“This is your mother, I suppose, Miss Elizabeth Bennet?” said Lady Catherine as way of introduction. “And that is a sister?”
“Yes, Lady Catherine,” replied Lizzy, still astonished by her presence.
“I see there is a brackish sort of backwater over there.” Lady Catherine waved in the direction of Batson Creek. “I would be grateful if you would accompany me on a short rowing trip, Miss Elizabeth Bennet.”
Lizzy obeyed out of curiosity rather than anticipated pleasure. She got out two life jackets from the chest in the sitting room, took the oars from the wall, and followed Lady Catherine, who was already marching out of the house.
Lizzy untied Angelica and rowed Lady Catherine down the picturesque inlet towards Lower Batson. Lady Catherine immediately launched her attack.
“Miss Elizabeth Bennet! How dare you even consider being engaged to my nephew, Mr Darcy! How could you! You are quite outrageous! An upstart! Mr Darcy is engaged to my daughter!”
The helicopter had now taken off and was following Lady Catherine’s moves. Her ladyship waved with dramatic effect up at the aircraft, and Lizzy could just make out the pale face of Miss de Brrr peering out, terrified, from the sky above.
“If he is engaged to your daughter,” said Lizzy, puffing violently as she tried to balance the boat to prevent it being swamped by the waves caused by the downwind from the helicopter, “you can hardly suspect that he could be engaged to me!”
“Insolent girl!” cried Lady Catherine, standing up in fury. The sudden movement caused the boat to lurch dangerously, and Lizzy was caught off guard and fell backwards, almost into the water. Lady Catherine toppled forward and, taking advantage of her new position, leant forward further, digging her sharp red nails into poor Lizzy’s neck to emphasise her next point.
“And do you promise never to be engaged to my nephew?”
“I will promise no such thing! But since you are intent on killing me, why should you care?”
“Insolent, ungrateful girl!” yelled Lady Catherine, now incandescent with rage. Lady Catherine’s nails were formidable and were locked onto Lizzy’s neck as their owner ranted and raged. Lizzy could feel the final breath being squeezed from her limp body. Somewhere in the haze of near death, she saw Lady Catherine signal to the helicopter hovering above. A hook was lowered down, and Lady Catherine attached it to her diamanté belt. As Lizzy passed in and out of consciousness, she was aware of Lady Catherine being lifted from her and swept up and away towards the hovering helicopter, still screaming, “Insolent, ungrateful girl!” The pressure released from her throat, Lizzy choked and coughed until, coming round, she saw the helicopter disappearing towards Bolberry Down, Lady Catherine leaning from the open doorway, shaking her fist, and Miss de Brrr peeping out of a window. Lizzy recovered herself and rowed back to 3 Island Street, hardly knowing what to think.
Chapter 57
The day after the extraordinary visit, Mr Bennet received a text from Mr Collins that cheered him up no end.
“I say, Lizzy,” he called, “I’ve just had a text from Mr Collins. It will amuse you! Ha! Ha! Ha! It says… Ha! Ha! Ha!… that you, Lizzy… you… may be linked to… Ha! Ha!… Mr Darcy! Mr Darcy! That man who probably never looked at you in his life! Ha! Ha!… and there is more… Dear Mr Collins expressly advises against it, as Lady Catherine would be seriously displeased! Ha! Ha! Ha!”
Lizzy would have much rather cried than laughed but did manage to add a “Ha! Ha!” to keep up appearances.
Chapter 58
Bingley and Darcy took it upon themselves to suggest a walk with the Bennet girls over to Bolt Head that afternoon. Jane and Bingley walked ahead, hand in hand, then arm in arm, then arms around each other’s shoulders, then arms around each other’s waists, and with eyes only for each other. Darcy, Lizzy, and Kitty formed an uncomfortable threesome behind, until Kitty, bored, spotted some absolute machines playing volleyball as they passed South Sands and decided they would make better company than a dull sister and the odious Darcy, so she left. Darcy and Lizzy climbed the steep path to the cliff top alone. Darcy seemed most interested in the seagulls and failed to look once at Lizzy, but she, gathering boldness, burst out, “Thank you so much for saving Lydia!”
“Lydia! That was meant to be a secret. I thought Mrs Gardiner could have been trusted.”
“Oh, it was Lydia herself who blurted it all out. We are most grateful.”
They stood on the cliff top, where a gun emplacement had previously bravely stood to protect Salcombe, surviving the war but subsequently being destroyed by deadly health-and-safety orders. Now Darcy took courage.
“Lizzy, if you still cannot bear the sight of me, speak now, and I will never…”
A gust of wind raced up across the cliff and swept Darcy off his feet. He stumbled, and to Lizzy’s horror, disappeared backwards over the cliff top and out of sight.
“Darcy! Darcy!” she called frantically. Could it be that the joy she hardly dared to hope for had just been cruelly blown away? Was her chance of happiness lying dashed on the jagged rocks below? Or could he be lying injured in terrible pain? The idea of his perfect body mangled tore at Lizzy’s heart.
“Darcy! Darcy!”
Her cries were caught and tossed around by the heartless wind.
“I was just trying to say,” Darcy went on from somewhere far below, “if you cannot bear the sight of me, I will never ask you out again and will never ohh!…”
Above the deafening roar of the wind, there was a louder roar of falling rocks. Darcy’s voice went on but sounded farther away than ever.
“…I will never ohh!… mention the subject again.”
“Oh, Darcy!” called Lizzy over the cliff top. Her relief that he was still alive gave her the courage to voice her true feelings. “Far from not bearing the sight of you, I could not bear not to have sight of you, but I simply cannot see you at all at this very moment! Oh, Darcy!”
“Did you say you could or could not bear the sight of me?”
“I said I could not bear not to have sight of you!”
The wind whistled and snatched at their words, whisking them away so comprehension was almost impossible. Darcy tried again.
“I say, do you think you could make yourself clear on this, Elizabeth? Can you or can you not bear the sight of me? It is rather important to my next move.”
“I cannot bear not to have sight of you.”
“What was that?”
The wind still mocked at their words. Darcy hanging onto the rock face, with sixty feet sheer drop below and a devil of a climb above, was facing the dilemma of his lifetime. He loved Elizabeth more than life itself. That he would now admit to himself, and if Elizabeth could bear the sight of him, he would try and climb up. If she could not bear the sight of him, he might as well fling himself off the cliff onto the rocks below. He tried again.
“Elizabeth. Could you please try and speak more clearly. Can you or can you not bear the sight of me?”
There was no distinguishable answer. Darcy was desperate. Then he had an idea. From his pocket, he got out an old copy of Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen, which he had intended to read should they stop on their walk and conversation dry up. Reluctantly, he tore out the frontispiece and scribbled a note.