness vibrated warm around them. At length, Elizabeth raised her gaze to meet his. She shivered again, but this time Darcy thought it was from anticipation–from desire–from the knowledge they would step into the future together.

  Darcy lowered his head to claim Elizabeth’s mouth. A gentle kiss. Their breaths shared. A kiss to declare his devotion to her. She was the one woman to complete him.

  Elizabeth moved closer, clinging to him. Her arms came about Darcy’s neck. Fingers teased the length of his hair. She kissed him back. Tentative at first and then with more boldness. God, but he would live a blessed life with Elizabeth by his side!

  Darcy kissed her as he dreamed of doing since those early days at Netherfield. He tasted her for the first time, sliding his tongue along the seam of her lips and delving inside when Elizabeth opened her mouth to him. Darcy tightened his embrace, one hand splayed across the small of her back and the other upon the fall of Elizabeth’s hips.

  The scent of lavender filled his senses. Elizabeth was his whole world. Yet, such perfection must occasionally claim a breath of air. The sound of boisterous laughter brought them apart while still clinging to each other. Their hearts pounding in complete accord. Elizabeth appeared dazed, and her breath came in ragged puffs.

  Darcy’s eyes stared down upon her upturned countenance; the desire dripped from him. His fingers sought hers, and Elizabeth intertwined their hold.

&n
bsp; “I feel I waited a lifetime to know you,” Darcy whispered.

  “I feel I always knew you,” Elizabeth admitted.

  Her innocent response had Darcy smiling again.

  “We should return to the ballroom,” he pronounced with regret. “Even those who are betrothed are not permitted the latitude of intimacies.”

  * * *

  Elizabeth came close to admitting to Mr. Darcy her dislike for propriety’s restrictions for she despised losing his closeness, but she dutifully followed him to the ballroom. Inside, she assisted her father in gathering her family so they might all return to Longbourn, while Mr. Darcy accepted the well wishes of his sister and cousin. Still tingling from the intensity of Mr. Darcy’s kiss, Elizabeth at first did not notice Kitty sitting upon a small bench in the main foyer.

  “Papa says to wait for him here,” Elizabeth said as she settled beside Kitty. Mr. Darcy assured Elizabeth he would call in the morning to escort her to church, and so Elizabeth rejoined her family.

  “Does it matter?” Dejection laced Kitty’s tone.

  “What is amiss?” Elizabeth implored.

  Kitty sighed heavily, her shoulders lifted in resignation.

  “Jane will marry and then you. Even Mary holds the prospect of Mr. Grange. Only I will remain at Longbourn, and it is not likely Mama will relinquish all of her daughters. I shall be Mama’s nurse until I am well upon the shelf.”

  “Oh, my darling.” Elizabeth laced her arms about Kitty’s shoulders. “Do not permit the blue devils to vex you.”

  “I shall be like one of those heroines in a Gothic novel, where the woman is locked in a cell until the hero comes for her. But for me there shall be no such rescue,” Kitty protested.

  Elizabeth hid her bemusement. For years, Kitty embraced the dramatics to claim a bit of attention from Lydia.

  “If there is a heroine, then there must be a hero. It may take him longer to arrive upon the scene than you would prefer, but trust me dearest one, your hero will arrive when the time is right.” Elizabeth thought of Mr. Darcy and how she was slow to accept the perfection of what he offered.

  “No one will even know I am hidden away,” Kitty protested. “Papa says I may not stand up at assemblies unless I stand up with my sisters, but my sisters shall be no where near Longbourn, and who would choose such a dolt to mate?”

  Elizabeth did not point out the fact that Netherfield was but three miles from Longbourn and if Mary chose Mr. Grange, the middle Bennet sister would be in Meryton; instead, she attempted to soothe her sister’s doldrums.

  “I wish you more happiness than dancing with your sisters. And I would extend an invitation to you to join me and Mr. Darcy at Pemberley.” Elizabeth prayed Mr. Darcy would not object. They had yet to discuss such details. She knew Mr. Darcy would never accept Lydia and Mr. Wickham under his roof, but what of the other Bennets. It would be something Elizabeth must address with the gentleman at the earliest convenience.

  “Truly, Lizzy?” Kitty’s features brightened.

  “I will require a bit of time to settle in at Pemberley,” Elizabeth cautioned. “Yet, I think you and Miss Darcy would do well together.”

  Kitty caught Elizabeth in a tight hug.

  “Oh, thank you, Lizzy. You are the best of my sisters!” Happy at last, Kitty insisted, “I shall find Mary. Mr. Grange has had enough of our sister’s time for one evening.”

  Watching Kitty skitter away, Elizabeth prayed she did not err in her estimation of Miss Katherine Bennet. She thought it would be to Kitty’s material advantage to spend the chief of her younger sister’s time with her and Jane. In society so superior to what Kitty generally knew, Kitty’s improvement would be inevitable.

  “Kitty is not so ungovernable a temper as Lydia, and, removed from the influence of Lydia’s example, Kitty will have the opportunity to become less irritable, less ignorant, and less insipid,” Elizabeth whispered to the empty foyer. “I should also speak to Papa about keeping Kitty from Lydia’s company, as well as to speak to Jane in assisting Kitty to a better way in society.”

  Within the Bennet coach, Elizabeth tolerated her mother’s excesses of “Good gracious! Lord bless me! Only think! Dear me! Mr. Darcy! Who would have thought it? And is it really true? Oh, my sweetest Lizzy! How rich and how great you will be! What pin money, what jewels, what carriages you will have! I am so pleased! So happy! Such a charming man! So handsome! So tall! Oh, my dear Lizzy! Pray apologize for my having disliked him so much before. I hope he will overlook it. Dear, dear Lizzy! A house in Town! Everything that is charming! Three daughters married! Ten thousand a year! O Lord! What will become of me! I shall go distracted!”

  No one in Mr. Bennet’s carriage attempted to silence Longbourn’s mistress. They learned long ago to permit Mrs. Bennet her moments. Yet, between the lady’s exclamations, Elizabeth and Jane whispered their hopes of happiness.

  “I noticed you and Mr. Darcy disappeared for a few discreet minutes,” Jane teased.

  “Do you think others noticed?” Elizabeth asked in alarm.

  “No one who would criticize,” Jane assured. “Did you enjoy your first kiss with Mr. Darcy?”

  Elizabeth thanked the darkness for hiding the red heat crawling up her neck.

  “Did you enjoy your first kiss from Mr. Bingley?” Elizabeth countered.

  “Very much.” Jane giggled is a manner Elizabeth had not observed in some time. “And you?”

  “I did not kiss Mr. Bingley,” she taunted good-naturedly.

  “Lizzy!” her sister pronounced in frustration.

  A smile tugged at Elizabeth’s lips as the image of Mr. Darcy’s countenance filled her memory.

  “Yes, very much. Very much indeed.”

  Mr. Bennet crawled into the carriage to sit beside Elizabeth. He laced his fingers with hers. Her marrying Mr. Darcy would take Elizabeth away from her family, and for a moment, Elizabeth fought the urge to call off the engagement so she might remain with those who loved her, but then she thought of the devotion written upon Mr. Darcy’s features; and she knew the gentleman would never permit her to know loneliness again. And there is the promise of children, she thought. A husband. A new sister. And children. She would know happiness.

  * * *

  Darcy slipped the local vicar an extra coin so the man would agree to add the first calling of the banns for his and Elizabeth’s joining to the vicar’s third calling of the banns for Bingley and Miss Bennet.

  “But the Pemberley vicar does not do the same in Derbyshire,” Elizabeth protested.

  “Who says Mr. Winkler does not perform his official duties?”

  Darcy winked at her as he placed Elizabeth beside his sister and the colonel on the bench.

  “Yet…”

  Darcy caught her hand as he sat beside Elizabeth.

  “Does it matter, Elizabeth? Your deceptions and my deceptions brought us to this time. I, for one, am glad to claim your affections after all the turmoil.”

  Elizabeth’s eyebrow rose in bemusement.

  “This conversation is not over, William.”

  The sound of his Christian name upon her lips drove Darcy to distraction. He lifted the back of Elizabeth’s gloved hand to his lips.

  “I look forward to all our conversations,” he said seductively.

  Elizabeth’s frown lines deepened.

  “We are in church, Sir.”

  “Yet, the sermon has not yet begun.” Darcy countered, “Moreover, God meant for men to think upon the women they affect. I am following His strictures. Genesis nine and twenty says, ‘And Jacob served seven years for Rachel, and they seemed unto him but a few days, for the love he had to her.’”

  Even with the speedy calling of the banns, it was a month before Darcy claimed Elizabeth to wife. They stood with Jane and Bingley mid week after the engagement ball. While Bingley whisked his new wife off to London to celebrate their marriage, Darcy and Georgiana stayed at Netherfield, although Darcy thought for a time it would be necessary to remove to the s
mall inn in Meryton.

  Miss Bingley and Mrs. Hurst arrived, without notice, the day before Bingley’s nuptials, and Miss Bennet pleaded with Bingley to accept his family for the ceremonies. Unsurprisingly, Miss Bingley’s effusions to the colonel had Fitzwilliam recalling duties awaiting him in London. Darcy’s cousin made his exit following the wedding breakfast.

  Thankfully, Bingley’s disgust for his sisters’ machinations had Darcy’s friend informing Miss Bingley and Mrs. Hurst that they were welcome to stay at Netherfield only until Friday. Bingley had not yet forgiven their interference in his life.

  “Jane is the mistress of Netherfield Park, and until you prove to me your regrets for treating my wife with disdain, you are not welcome under my roof,” Bingley pronounced when his sisters claimed dismay at their brother’s eviction.

  Mr. and Mrs. Bingley returned in time for Darcy and Elizabeth’s joining. As he and Fitzwilliam promised each other years prior, Darcy asked the colonel to stand with him on Darcy’s wedding day. Although he expected Elizabeth to choose Mrs. Bingley, Darcy’s betrothed surprised them all by requesting her sister Kitty to stand as witness.

  “Mary stood with Lydia and I with Jane. Kitty deserves to know the hope of marital felicity,” Elizabeth declared when others questioned her choice. Elizabeth’s gesture pleased the girl, who had become one of Georgiana’s favorites, and Miss Katherine Bennet rose to the occasion. It was a refreshing revelation for Darcy.

  Later in life, Darcy would declare the births of each of his five children his happiest days, but on the morning when Vicar Williamson place Elizabeth’s hand in his, Darcy knew completion: Elizabeth Bennet was his life’s blood–the very air upon which he existed. Beautiful in the light gray satin and lace dress Mrs. Bennet designed for her second daughter, Elizabeth’s beauty stole Darcy’s breath when she appeared in the church’s alcove upon her father’s arm. For months, Darcy wanted Elizabeth with a passion he did not think possible–day and night, desire nagged at him. It was as if Darcy saw Elizabeth for the first time; yet, his heart knew her the moment their eyes met.

  On a day a week prior to their nuptials, Elizabeth’s spirits rose to playfulness, and she asked Darcy to account for his having ever fallen in love with her.

 

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