Book Description
A Covenant of Marriage—legally binding, even for an unwilling bride!
Defined as a formal, solemn, and binding agreement or compact, a covenant is commonly used with regard to relations among nations or as part of a contract. But it can also apply to a marriage as Elizabeth Bennet learns when her father binds her in marriage to a man she dislikes. Against her protests that she cannot be bound against her will, the lady is informed that she lives under her father’s roof and, consequently, is under his control; she is a mere pawn in the proceedings.
With such an inauspicious beginning, how can two people so joined ever make a life together?
* * *
Excerpt from
Chapter 3 of A Covenant of Marriage
Logical
consequences are the scarecrows of fools and the beacons of wise men.
—
Thomas Huxley (1825–1895), English biologist
Monday, September
21, 1812
East End, London
East End, London
Lydia had felt a
certain queasiness when she first arose on that fateful Monday morning, but the
sickness did not fully take hold of her until she sat down to breakfast with
Wickham.
Almost as soon as he removed the cover from the cooked ham, the smell
hit her nostrils, and she was barely able to reach the washbasin before she
completely lost the contents of her stomach. Some of it slopped over onto the
floor and stained her already discoloured nightgown.
Wickham threw down
his napkin in disgust and immediately took his coat from a hook on the door.
“Wickham, dear,
where are you going?” Lydia called weakly, sitting down on the bed but keeping
the washbasin in her lap, for she was by no means certain she would not need it
again.
“Out,” was Wickham’s
only reply, and then he was gone, even as Lydia felt another wracking spasm
twisting her stomach.
At first, Wickham had
no destination in mind. He wanted only to walk and think of some solution to his
predicament. After he paid the landlord for the past week’s rent, there was
enough money for another three or four weeks at the cheap inn, but he did not
know what to do after that. He could not sell his militia commission as he
might have done with a regular army commission. Militia commissions were only
given to men whose families owned a certain amount of land, and he had deceived
Lieutenant Denny in that regard.
He had left London
for Hertfordshire in the company of Denny to escape the creditors who were
searching for him, and the possibility of employment in the countryside was his
best prospect, but he was now in the same trap as before. He had to go
somewhere—do something—but he did not know where. And Wickham knew he would
have nothing to live on in a few more weeks.
On an impulse, he
decided to visit Mrs. Younge’s establishment in Edward Street. He had gone
there when he and Lydia first arrived in London, but she had no room for him.
Because
of their former connection, he knew she would have found room for him if it was
at all possible, so he had not returned. Now, he thought it might be worth another
visit.
Anything was better than to return to Lydia in that small, grimy room,
and he wondered for the hundredth time why he had allowed her to come with him.
Her plan to go to Gretna Green had been ludicrous, and at first he had thought her
joking. If he did not have enough money to stay with the regiment, how could he
possibly have had the funds to get all the way to Scotland?
Wickham shook his
head in resignation. All Lydia ever wanted to do was go out to the theatre or
go to a ball. Did she not realize she had left all hope of attending such
social events behind when she came away with him? His reputation, at least in
Hertfordshire and Brighton, had been destroyed, but hers had been even more
utterly ruined. It was past time to be on his way.
She was a foolish,
silly girl and had no idea of what she had done to herself. Her company in his
bed had begun to pall, and he would be glad to see the last of her. The thought
struck him that, if he took all their money, he could travel a lot farther than
if he had to pay for two.
When he got to his
destination, he found Mrs. Younge in the small room she used as an office,
making entries in a book and adding columns of figures. Wickham leaned against
the doorjamb, smiling at the sight. She had not yet seen him, and she looked
like a reputable shopkeeper, which she most assuredly was not.
“Well, it looks as
though the blood-sucking landlord business is thriving,” he drawled, and the
handsome woman glanced up quickly, a look of outrage on her face. The anger
faded as she recognized him, and she nodded once before returning to her
figures. When she was finished, she looked up at him with a wry smile.
“Well, as always,
you unquestionably look the part of an elegant gentleman,” she said.
Wickham
gave her a mock bow, and she continued. “Have a seat, please. And tell me what
brings you to my humble domicile this fine morning?”
He grimaced with
distaste as he sat down, and he related what had driven him from his room.
“I must admit I am
at my wit’s end. I am thoroughly sick of her, but that is not what keeps me
from leaving. I simply do not know what to do now. I had thought a commission
in the militia would provide an opportunity for a steady stream of income, but
I had the most bloody awful luck you can imagine.”
“You always were
more convinced of your skill at games of chance than you should have been,”
Mrs. Younge said sternly, but Wickham only smiled and gave a sheepish shrug of
his shoulders.
“As it happens, I
have an opportunity that might suit you if you do not mind occasionally getting
your hands dirty. But first, let us discuss your problem with this Miss Lydia
Bennet. You have been in town since the beginning of August, is that right?”
“Dead on,” he
acknowledged. “I came to see you on Sunday the first.”
“Very well,” she
said, doing some quick calculations in her head. “Yes, enough time has passed. George,
it seems your Miss Lydia has gotten herself in the family way.”
Wickham’s mouth fell
open in astonishment; then a look of concern crossed his face. “Are you sure?”
“I ought to know.”
Mrs. Younge had once
kept the accounts for a house of ill repute until the owner had tried once too
often and too forcibly to recruit her as one of his ladies. He had thought her
refined bearing and elegant appearance and speech would be a remarkable draw. He
had not known about the thin Italian stiletto she kept up the sleeve of her
dress. She was not certain he had died, but she had not stayed long enough to
find out. The upshot of her experience at his establishment was that she was
well-acquainted in how long it took for a young woman to start showing signs of
being with child.
“It is called morning
sickness,” she continued, “and it occurs in some women when they first become
with child. It usually goes away in a month or so, but your Miss Lydia will
probably have difficulty eating for a while. And, in about eight months, she
will present the world with a little Wickham bastard.”
“Thank you for such
an apt description,” Wickham said harshly; then his tone softened.
“What was
the opportunity you mentioned?”
“My business has
been successful enough for me to put aside enough to buy another house in a
more disreputable part of town. I can manage both quite easily, but I should
not care to go into the part of town where the new house is located without an escort.
If you still keep a rapier inside your walking stick—”
“I do,” he said,
lifting it up to show her.
“—and if you do not
mind using a cudgel on the occasional hard head who does not want to pay his
weekly rent—in advance, of course.”
“Of course,” Wickham
responded, and the two of them shared a quick, predatory smile.
“Then I could
provide food and lodging here and a little on the side. Provided,” she smiled
thinly, “you keep my bed warm on those few nights when I need a gentleman’s
companionship.”
“Of course,” Wickham
agreed again. He knew Mrs. Younge did not need such solace often, but she was
always fastidious. She had no desire to take some uncouth, ill-mannered lout to
bed. She preferred a gentleman—or at least a reasonable facsimile.
* * *
Author Bio
By training, I’m a retired engineer, born in Texas, raised in Oklahoma, and graduated from the University of Oklahoma. Sandwiched in there was a stint in the Marines, and I’ve lived in Arizona since 1977, working first for Motorola and then General Dynamics.
I raised two sons with my first wife, Margaret, before her untimely death from cancer, and my second wife, Jeanine, and I adopted two girls from China. The older of my daughters recently graduated with an engineering degree and is working in Phoenix, and the younger girl is heading toward a nursing degree.
I’ve always been a voracious reader and collector of books, and my favorite genres are science fiction, historical fiction, histories, and, in recent years, reading (and later writing) Jane Austen romantic fiction. This late-developing interest was indirectly stimulated when I read my late wife's beloved Jane Austen books after her passing. One thing led to another, and I now have four novels published: A Most Civil Proposal (2013), Consequences (2014), Pride, Prejudice, and Secrets (2015), and Perilous Siege (2019). Two of my books are now audiobooks, Most Civil Proposal and Pride, Prejudice, and Secrets.
I retired from engineering in 2011, but I still live in Arizona with my family, a pair of dogs (one of which is stubbornly untrainable), and a pair of rather strange cats. My hobbies are reading, woodworking, and watching college football and LPGA golf (the girls are much nicer than the guys, as well as being fiendishly good putters). Lately I’ve reverted back to my younger years and have taken up building plastic model aircraft and ships (when I can find the time).
Contact
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Giveaway Time!
Meryton Press is giving away 8 eBooks of A Covenant of Marriage! To enter, please use the Rafflecopter below.
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Blog Tour Schedule
7 Nov From Pemberley to Milton
19 Nov Interests of a Jane Austen Girl
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Oh how I dislike Wickham and Mrs. Younge.
ReplyDeleteBoth of them are very similar, with Wickham able to present the aspect of a gentleman while Mrs. Younge presented herself as a genteel, educated lady. But, while neither one had any other way of making a living, Mrs. Younge had put enough aside to allow her to be able to rent rooms. Wickham, however, could never restrain his spending.
DeleteI agree, Darcybennett, they are both deeply unpleasant here!
DeleteMrs. Younge and Wickham, what a despicable pair...I guess they deserve each other. Maybe Lydia is beginning to see that Mr. Wickham is no gentleman.
ReplyDeleteAs I said in my above comment, they're very similar. In modern terms, I think we'd classify both of them as con artists. But Wickham needs Mrs. Younge more than she needs him, since she's the brains of that duo. As for Lydia, I have to say that she's still as clueless as ever!
DeletePoor girl, and she is coming to see it too late :(
DeletePoor stupid Lydia! I assume he isn’t going to take him to Mrs Young’s with him! What a foolish child! Wickham and Mrs Young deserve each other!
ReplyDeleteI feel so sorry for the rest of the family as they will obviously suffer the shame of being related to Lydia.
I was lucky enough to win a copy of this and I look forward to reading it when it arrives.
You are indeed correct, Glynis. Lydia will soon be on her own and pregnant without benefit of matrimony. As for the rest of the family, Mrs. Bennet is the real architect of their ruin. Whenever I'm going through the text of P&P, my blood runs cold when Mrs. Bennet sends Lydia on her way to Brighton by advising her not to miss any opportunity of enjoying herself as much as possible. Talk about setting her family up for disaster!
DeleteI felt quite sorry for her to be honest, Glynis. I thought Wickham paused when he realised that he might have a baby on the way, but he doesn't seem worried about dumping that along with the poor ruined mother!
DeleteI wonder when Lydia is going to realise how much trouble she is in
ReplyDeleteIt won't be long, Vesper! When she wakes up to find that Wickham had disappeared with his belongings and with the last of the money her mother had given her, she'll start to realize it. And when the landlord sends her packing, telling her that her nausea is because Wickham has gotten her in the family way, the gloom will be inpenetrable!
DeleteI just hope she has the sense to go back to her family - the Gardiners I mean, she would need to keep away from her sisters :(
DeleteLydia... how Naïve can she be! Ugh to Mrs. Young & Wickham!
ReplyDeleteThat's why young people were strictly chaperoned! And why Lydia should never have been allowed out of the house into society at sixteen! Mrs. Bennet is living vicariously through Lydia's "high spirits" (AKA wild and carefree!), while Mr. Bennet valued his tranquility above his duty.
DeletePoor girl. It was very bad that she was out in society so young. Mrs Bennet was not a woman of sense at the best of times. I blame Mr Bennet more, because he should have taken better care of them. However, in some respects he was also naive, thinking that as Lydia was poor she would not be of interest to a scoundrel.
DeleteI read and enjoyed this book and posted a review. I recommend reading it for yourself.
ReplyDeleteI'm glad you enjoyed my book, Shiela. I took a look at your review, and there were some insightful comments. In the matter of wanting more information in the Epilogue, I wrote a vignette in a previous stop on this blog tour addressing Lydia ten years after she was abandoned by Wickham. After a decade of dealing with life's challenges to an unmarried mother, even with Darcy having provided for her support, Lydia is not the same flightly female as she was. Most of the changes are for the better but not all.
DeleteJanet Taylor sent me three links to other blog stops and I did read that vignette and left a comment. I was happy with the outcome. I hate to see someone so young punished for eternity when it was her parents who misguided her. Thanks for getting back to me.
DeleteI'm glad to hear that you were happy with the outcome, Sheila. I feel sad about somebody that young being doomed too.
DeleteGreat excerpt. Loved seeing things from Wickham's POV. And really interesting to read your story about how you came to be a JAFF author. Good luck with the new release and thank you for the generous giveaway.
ReplyDeleteGlad you enjoyed the excerpt Elaine!
DeleteI hate that Wickham is thinking of abandoning Lydia after what he had done. He is so irresponsibile that I hope he gets his comeuppance soon. But Lydia is also at fault too and doesn't realise the evils of men.
ReplyDeleteHe seems a pretty vile specimen here!
DeleteFacsimile of a gentleman, right on target. 😁
ReplyDeleteAbsolutely, KateB!
Delete