Available August 20127 |
All
in the golden afternoon,
My pen in hand, I ply.
The
task before me comprehends
That which I never tried.
To
intertwine two writers’ books:
Beloved worlds collide.
Oh,
my muses! Adored authors,
I ask through me you speak,
And
help me play with each your tales
While dodging your fans’ pique.
Please
let me take sufficient care
In tweaking the antique.
Austen
— my Prima — heeds my call
(she’s such a constant friend),
And
sends me tales of Pemberley,
The Darcy brood ascends.
They
plan to host a birthday ball
And all their world attends.
Carroll
next infuses fancy;
Tales of Alice enchant.
But
Austen still must have her say,
So Darcy will transplant
From
Pemberley to Wonderland,
Miniscule as an ant.
It
is only on occasion
That my voice will intrude,
Upon
those of famous authors.
Just
me: a parvenu.
Yet
as I alone am living,
What would you have me do?
And
when my pen decreased its speed
One Muse to me would chat,
And
then, in turn, the other one,
Would take his turn at bat.
And
so we sailed forth to the end
And never once fell flat.
Darcy!
Pursue your daughter through
Adventures most absurd,
But
born of child’s fantasy
And playful choice of word.
Tumble
down endless rabbit holes,
Where lunacy allures.
Chapter One: A Troll
and a Rabbit
“Papa! Papa! The most wondrous thing has happened!”
Fitzwilliam Darcy stifled the indulgent smile threatening
his lips. “Alice, please recall our many conversations on manners.”
The little girl who had so unceremoniously burst into his
office instantly checked her advance, freezing in place like a statue. Slowly
she began to move, creeping her way backwards until she was again outside the
door, upon the frame of which she knocked.
The smile could no longer be retained. “Can I help you,
Alice?”
She returned it with one full of mischief. “How can you know
it is me, Papa?”
Bennet, who sat on the opposite side of the massive mahogany
desk, a mirror image of his father at the same age, rolled his eyes. “What is
wrong with that child?” he muttered, incurring a quelling glance from his
father.
“I can see you, my dear. The door is open. You may come in.”
“No, I cannot. There is a troll guarding a drawbridge, and
one must have a password if one wishes to proceed,” she explained.
“And what is the password?”
Her face contorted into a mask of tragedy. “I do not know
it.”
“Good Lord!” Bennet turned to stare at his youngest sister.
“Can you not be rational even in your own game? You imagined the troll and the bridge;
can you not dream up a password just as readily?”
She scowled at her brother. “No, I cannot. I said I don’t
know it.”
“Well, I do,” Darcy stated firmly. He knew from experience
that once Alice established an imaginary impediment, it was not to be overcome
without making a concession to her whimsy. “It just so happens this troll is an
old friend of mine.”
“You know him already, Papa?” Her chubby face fell. “Now I
shan’t have the honor of the introduction.”
“You sound like Aunt Catherine,” Bennet muttered.
“We met at Eton,” Darcy said before Alice could retort. “When
the older trolls gave me trouble, he was always the first to come to my aid.”
“What is his name?” she eagerly inquired.
“You see, you could never have made an introduction anyway,”
Bennet persisted.
“His name is Travelos. Travelos Gymphenor.”
Alice cooed with delight. “What a splendid troll name,
Papa!”
“Thank you, my dear.”
“What is the password?”
“Custard.”
Very solemnly Alice turned to the imaginary creature and
said, “Custard.” She then thanked Mr. Gymphenor and curtseyed before reentering
the office.
“She is mad, Father,” Bennet said. One firm finger pointed
at the ledger he was supposed to be ciphering, and he hurried to refocus his
attention on his task.
“Now, Miss Alice, how may I be of service?”
Her eyes grew big. “Papa, I saw the most wondrous thing in
the garden.”
“So I hear. What was it?”
“Well, Miss Williams and Cassie were reading Kenilworth, again, while I was making a
daisy chain,” the evidence of which remained in her hair, “and feeling
senselessly bored. Papa, what is the use of a book without any pictures?”
“You will find joy in a great many books without pictures as
you grow older, Alice. I predict the day will come when you are an even more
ferocious reader than your mother or Rose.”
“Adults always say things like that. I miss Rolie,” she
declared, utilizing a pet name for her favorite sister. “When will she be
home?”
“Tomorrow.”
“And why did you have to send her to school?”
“Why does one go to school but to learn?”
“She seemed to learn well enough with Miss Williams. She
knows more than Miss Williams does about flowers.”
“Which is precisely why her education needed a different
teacher to reach completion. Speaking of which, I thought Miss Williams had
planned to review French and Geography with you girls this morning? Certainly
little enough is likely to be accomplished over the next few days.”
Alice shuffled her feet restlessly. “I much rather she had.
We started on French, but it was so lovely outside, and my legs were just
aching to be out and about. So we took our books out, and Cassie brought Kenilworth. I learned to ask where
things are.” She clasped her hands before her and turned her toes out. “Où est
mon livre? Où est l'école? Où est ma chatte?” She relaxed her
posture and continued. “But then Miss Williams was persuaded to read Kenilworth, again, instead.”
“I see.” He made a
note on the tablature before him: a reminder to discuss the matter with
Elizabeth. “And what happened that was so wondrous amidst Sir Walter Scott and
the daisy chain?”
Her eyes sparkled once more with excitement. “You shall
never believe it! A white rabbit with pink eyes came by — ”
“There is nothing so very remarkable in that,” Bennet
interjected, again distracted from the work before him. “A great many rabbits
are white with pink eyes.”
“ — wearing a pocket watch and waistcoat!”
Darcy sighed. The wondrous happening was merely more
fantasy. His son said, “Now that would be a sight worth seeing.”
“Papa, he actually took the watch out and checked it!”
“Why wear a watch if not to know the time?”
“You don’t believe me,” Alice said accusingly to Bennet.
“Whatever gave you that notion?”
“Come now, children. Enough squabbling.”
“But it is true, Papa. I saw the rabbit and got up to follow
him, but I soon lost his trail.”
“You might release the hounds, Father.”
“Don’t you dare!” Alice shrieked indignantly at her brother.
“You would never do such a thing, would you, Papa?”
“There must be some means of controlling the pest population,”
Bennet continued to goad.
“Papa!” True panic now read on the child’s face.
“Let her be, Bennet. Attend to your work.”
“Yes, sir,” he said with a satisfied smirk.
“Now, Alice, no one shall harm your Mr. Rabbit. The dogs and
the groundskeepers know how to tell the difference between your average rabbit
and the very proper gentleman you describe.” Alice sighed her relief. Bennet
harrumphed.
“I wish you might see him, Papa. Do you think he shall
return?”
“If he is a tenant of Pemberley, we are sure to see him
again.”
“When Mr. Fredericks comes complaining that Mr. Rabbit
failed to pay his tithes.”
“Bennet!”
“Sorry, Father. It is just too irresistible not to tease her
when she so opens herself up to it.”
“I do not!”
“You most certainly do.”
“That is enough,” Darcy interjected. “Alice, please return to
your lessons.”
“But Kenilworth is
not a proper lesson!”
“Call it History,” Bennet replied.
“Then return to making your daisy chain under Miss Williams’s
guidance. You may keep an eye out for your white rabbit.”
“Oh, I shall certainly do so! I won’t let him get away from
me again. Next time I see him, I will invite him to tea. That way you can all
meet him.” She frowned. “But who will introduce me to him?”
“It certainly won’t do for you to be accosting strange
rabbits on the street. What will the neighbors say?”
“Bennet,” Darcy said warningly.
“Sorry, Father.”
“You are not. If you were, you would cease provoking her.”
The young man’s grin acknowledged the truth of his father’s assessment. “Run
along now, Alice. Bennet and I have a lot of work to do.”
“Will you come to the nursery tonight and read to me?”
“Of course, my dear. A book with pictures, I assume?”
“Well, I shall certainly not request Scott. I much prefer
nursery rhymes.”
“Then nursery rhymes you shall have.”
The child kissed her father on the cheek, stuck her tongue
out at her brother, and skipped away.
Bennet watched her go before turning forward towards his
father. “You will need to do something for that one.”
Darcy sighed. “What do you suggest?”
“A madhouse, for starters.”
“The child is perfectly sane, as you very well know. She is
just rather … creative. Your mother tells me it is a sign of great
intelligence.”
Bennet scoffed. “All I know is that if I had run about
spouting such nonsense at her age, you would have knocked the sense into me
quick enough.”
“It is rather different, Bennet. You were our first born: our
only son.”
“And not to be indulged like the baby of the family.”
Darcy smiled in acknowledgement. “Perhaps we are too easy on
her, but I really have no notion how else to handle the creature. No
punishments work on her. She simply turns anything we contrive into another
game.”
“I should like to see her turn a solid spanking into a
game.”
“Should we beat her for being imaginative?”
“No, you should beat her in hope it imbues her with some
sense.”
“Your mother would never allow it.” Darcy’s fond smile
suggested that neither would he.
“As I said, you are too easy on Alice. If you and my mother
do not take her in hand and impose reality upon her, the world will someday do
it for you, and it will be a far more difficult lesson to learn.”
“You are right.” He turned to his son. “When did you become
so wise?”
“That university education you are subjecting me to must be
put to some use.”
“It is for your own good, Bennet. You cannot simply cloister
yourself at Pemberley all your life. The world insists we mingle with it.”
“I understand, Father, but I do not have to like it.” He put
down his pen and leaned back in the comfortable leather chair, looking lovingly
at the book-lined walls. “I feel more at peace here than I do anywhere else,
even taking into account this formidable brood of sisters with whom you have
cursed me. If I could see them all fired off and remain here farming the land
and caring for the tenants the rest of my days, I should be most content. I
have no taste for society.”
“It is one of those necessary evils in life. Besides, you
will want some lady to share the years with you. You have your posterity to
consider.”
“Yes,” his son conceded, taking back up his pen, “someday I
suppose I will, but right now I should just be pleased not to have to return to
Cambridge.”
Darcy looked at his son with concern. “Is it really so
terrible?”
Bennet continued his ciphering. “It is not unendurable, if
that is what you mean.”
“The other young men are kind to you?”
He looked up and smirked. “Almost too kind, if you
understand me.”
Darcy relaxed. “I most certainly do. Tell me, are some of
your fellow scholars interested in introducing you into their equally
sister-laden homes?”
“Well, few are equally
laden, but yes, they do. They all wanted me to come visit them over the
holidays. It is like offering myself up as meat to hungry lions. Had I not had Ellie’s
ball for a firm excuse, I should have been pestered to death. How is it that
such an extraordinary number of perfectly amiable gentlemen have sisters who
are so positively vile?”
Darcy laughed. “I know not, but it seems frightfully common.”
“Mother tells me Uncle Charles’s sister gave you a rather
difficult time when you were all young and eligible.”
“Yes. Mrs. Lucas, Caroline Bingley as she was then, was
quite persistent in her pursuit of me. It was exceedingly awkward, I can assure
you.”
“I can only imagine,” he laughed.
“Here is something to think of: had I not been willing to
endure the society of one friend’s vile sister, I might never have met your
mother.”
“I shall start petitioning for friends with amiable
neighbors,” he quipped. Yet his usual smirk was absent, and it was with an earnest
mien he proceeded to ask, “What if I never meet someone to suit me as Mother
does you?”
“You will, Son. Give it time. You are not yet one and twenty
—
far too young to marry now even should you happen across the right lady.
The here and now is dedicated to the ledgers, and between Alice’s rabbits and
trolls and this tête-à-tête, I fear we shall
never be done.”
“Alice started it.”
“No, I need not fear you are growing up too fast. Any wisdom
you may have stumbled upon is still judiciously diluted with a great deal of
childishness.”
“The books, Father! We must attend to the ledgers!”
“What would I do were you not here to recall me to my
duties?” Darcy retorted with a sardonic smile, and they got on with their work.
An intriguing and amusing excerpt, altho' I hope you will allow me to make one observation about content which I will send to you direct via email.
ReplyDeleteHa ha ha ha ha! Replied directly
DeleteWonderfully entertaining opening! I love Alice's imaginative streak, Darcy's indulgent tolerance, and Bennet's annoyance! Looking forward to the finished book.
ReplyDeleteThank you! It will be available in about a month.
DeleteThis is a great start for a story! Thanks for sharing it.
ReplyDeleteMy pleasure!
Delete