The Process Behind
the Cover of “Lizzy Bennet Meets the Countess”
By this point,
Janet Taylor and I have firmly established the overall cover format for Bennet
Wardrobe stories. There have been two in the “new style” –The Keeper: Mary Bennet’s Extraordinary Journey and The Exile: Kitty Bennet and the Belle Époque. This latest novella will be the third utilizing the unifying “look.”
One might suggest
that if you have the frame, it is a relatively simple process to drop a picture
into the hole. However, there is a peculiar zen
behind an art director’s craft. As opposed to being almost incidental, what
truly drives the underlying creative impulse for the cover design is the core
visual. Even if Janet is not creating a new image, she derives the primary
background color for the title block and then the complementary colors for the
type itself. Wrong choices can have awful consequences.
For Lizzy Bennet Meets the Countess, the
strong visual was already in hand—or so it seemed. I had originally been
composing a story called The Darcys Meet
Frankenstein. As such I had already
begun focusing on the Villa Diodati
where Byron, Godwin, and Shelley had gathered during the summer of 1816.
Because Mary Shelley’s immortal Frankenstein
began its life as a short story composed at Diodati,
the novel has been illustrated countless times. Early on William Purser made an
engraving for a fronts piece of an edition. Later Edward Francis Finden made a
colorized version of the original print.
The dramatic
nighttime vision fired our collective imagination. But, would it actually fit a
novella whose focus, while still keeping elements of the mature Elizabeth’s
encounters with Mary Godwin, had been shifted to explore the youthful Lizzy’s
interaction with the Wardrobe?
We decided that,
while one could read the novella as two separate stories, both tales were so
interlocked that to consider the Lizzy portion without the Elizabeth segment
and vice versa would strip the deeper meaning from both. The visions besetting
the adult find their roots in the child—or so Dr. Freud would assert.
Thus, the Finden
color image of Villa Diodati became
our only choice. Janet then picked up the yellow block background color from
the moon and the burgundy type for my name from the roof and as a complementary
color.
Don Jacobson
When Reality Becomes Dreams
The universe shook again on Midsummer’s Day in 1801. The Bennet Wardrobe opened the door to the future in Longbourn’s bookroom. This time the most impertinent Bennet of them all, Elizabeth, tumbled through the gateway. Except she left not as a grown women, but rather a ten-year-old girl who had been playing a simple game of hide-and-seek.
What needs could a child have that could be answered only by the Wardrobe? Or was it another Bennet, one who had aged into a beautiful, confident leader of Edwardian Society, who acted as the prime mover behind Lizzy’s journey? Was the enigmatic Lady Kate the force that shaped Lizzy’s destiny and that of her younger sisters left back in Hertfordshire?
Perhaps the Wardrobe also understood that Lizzy’s time in the future was destined to become the stuff of adult dreams…those mirages that rise only when the doors to the mind are most open…at the edges of sleep.
After Lizzy is transported back to that innocent summer’s day in 1801, Lizzy Bennet Meets the Countess will carry readers forward to what may be considered the greatest writers’ workshop in history. T’was at the legendary Villa Diodati that Lord Byron gathered Mary Godwin (Frankenstein) and Percy Bysshe Shelley for a vacation during the Year Without Summer. Oh, Fitzwilliam Darcy and his wife, Elizabeth, were there to act as catalysts to transform vague ideas into timeless fiction.
“The Wardrobe Series weaves Bennet Family history through a series of impossible “coincidences,” leaving the reader to gasp in appreciation at the mastery that links it all together. Each new offering sheds light on a kaleidoscopic tapestry of the major events spanning two centuries. In “Lizzy Bennet Meets the Countess,” Jacobson tightens the details of his complex universe and draws his artistry nearer to its pinnacle.”
Nicole Clarkston, author of These Dreams
READ CHAPTER 10
Ten-year-old Lizzy Bennet, while looking for a place
to hide during an after-dinner game at Longbourn in 1801, has placed her hands
on the front of the remarkable Bennet Wardrobe. The Wardrobe sends Bennets to a
time in the future where they can learn what they need to know…or to be of
assistance.
By this point in the story, Lizzy has already arrived
in the summer of 1907 at Matlock House where the Wardrobe rests, met Jacques
and Maggie Robard (see THE EXILE), been introduced to many of the visions of the
20th Century, and has been transported across the English Channel in
Lord Henry Fitzwilliam’s steam yacht ‘Persephone.’ Her final destination is The
House at Deauville, the beachfront residence of the Five Families. Chapter X
details Lizzy’s first encounter with the Earl and Countess of Matlock, Henry
and Kitty Fitzwilliam.
This excerpt
is © 2017 by Donald P. Jacobson. All
rights reserved. No portion of this work
may be reproduced by any means electronic or mechanical without the expressed
written consent of the holder of this copyright with the exception of brief
excerpts for review purposes. Published
in the United States of America.
Chapter X
Kitty was shaken to her core.
Here was her older sister, but wearing a child’s body and clothes
rather than being that impertinent young lady who lived most clearly in the
Fourth Daughter’s memory. She scanned
deeper until she recollected a time when Lizzy looked as she did here in
Deauville: a frolic in Hyde Park with Aunt Maddie and Uncle Edward. Kitty had
been but six years old when all five girls from Lydia, barely out of leading
strings, to Jane, who at age eleven was experiencing her first spurt of
adolescent growth, had been packed off for an extended visit with the newly
married couple. There had been ducks and bread and a multitude of flapping
webbed feet demanding food from giggling little girls. Kitty wryly smiled at
the sad/happy ancient reminiscence from her own childhood, some thirty-two
years before.
Oh my! That was the summer
of the Year 0. Papa had sent us to Town because Mama was so ill after her great
loss. I was frightened of the ducks’ beaks until Lizzy took my hand and showed
me how to feed those hungry birds. Everything sent me into terror at that time.
If not for Lizzy…
She tightened her grip on Henry’s hand as the youngsters tumbled out
of the carriage to be followed by Maggie in her best ‘ship of state’ manner.
Maxie and Tommy were strangely restrained and held back from rushing to greet
Henry and Kitty as they intuitively grasped the important nature of the meeting
between Miss Bennet and the Countess.
Lizzy stepped forward, near black eyes peering up from beneath the
merlot brim of her topper, the giant rose complementing her coloring like a
raspberry gelée mates with dark chocolate. Tommy came up to her side and introduced
her.
“Mama, Papa. Please permit me to introduce one of our cousins. This
is Elizabeth Rose Bennet. Miss Bennet, please permit me to introduce my
parents, the Earl and Countess of Matlock, Lord and Lady Fitzwilliam.”
Lizzy gazed at the couple and then made a deep curtsey.
Henry cleared his throat and opened seriously, “That was an
excellent introduction, Thomas. I am pleased to see that you have not lost all
of your manners while tramping around Brownsea with Lord Baden-Powell. You are
also well-met, Maxim.”
Then his voice assumed a lighter, more playful tone, “And, Maggie;
is that square husband of yours coming along with the luggage or did he leave
it to the Wilsons so that he could greet all of his bocce opponents out behind patisserie Villet?
“He may be surprised to know
that the commune has a new maire who has taken the pledge. Monsieur
Villet has had to close down his still during the vacation months. Monsieur le Maire, or maybe it was
Madame, decided that allowing a workingman a drink after a day’s labor would
shock the sensibilities of the tourists.
“And, Lizzy, if I may be permitted such familiarity, you must now
forget all of your manners. This is the Beach House. Shoes and stockings are
discouraged. If your Uncle Eddie Darcy insists upon wearing a necktie, I will
cut it off at the knot and nail the remains to the archway leading to the
beach!”
Kitty shot a quick elbow into her husband’s ribcage. Then she took
up the light-hearted litany as well.
“First off…my husband is correct. This is the Beach House, and we
throw off the artificial in favor of the real when we are here. You must call
me Aunt Kate. This specimen,” at this she reached out and with soft fingers
gently stroked Lord Fitzwilliam’s right arm, “is nothing less than your Uncle
Henry. You have met the rest of our clan with the exception of your cousins
Eloise.
“But, I must correct my
beloved. Lest you think all
Darcys are stuffy prigs, Lizzy, my brother Edward has been living in a morning
coat and top hat for months as he has represented Britain at The Hague
Conference. Your Uncle Henry would have been by his side except that I insisted
that he take at least one year to recuperate after Algeciras. [i]
“We expect Earl Darcy and Aunt Ellie to arrive in the next day or
two. Little Georgiana is already here with Eloise. Her older brothers are
visiting their Johnson cousins in Baltimore.
“So, we will be a small group, but with more than enough activities
to keep us occupied. Oh, Maggie, Aline telephoned earlier. She and
Pierre-Auguste have decided to send Jean ahead while they wrap up the studio.
Tomkins will have to return to the gare
to collect him. Young Claude is off with Aline’s family in the country.”
Lizzy had been studying Tommy’s mother as she gave the updates. The
woman’s confidence, her powerful ability to engage everyone within reach, was
immediately relaxing. Although a countess, Lady Fitzwilliam, Aunt Kate, did not
wield her title like a truncheon. Rather, she quickly disposed of her figurative
tiara in favor of an actual wide brimmed canvas hat that shaded her fair skin.
On top of that, she is
wearing men’s pantaloons. And some sort of footwear that looks like the ancient
Roman sandals Papa showed me when we visited his College in Cambridge!
Lizzy was immediately drawn to her in a manner unlike her attraction
to Maggie. This was a deeper, more profound, feeling that vibrated through
Elizabeth’s entire being. Lizzy thought to herself, I have met Aunt Kate before!
The boys began to impatiently shuffle their feet while Kitty was
diving into another thought. They froze as Henry’s nose—his eyes hidden behind
the smoky lenses—angled down toward them. Lady F was not oblivious, either.
“…but I am rattling on. So…”
She raised a left hand unadorned except for a glorious solitaire
blue diamond engagement ring abutting a gold wedding band. Then she began to
tick off items using her elegant fingers as counters.
“First: The tide is out and the surf is low. Maxie and Tommy: get on
your swimming costumes and collect the younger girls. They have been waiting
for you before going out onto the beach. If you think you are impatient,
imagine two five-year-olds denied their fun.
“Second: You two are responsible for their safety. No rough play!
Watch them carefully! Aunt Maggie will accompany you until Henry and I can join
you.
“Third: I would ask you, Lizzy, to accompany Uncle Henry and me into
the library. We would like to talk with you about your family at home. Once we
have finished our conversation, I imagine you will want to join the others.
“Finally, Madame Brouillard has somehow obtained—I think it must be
from Teddy and Ethel’s cook at Sagamore Hill[ii]—a
menu for what the Americans refer to as ‘a
cookout.’ We will be eating a number of dishes all prepared over open fires
right on our beach! I expect hearty appetites!”
With a vigorous nod, she sent everybody scurrying away—everybody
except Lizzy to whom she held out her hand. Thus linked, the two sisters
climbed the stairs and slipped into the coolness of the House.
vvv
The difference in temperature from the front drive to the front hall
of the House was as pronounced as was the contrast between brilliant sunshine
and deep shadow. Lizzy was used to spending as much time as she could out of
doors. But the ocean breeze had done little to relieve the oppressive heat
radiating from the crushed limestone surface beneath her feet as she stood in
the drive.
Moving indoors was a relief. How much of a relief, she was not sure,
as she did not know quite what to expect from the two adults. Their initial
greeting seemed pleasant enough, much akin to the open manner of Mr. Lucas when
he welcomed everyone to his large home fronting on High Street—something
suitable for Meryton’s mayor—situated across from his mercantile.
Lord Fitzwilliam surely seemed jovial enough. Lady Kate, on the
other hand, was full of contradictions. One moment she was laughing with the
boys; the next a cloud of sadness crossed her freckled face and dimmed those
rich blue eyes.
Uncle Henry led the small group into a pleasant book-lined room. He
immediately doffed his dark glasses, revealing his steel-grey eyes for the
first time, and stopped by a cart filled with decanters. He turned to his wife
while pointing at one bottle filled with an amber liquid.
She nodded. He poured two short drinks, and walked to the
leather-upholstered sofa where she had settled first Lizzy and then herself. In
the meantime, Kitty had poured a tumbler of lemonade from a pitcher beaded with
cooling condensation. This she handed to Lizzy before accepting her own from
her husband.
Then they gazed at one another.
Of Kitty’s impressions of the child Elizabeth, dear Reader, you have
been apprised.
As for Henry: all that can be said is that he had not any specific
impression but rather an underlying concern about the impact of Lizzy’s
presence on his beloved. This was much in keeping with his manner of dealing
with the world since those dark days of 1891-92.
On the other hand, young Miss Bennet was soaking up everything like
a Greek sponge. And her observations were curious and oddly connected with her
old life.
Although not in manner, but
rather appearance, Aunt Kate reminds me of nothing more than Mama. She truly
looks like Mama, although Mama’s eyes are emerald green not grey-blue. She is
also very pretty like Mama, although I think she may be a little older. I have
heard Uncle Edward speak of Mama’s great beauty as a young girl. I remember
what Papa said to her when we had her birthday celebration last year.
In her mind’s voice, Lizzy assumed a gruff, Papa-like tone, Ah, Fanny; you have not aged a day since I
met you back in the autumn of ’87. You were fighting off beaus in the Assembly
Rooms. And then you looked my way. Pierced me to the soul, you did. Your pair
of fine eyes still set my heart quivering.
Lizzy had discounted much of that speech because Mama had been so
sad. She barely had made it downstairs to the dining room for her cake. But,
she did seem to become more engaged after Papa’s toast. Her time on the main
floor became longer and longer each day. And, she became much more involved in
her daughters’ educations with a particular emphasis being placed on husband
hunting.
At this point, only Janie, Lizzy herself, and Mary had been the
focus of Mama’s ministrations. Kitty would soon enough be forced to join in the
drills and the droning strictures of Mama’s accomplishments.
Yes, Lizzy understood how important it was for her to become skilled
with a needle. No, she could never comprehend why stitches that would never see
the light of day needed to be perfectly just
so.
Of course, as a young girl in a gentleman’s household, Lizzy knew
that young ladies, once they reached a certain age would be expected to
demonstrate some genteel skills: sketching, music, or languages. However, Lizzy
did not believe that, laudable as they were, these activities could do any more
than beautify a life. They could not help run an estate or improve the family’s
fortunes.
Likewise, she had no objection to learning how to carry herself like
a lady. However, she was confused by Mama’s insistence that gentlemen needed to
‘appreciate a lady’s assets’ and that those features could be presented to
their greatest advantage by clamping one’s arms across her middle while jutting
her chest forward. Nothing happened when Lizzy tried those movements except
that her gown bunched. Try as she might, Lizzy could not dispel the notion that
she was in preparation to be paraded like a prize lamb in front of hungry
foxes.
How would the Matlocks size her up?
As her musings became deeper and browner, Lizzy was roused by a firm
knock on the library door. Henry crossed to the portal and opened it. He
quickly conversed with, as it turned out, Liam and Sean Wilson. Stepping back,
he allowed the two giants to wrestle the substantial packing case obscuring the
Wardrobe into the room.
Henry ignored Kitty and Lizzy and set about helping the two men in a
speedy unpacking of the crate. When all the panels had been removed, Henry
stepped away from the cabinet and allowed the others to slide it back into a
recessed slot in the wall—one clearly designed for the Wardrobe. They draped a
pair of fireplace gloves over the door handles and then bowed to the library’s
other occupants.
Henry walked back to the ladies, reached down to grasp his drink that
he then proceeded to drain in one gulp.
Lizzy looked at the older couple. Then she glanced at the Wardrobe
in a way that brooked no confusion about the point she was about to make. She
took a considerable sip from her lemonade and in a sagely serious voice
delivered from her slight figure in a firm tone asked, “And when would I have
been told?”
[i] Along with the Geneva Conventions, the Hague Conventions were among the
first formal statements of the laws of war and war crimes in the body of secular international law. The Second Conference was held in 1907. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hague_Conventions_of_1899_and_1907 accessed 8/17/17. Algeciras was
conference held in Spain in 1906 to resolve the First Moroccan Crisis. https://www.britannica.com/event/Algeciras-Conference accessed 8/17/17.
9 comments:
I expect a child is more easily able to cope with the changes that are faced after going through the wardrobe then an adult maybe. Having read and enjoyed the others in the series I look forward to reading this as well.
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Hi Vesper...Your take on Lizzy's ability...as a child...to cope with travel through time is intriguing. I had thought her to be the exceptional human being...adult or child...to be able to handle an accidental trip through the Wardrobe. Appreciate your insight!
So happy to see a continuation in this series. I loved the excerpt. Thanks so much for sharing and for the giveaway!
Hi DB!
Yes, "Lizzy B." is a bridging novella designed to allow me to satisfy my own curiosity about what motivated events in the main books...in this case both "The Keeper" and "The Exile, Pt. 1". Thanks for stopping by. Tell your friends!
I can't begin to imagine what Kitty felt when she saw Elizabeth in a child's body. Your Wardrobe series is quite incredible!
Hi Eva,
I really appreciate your comment. I am getting into Part 2 of The Exile right now. Some new faces and a lot of old when The Countess Visits Longbourn.
I have really enjoyed reading your blog posts. This information is impressive. I am inspired with your post.. I hope you post again soon.your post is very helpful for me. nice stylish pics .
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An interesting Comment. Hope the idea of the Bennet Wardrobe continues to excite you.
Enjoyed the post, Don. Very late commenting but decided to comment anyway. The excerpt was one I loved in the book, but then I loved all of the book! Congratulations on your new release.
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