(align:"=><=")+(box:"X")[<img src="https://authorsarahcourtney.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/2_aG1rZS0xNg-scaled.jpg" width=50%>] Have you ever read a JAFF story and wished you could shake some sense into a character or two? Tell them not to open that door, to tell the truth, to get out of that carriage, to stay at Netherfield? Now’s your chance! Travel back to the autumn of 1811 and step into Elizabeth Bennet’s shoes. Follow along as she finds her own adventure just after the Netherfield Ball and Mr. Collins’s proposal. Every time she reaches a decision point, you as readers get to vote on which decision she should make! Check back the following week to see what becomes of her decision and continue with the story from there. Are you ready? It’s time to don your stays and gown, put up your hair, and exercise your wit. You are now Elizabeth Bennet! Special note: just want to catch up to the current part? Click here: [[get out to see what is going on]] . (align:"=><=")+(box:"X")[<img src="http://authorsarahcarlisle.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/Decorative-border1.png" width=50%>] Elizabeth released a sigh as she sat back into the squabs of the carriage and watched Longbourn disappear in the distance. Mr. Collins’s proposal this morning had not been a complete surprise. After her embarrassing dance with him at the Netherfield Ball last night, and considering his limited remaining time before he returned to Hunsford and his noble patroness, Lady Catherine de Bourgh, she had been certain that his proposal was imminent. Mamma’s reaction had not been a surprise. Desperate in her desire to see her daughters wed and grasp some security for both herself and them, she was always destined to be disappointed at Elizabeth’s refusal of her cousin’s offer. It was Papa’s response that had shocked her. “I should never have accepted my cousin’s ‘offer’ to visit,” he had said, taking off his spectacles and massaging the bridge of his nose. “I should have anticipated this very issue.” He had chuckled wryly. “Well, I would never have guessed that Mr. Collins’s attention would be on you. I could not have imagined a worse choice for him, except perhaps Lydia.” She dutifully chuckled, but there was something in his manner that gave her pause. “I am sending you to London,” Papa said abruptly. She gaped. “Pardon me?” “London.” He stood, pushing himself away from his chair. “There is a . . . situation at the moment that I must deal with. Something your mother and I must deal with together. This is not a good time for her nerves when we have a more serious matter to contend with. If you go to London, she will settle far sooner. Your aunt and uncle Gardiner will be happy to have your help with the children, and I hope that in a few weeks . . .” He cleared his throat. “A few months, perhaps, the situation might be resolved. I must speak with your uncle Phillips.” It had taken less than an hour to change into travelling clothes, say her farewells, and for the trunk her maid had packed to be loaded onto the carriage. To London. Well, she could not say she was displeased. Mamma had already been wailing about her refusal all morning, and even Jane had been beginning to look unhappy. Aunt and Uncle Gardiner’s home was always a haven of peace compared to Longbourn’s ruckus, although she hoped they would not be displeased at her sudden and unannounced appearance. If only Jane could have come along. But Mamma had insisted that Jane stay and wait for Mr. Bingley to return from London, as he was only expected to be gone for a few days, and Jane’s ready compliance seemed—for once—not from her gentle nature but from her eagerness to see Mr. Bingley when he returns. Elizabeth could only hope that he would take the arrogant Mr. Darcy with him on his visit to London and leave him there! There was a shout from outside the carriage, and Elizabeth was jostled against the window as it came to a sudden stop. She leaned out the window to see the coachman and manservant standing over what looked like a log in the road, the coachman gesturing wildly towards the forest. He half turned and saw her watching. “Please stay in the carriage, Miss Bennet!” he called back. “All is well!” She nodded and sat back into her seat, but something did not seem right. They were not very far on the road to London, and yet she was suddenly reminded of stories of highwaymen placing logs in the road to block carriages and then attacking as soon as the carriage stopped. She was being foolish. There were no highwaymen attacking carriages in Hertfordshire in the year 1811! The very idea was ridiculous. Yet there was something the coachman wasn’t telling her, and the longer she sat here, the more anxious she became. Should she: tamp down her nerves and [[wait patiently]] for the carriage to move again or [[get out to see what is going on]], despite the coachman’s warning?The idea of highwaymen was ridiculous, but something was clearly amiss. Mamma would have waved her handkerchief and cried for her smelling salts at the idea, but Elizabeth could not sit in the carriage and wait, not knowing what might happen. Gingerly, she cracked the door and peeked outside. The coachman was crouched low in the road, and he did not notice her. Slowly, carefully, she opened the door and climbed down without a footman to help, her eyes on the forest alongside the road. Nothing visible threatened, but that did not mean all was safe. She went unnoticed until she landed neatly on the ground. The coachman looked up with dismay. “Miss Bennet!” But she ignored him. There was something familiar about the shape on the ground. The dark form rolled and groaned, and she gasped. It was not a log. It was a person! “Mr. Darcy!” It was unmistakably him. She recognized the firm jaw, the wavy hair, and the bold eyebrows of her adversary. But his face was pale and sweaty, his clothes muddy and damaged as if he had been thrown from his horse. He squinted up at her, as if the weak morning sunlight was too much for his eyes. “Miss . . . Bennet?” The words were weak, barely above a whisper. Just what had happened to him? “John, we need to get him into the carriage now,” Elizabeth said. “Mr. Darcy is ill. Where . . . where is his carriage?” She straightened, suddenly puzzled. Where was Mr. Darcy’s carriage? He must have been traveling to be here, so far from Netherfield, and yet he was alone. Of course, he must have been traveling by horse. “No sign of a carriage or horse, ma’am.” The coachman exchanged a look with the manservant. “Likely as not he was riding alone and was thrown.” Elizabeth nodded. It was the obvious explanation. Could his pallor and trembling be from injury? “Let us take him back to Netherfield.” The coachman nodded and shifted to get under Mr. Darcy’s shoulders, but Mr. Darcy’s hand snapped forward and grasped her wrist before she could move. “Not Netherfield,” he gasped out. “Not Netherfield. Take me to London.” “London!” The coachman drew back, staring at him in shock. “Sir, we are not so far along the route as you may think, if you were on your way to London. It is still another fifteen miles to town at least!” Mr. Darcy coughed. “What is fifteen miles of good road?” he said, and it was if he were trying to smile. “It must be London.” Shaking their heads, the men worked together to haul Mr. Darcy up and into the carriage. Mr. Darcy was not a small man, and both were gasping by the time they deposited him on the seat. “Sorry, ma’am, but we don’t dare put him on top,” John apologized. “No, no, of course you should put him inside,” Elizabeth said. Mr. Darcy was now slumped into the squabs, eyes closed. “Mr. Darcy? Are you well?” He did not reply. “Ma’am?” The coachman looked from Mr. Darcy to Elizabeth. “Should we . . . should we go on to London as he says? Only it really is fifteen miles. Or should we take him to Mr. Bingley at Netherfield Park?” Elizabeth did not know why Mr. Darcy refused to be taken to Netherfield. But he had been so insistent. Was he desperate to go to London or was there a problem at Netherfield? A falling out with Mr. Bingley, perhaps? It did not sit well with Elizabeth to override the wishes of an unconscious man. Yet she did not know the severity of his illness or perhaps injuries if he really was thrown from his horse . . . what if taking him to London caused irreparable harm? Maybe there is another option. She could take him to Longbourn. Papa had wanted her to leave for London, it was true, but he would forgive her change of plans in this situation, and Mamma would be delighted to have a rich, single man taking up a guest room at Longbourn. What if his business in London was of dire urgency? Either he had been traveling despite being very ill, or his apparent illness was actually injury from being thrown. Given how well he rode, falling from his horse might imply that he had been traveling too fast, and he did not seem the sort to push his horse to ride fast without reason. The coachman was still looking at her expectantly. She needed to make a decision. Should she: [[take Mr. Darcy to London]] as he insisted or [[take Mr. Darcy back to Longbourn]] and call for Mr. Jones?Make sure to go back to austenvariations.com and leave your vote!Make sure to go back to austenvariations.com and leave your vote!