Chapter 1
THE RULE OF OTHER’S
Elizabeth busied about the room arranging her belongings.
With her maid, Betsy, out of the way, Elizabeth was at liberty to arrange her things as she saw fit.
She had to admit it was a remarkably pretty apartment of a nice, comfortable size—a corner room with windows on two sides.
On one side, she could look across the lawn behind the house to a beautiful hanging wood, and on the other, she beheld a view of fine bold hills.
As much as she relished being out of doors, the thing she considered most important, ironically, was the writing desk situated in front of one window.
Elizabeth was sure to enjoy her most pleasurable moments sitting there.
On the whole, she had no cause at all to repine about the room; its greatest failing being it simply was not home.
She placed her favourite books on the shelves and hung her sister’s drawings on the walls.
Resting her hands on her hips, she studied her surroundings.
This apartment is going to be mine for the unforeseeable future. I had best accustom myself to it.
Elizabeth’s father, Mr. Thomas Bennet of Longbourn in Hertfordshire, had the best of intentions in sending her there.
In consenting to have her stay with her aunt and his estranged elder sister, Lady Vanessa Barrett, he had afforded the means of healing the breach in his family—a breach that had commenced on the day he chose Miss Fanny Gardiner as his bride.
When Elizabeth allowed herself to think through the arrangement she had agreed to enter on the bequest of her dear father, she began to see that it was for her own benefit as well.
The past year and a half had been the most difficult stretch of Elizabeth’s life.
Day after day, night after night, one interminable week after another, and Elizabeth’s spirits still faltered.
Having prided herself for so long on her philosophy of thinking only of the past as its remembrance gave her pleasure, even she did not recognise herself.
Now here she was entering a new period of her life under the stewardship of a woman whose acquaintance she had not yet made, for her ladyship was in the village attending the poor and less fortunate when Elizabeth’s carriage arrived.
Elizabeth had been impressed by the warm reception she received, nevertheless, even though it was made clear to her that an introduction to her aunt would occur at dinner and not a moment before.
She called out in response to the knock on her door. In waltzed Betsy. “Her ladyship asked me to check on you and see if there is anything you need. I’m to inform you that dinner is promptly at five.”
Amused, Elizabeth smiled. Punctuality must surely be the rule in her aunt’s establishment. I wonder what other rules I must abide. “Thank you, Betsy. I have all that I require, and I believe I have sufficient time to prepare. It is only three o’clock.”
“I am only doing as I was told. I meant no offence.”
“I took no offence, I assure you,” Elizabeth voiced in a more appeasing tone.
Betsy wandered over to the wardrobe and went about the business of looking through Elizabeth’s things—what little there was.
Elizabeth was not used to the notion of having her own maid.
At home in Hertfordshire, she and her sisters had shared a single maid.
Something else to which I must accustom myself, I suppose.
Elizabeth discerned the fine tailoring of her maid’s dress—far richer than the gowns Elizabeth owned. She joined Betsy’s side. “There is not much to choose from. I fear my aunt will be disappointed.”
“She might—but she has made an appointment for you at her modiste. In no time at all, your wardrobe will be quite up to her expectations.”
“Yes, Lady Vanessa’s generosity is boundless.
” Elizabeth reflected upon her mode of travel in the fine private coach as well as all her family’s astonishment that Lady Vanessa had sent Betsy to Hertfordshire to accompany her on the long journey.
Elizabeth pulled out the dark-brown gown and the pale-green one, and she walked over and arranged them on the bed.
She picked up the first one. “Which shall it be, Betsy? Will it be this one?” She held the dress before her.
Before Betsy mustered a reply, Elizabeth held up the second gown. “Or will it be this one?”
The golden-haired young woman, who looked but a couple years older than Elizabeth, pursed her lips.
Elizabeth tossed the gown aside and plopped down on the bed. “I shall decide later. Now I believe I shall take a walk. It is such a lovely day.”
Betsy gathered the two discarded garments and placed them where they belonged. “Then I will return to attend you in an hour if that is agreeable.”
Elizabeth nodded, and soon Betsy was gone.
Her purpose in sending Betsy on her way accomplished, she was finally at leisure to do the one thing that satisfied her more than anything else: capture her thoughts in a missive to her dearly beloved sister, Jane.
Afterwards, there would be time enough for her escape from the manor house for a brisk stroll about the lovely grounds, which she credited as being, by far, the finest she ever recalled seeing.
The grounds alone were enough to spur enthusiasm over her new life.
She settled comfortably at her desk and began writing where she had earlier left off.
The first part of my journey was suffered in too much melancholy over the prospect of my leaving my beloved Longbourn to occasion any measure of pleasantness.
But as I drew towards the end of it and beheld the magnificence of the country I am to inhabit for the indeterminate future, I began to appreciate my fate—to be the means of healing the breach between my father and his sister, to reside with her here in Bosley, and to be the heir apparent to all her worldly possessions pursuant to my fulfilling her expectations of all that her niece and heir ought to be.
Elizabeth was two pages into the recitation of her journey from Hertfordshire—the comfort of the carriage, the condition of the roads, and the inns she had patronised—when a light rap on the door stole her concentration.
She glanced at the clock on the mantelpiece.
Where has the time gone? Pray it is not Betsy.
Elizabeth went to the door and opened it. “Betsy.”
The young woman curtsied and proceeded quickly into the room. “Miss Elizabeth, I’ve come to help you prepare for dinner, if I may.”
“Yes, I do not believe it can be put off any longer.”
After dinner, Lady Vanessa sat in the parlour with her niece. Elizabeth was telling her aunt about her sister. “Jane always said the world was bright and good. I cannot recall a time when she ever spoke ill of anyone.”
Having been rendered completely aghast upon seeing her niece for the first time, Lady Vanessa continued to observe Elizabeth with a critical eye.
She supposed she had her work cut out for her in light of the circumstances of her niece’s upbringing.
What does the daughter of a tradesman know about rearing a gentlewoman?
Although her clothing was completely unremarkable, one’s eyes were drawn to her golden brooch, which was quite lovely as best Lady Vanessa could tell from a distance of only a few feet.
The years had taken quite a toll on her ladyship’s beauty as well as her eyes.
She did not intend to serve as nature’s accomplice by wearing spectacles.
Her ladyship thought Elizabeth’s skin was rather brown, even a bit coarse—a consequence of her recent travels, no doubt.
However, Betsy and she travelled under the same circumstances.
I detected no such alteration in Betsy. Not everything she observed was met with displeasure.
Elizabeth’s hair is perfectly arranged. I suppose I have Betsy to thank for that.
She talks incessantly of her sister Jane. She misses her very much, I am sure.
“I understand your sister Jane’s place in your heart shall forever be the most cherished.
No doubt you miss her dearly, but what of your other sisters?
I should love to hear more about them, as well.
Of course, my brother proclaims them to be the silliest girls in England, but he has always countenanced such opinions about the fairer sex—at least for as long as I can recall. ”
“My sister Mary, who is next to me, is best described as a young lady of deep reflection. She is an ardent reader, and she is most proud of her accomplishments on the pianoforte. When she is not reading, she is practising.”
“It sounds as though your sister Mary is a very accomplished young woman. The constant improvement in one’s mind through the practice of reading is a laudable quality.”
Elizabeth accepted the compliment on behalf of her sister and recommenced speaking. “Kitty is next to Mary.”
“Kitty?”
“Pardon, your ladyship, for you likely have heard her spoken of by her given name, Catherine. My youngest sister, Lydia, can be credited for calling her ‘Kitty’ I suppose by insisting as a young child that she was more like a kitten than a cat.” Elizabeth chuckled, likely in recollection of the childhood memory, but Lady Vanessa was not amused.
Her ladyship raised her eyebrows and laced her voice with condescension. “I suppose one would have had to be there to appreciate the story.”
Elizabeth cleared her throat. “I suppose you are correct, your ladyship.” Elizabeth went on to describe her two younger sisters.
By her niece’s account, Lady Vanessa considered that perhaps her brother was correct, for try as Elizabeth might to extol their antics with consideration and affection, her ladyship could not but suppose that indeed they were rather silly.