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A Test of Fire Chapter 4

Four days after the fire, Mr. Darcy again called on Longbourn. The household that was once silent as the grave and deep in mourning bustled with activity. One of the Bennet sisters practiced piano, albeit not very well, somewhere on the first floor.

For numerous minutes after being welcomed in by the housekeeper, Mr. Darcy and Doctor Stevens stood dumbstruck by the number of household members who passed them without a second glance.

The two youngest Bennet daughters giggled as they came down the stairs to see the visitors waiting for Mr. Bennet.

“So good to see you again, Mr. Darcy,” one said, bobbing a curtsy that Mr. Darcy returned with a silent nod of his head.

He grimaced as he could not properly recall which sister was which, apart from Jane, and he craned his neck to see if she might be coming to rescue them from their awkward position.

“If you’re here for Jane, you’re too late. Mr. Bingley is with her in the parlor,” the other sister stated, narrowing her eyes in careful observation of the tall man from London.

Mr. Darcy cleared his throat at the surprising information that Mr. Bingley was present. Still, he settled on a way to address the young girls without needing a name.

“Pardon me, but would you be so willing as to find your father? We are here to see him.”

The taller Bennet sister made a face.

“He won’t like that,” she started, pointing down the hall to where the study was which Mr. Darcy was very familiar with. “He never comes to get visitors. If people are welcome, they know where to find him.”

Mr. Darcy groaned. He was quite familiar with the strange behavior of his host, but had believed the lack of greeting and social graces before to be the result of the dire circumstances from the fire. He looked to his friend, Doctor Stevens, who stifled a laugh at Mr. Darcy’s predicament.

“And forgive me for speaking without an introduction, Miss?” Doctor Stevens asked the sister he believed to be younger because she was shorter.

“Catherine. Catherine Bennet.”

“Don’t put on airs, Kitty!” the other sister said, flippantly.

Doctor Stevens ignored the sibling rivalry. “I am looking for Miss Elizabeth Bennet. I am told she was gravely injured in the fire.”

“Oh, Lizzy, yes, but she’s all better now. She’s playing chess with Papa,” Kitty Bennet explained, again pointing down the hall the same as Lydia had done just before.

The two men shrugged and supposed the housekeeper at least by now had alerted Mr. Bennet as to their arrival. Without thinking about it, Mr. Darcy glanced over his shoulder at the closed doors of the parlor, wondering if Mr. Bingley was in fact visiting with Miss Bennet and how very odd the entire household was every time he visited.

After knocking on the door, both men entered the study to find the younger Bennet sisters were in fact correct. Mr. Bennet and his second eldest daughter were playing chess.

Mr. Darcy stood arrested by the sight of Miss Elizabeth so entirely lovely, sitting in the sunlight from the early afternoon in the window seat, her legs propped along the cushions with the game table obscuring them from view.

“Mr. Darcy, forgive me, I must not stand,” she said with a laugh and Mr. Darcy stood there dumbstruck by the tableau.

Beyond an uncomfortable silence, Doctor Stevens jostled his friend to break him free of his stupor. Swiftly, Mr. Darcy turned to his physician and introduced him.

“Yes, I traveled to London to fetch my personal physician, Doctor Stevens. To help, help,” he gulped and finally looked again at Elizabeth, “you heal.”

“Well, that is very thoughtful of you, sir,” Mr. Bennet exclaimed, jumping from his chair to shake the hand of the man who had rescued his favorite daughter. “When we had not seen you in a few days, I worried that you no longer enjoyed my company!” Mr. Bennet teased, earning a sudden bewildered look from Mr. Darcy.

Doctor Stevens grinned at the expense of his friend as he lifted his doctor’s bag and took a few steps towards his patient.

“Miss Elizabeth?” he asked, bowing his head until she acknowledged his presence. “Frederick Stevens. Might I see the injury in question?”

Sighing with consternation, Elizabeth began to lift the edge of her gown, wincing at the fresh pain of pressure against her injuries.

Doctor Stevens began to protest, looking back to Mr. Darcy, “Perhaps Madam, that is—”

“Oh your friend cannot claim false modesty now, hand him a copy of Hamlet to calm his nerves,” Elizabeth said, gritting her teeth through the pain of reaching down to lift the soaked bandages from her badly blistered skin.

“Hamlet?” the doctor asked, confused, until the sight of the injury attracted his full attention. The skin above Elizabeth’s ankles bubbled in a devilish red with numerous bulging blisters.

“My God, we must lance these immediately!” he cried, looking back to Mr. Bennet and Mr. Darcy.

Elizabeth protectively waved her hands over her skin, shaking her head.

“Mr. Jones was very explicit that I am to leave them be,” she said.

Mr. Bennet frowned.

Doctor Stevens protested. “Mr. Bennet, the risk of infection is quite high with burns this extensive. I have seen too many a maiden scalded by the stove on a Monday, well by Wednesday, in the grave by Sunday.”

Mr. Bennet closed his eyes.

“Are you insinuating I am at risk of dying, sir?” Elizabeth asked with her eyebrow raised. She didn’t want to insult Mr. Darcy’s friend and physician, but truly she had been burned before in her life.

If she was a foot away from death’s door, then so were the lot of them!

Doctor Stevens nodded gravely. “‘Tis a tragedy, but it happens.”

Mr. Darcy cleared his throat.

“In my own household.”

Mr. Bennet nodded, understanding as the pallor of his family’s would-be benefactor paled most noticeably.

“Ah, that is why you hurried so fast to London.”

“But Papa, Mr. Jones—”

“Who is Mr. Jones?” Doctor Stevens interrupted.

Mr. Bennet eyed his daughter and looked down at the unveiled blistering skin. Mr. Jones’ treatment had carried her thus far, and she was very much back to her old spirits by any account.

“You’ve truly seen people succumb to burns this late?” he interrogated Mr. Darcy.

Mr. Darcy swallowed hard the lump in his throat. “Too often. It’s a wicked false hope.”

Mr. Bennet turned back to Doctor Stevens and gave a quick nod.

The man took off his coat and handed it to Mr. Darcy, then pointed to the chess pieces for silent permission to move them.

Elizabeth protested.

“Mr. Jones is our local apothecary and he saved me, I’ll have you know,” she began to plead, looking to her father. When Doctor Stevens pulled out what appeared to be a long hairpin with a garishly jagged tip, Elizabeth grew agitated and tried to leave.

“Father, this is madness. If we must do this, let me retire to my room. Jane will assist me,” she bargained as it was one thing to humiliate Mr. Darcy as he had humiliated her, but quite another for him to witness the horrific display of fluids leaving her person.

Mr. Bennet stepped forward and pressed a firm hand to Elizabeth’s shoulder to still his daughter.

“Be brave, my Lizzy. If you cannot bear to look . . .” he said, offering his handkerchief to her but she waved it away as Doctor Stevens seemed fully prepared to begin the procedure.

Doctor Stevens pushed his spectacles up that had slid down his nose, leaning closer to inspect the largest blisters. “If the liquid is clear, we have caught it in time.”

“And if it’s not?” Mr. Bennet asked.

Doctor Stevens didn’t say anything but rolled up his sleeves to get to work. Elizabeth watched the first puncture, that felt like a sharp prick, and then nothing. The pressure of the cloth applied to catch the oozing liquid stung severely to the burned skin around each blister.

She sucked in her breath and turned away, cursing an oath against her own pride. Her foolishness to run back into that building had saved no one and she suffered acutely for the folly.

Opening her eyes as Doctor Stevens and Mr. Bennet spoke on the condition of the fluid, Elizabeth caught the eye of Mr. Darcy. The man had hung back to the middle of the room. The most vulgar display of the procedure remained shielded from him by the backs of the two men administering the treatment.

But his eyes were not in that direction at all, but squarely staring at Miss Elizabeth’s face.

She again found herself lost in the brown, pained eyes of a man who stood nearly as a mystery to her. Yes, she had been foolish to run into that fire to seek her sister, the same sister escorted out the back by Mr. Bingley it turned out. But what had been his aim?

Elizabeth found herself no longer registering the pricks and prods. Her body numbed the response as it had since she ceased taking the laudanum. Pain functioned in that way for her, a mild nuisance to her that would send her sisters howling.

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She watched Mr. Darcy’s face and smirked. The man had insulted her nearly to her face and then risked his life for hers.

Just as the last blister had been lanced and Doctor Stevens offered a numbing balm for her afflicted skin, the study door opened, and Mrs. Bennet entered in a gown, newly dyed black.

“Mr. Darcy! So good to see you and your . . . ” she trailed off, as she could not at first place the man sitting next to her husband. “Friend,” she finished, unsure how to mark the man’s identity. “Will you be joining us for dinner?”

Flummoxed at Mrs. Bennet’s sudden request contrasting with her attire, Mr. Darcy did not offer the woman an immediate answer.

Doctor Stevens put away his ghastly instrument of torture. “They may fill with fluid once more. Each time, you must lance it. Do not allow the fluid to accumulate.”

Elizabeth looked down at the doctor’s handiwork immediately repulsed by the sight. Her skin once strained and stretched by the size of the blisters was now marred by translucent skin hanging limply where the largest blisters had been.

Quickly, she covered her wounds with her skirts, seething at the flicker of pain from the touch. To her surprise, the constant ache of pressure was gone, and she looked at Doctor Stevens with a new appreciation.

“Will you be staying for dinner?” she asked the doctor who had aided her affliction, against her better judgment.

“I believe we are to stay at a place called Netherfield Park? It is not far from here, I am to understand,” Doctor Stevens explained to his patient.

“You ought to stay here, in case Elizabeth has any ill-effects. May I persuade you to trouble our guest room?” Mr. Bennet asked. “We shouldn’t need it for at least another fortnight,” he added.

“I am . . .” Doctor Stevens looked to Mr. Darcy for assistance in what he should do, and to his surprise, Mr. Darcy nodded. “I am delighted by the invitation. Let me have my things removed from the carriage,” he said, standing up to leave the study.

Mr. Darcy turned around to Mrs. Bennet and accepted the hospitality. Then to the woman’s surprise, he walked across the room to take the chair in the corner closest to Elizabeth and began to set up the chess board once more.

Finding she wished to know more about this man who ignited her senses, confounded her expectations, and irritated her thoughts, Elizabeth addressed him. “Do you play, sir?”

“Indeed. I am sorry we spoiled your game with your father.”

“Hopefully, I will benefit greatly from it,” she said, nodding towards her feet. “Would you like to play a game?”

Mr. Darcy offered a thin smile. “It would be my honor.”

“Lovely, so long as you don’t mind moving my pieces,” she said, holding up her gloved hands. “They are still too painful to use.”

Mr. Darcy agreed that he did not mind moving Elizabeth’s pieces to the squares she called out, and to a passerby, it appeared that Mr. Darcy was playing a game all by himself.

A few moves in, and he quickly realized Elizabeth’s skill surpassed his usual opponents, including Mr. Bingley and Doctor Stevens.

“How often do you play, Miss Elizabeth?”

She uttered the directions for her knight to take one of his bishops. “Father and I play a few games per day, ” she said, feeling the heat of a blush as he responded to her play by moving his rook.

She sighed and ordered a pawn to the final row on his side to get back her queen. “I also solve the chess puzzles in his weekly sporting paper when he cannot. Check.”

Mr. Darcy smirked as he tried to escape her clutches. “It’s rare for me to meet a lady who would feel no compunction about boasting better wits than her father,” he commented, and Elizabeth laughed.

“Queen to F7, check mate. And I don’t boast that I have more skill, Mr. Darcy, for the man taught me.”

Mr. Bennet came over to inspect the board after his daughter’s dazzling display of warfare. “She holds an infinite amount of patience and youthful exuberance, as well. Sometimes an old man just can’t be bothered with a puzzle of meaningless solution.”

“Again?” Mr. Darcy asked and Elizabeth, stifling a yawn, agreed then said after the next game she would need to retire to prepare for dinner.

This time, Mr. Darcy took the position of aggressor, and Elizabeth found herself struggling to parry his attacks. She wished to focus on the game, but she was beginning to feel the exertion of the day draining her, loathe as she was to admit that she needed to rest.

Mr. Bennet left the study for a few moments, with the door open, to help his wife settle Doctor Stevens into his room. As Mr. Darcy swapped one of his pieces for hers, he found the courage to ask her a question he had been meaning to ask for days.

“Why did you run back into the assembly rooms?”

Elizabeth caught his stare and lost her ability to breathe for a moment. When she inhaled deeply, her normal answer of saving Jane didn’t seem to suit the real question he was asking. The one he really wanted to ask was why was she so different from all of the other ladies that he knew.

Likewise, she wanted to know why Mr. Darcy was so different from the other gentlemen she knew. It took Mr. Bingley days to come and see if Jane was well.

Just like their chess match, where she realized her error was three turns before and there was nothing she could do to save herself, she turned the question back on him.

“Why did you run in to save me?”

He acknowledged the silent understanding they now held between the two of them, survivors of a great tragedy, bound by the unthinking actions of the other.

Instead of giving her a swift answer, he moved another piece, also recognizing the game was mated in just a few moves. They were both spared further clarification by Jane and Mr. Bingley who had wandered and found them in the study.

“I heard you had arrived, straight from London,” Mr. Bingley pronounced with a sound of shock to his voice. Elizabeth tilted her head towards Mr. Darcy, rather baffled the man hadn’t stopped at Netherfield Park before visiting.

“If the good doctor is finding his moment to refresh himself,” she offered, “do you need to return to Netherfield Park before dinner?” Elizabeth asked.

But Mr. Darcy shook his head, rather uncomfortable at the sudden interest into his well-being. The man shifted his weight in his chair and set the abandoned game aside.

“We stopped the village before Meryton now that the inn . . .” he began and then stopped as all four of them could not quite accept the tragedy that had befallen the village less than a week ago.

“Jane, how did you escape?” Elizabeth asked, suddenly realizing that during her recovery, no one bothered to fully explain how foolish her folly had been.

Jane blushed. Mr. Bingley blushed. Elizabeth looked to Mr. Darcy for an answer, but he was just as confused as she was. Believing her to be asking him a silent question, he answered the obvious:

“I had run in after you, I did not look for Miss Bennet.”

The silence continued until Elizabeth prodded her sister again. This time, gesturing with her gloved hands to urge Jane to speak. The physical reminder of her sister’s injuries appealed to Jane’s sense of guilt.

“I was dancing with Mr. Bingley,” she started, and Elizabeth rolled her eyes.

“Yes, yes, and I was dancing with Mr. Lucas—” Elizabeth gasped, suddenly fighting back sobs as another part of the night flooded her memory. Her voice choked out to a whisper, “Charlotte?”

To her surprise, Mr. Darcy reached out and gently touched her arm, close to her elbow in comfort. When she looked down at his hand, he immediately withdrew it.

“I’m sorry, Lizzy, she did not survive,” Jane said.

“Nor did her sister,” Mr. Bingley added, earning an incredulous stare from both Jane and Mr. Darcy. “Oh, my apologies, I should have considered . . . “

Elizabeth began to struggle with her emotions as the night played out in a ghastly memory. Fuzzy images of laughing at Mr. Darcy’s arrogance, the context so wholly meaningless now.

Then they were all dancing in a circle, taking turns, and someone yelled “Fire!”

Gasping for air, Elizabeth hyperventilated as she finally remembered spying Charlotte’s body, unmoving in the smoke and oppressed by the heat. She felt as though she were there again, resigned to meeting the same fate. Only she hadn’t.

Finally, Elizabeth counted to five as the others called her name and steadied her breath, then braved looking to her right at Mr. Darcy, the man who had saved her from a certain death of her own making.

Crushed by the debt she owed, his presence brought to mind too many things at once. Why had he risked his life for a foolish woman he barely knew? Why was he here, and as Jane recounted, at their home every chance he had until she awakened? As her head throbbed in pain, from the crying and overthinking, new voices joined the study.

“Lizzy! Lizzy!” her mother called out.

Doctor Stevens pushed Mr. Bingley aside to get closer to Elizabeth. He pressed his hands to her forehead which was burning up with fever.

“She is ill,” he pronounced and suddenly Jane and Mr. Bingley left the small room so that Doctor Stevens and Mr. Darcy could help Elizabeth stand up.

When the sudden change in position made her feel lightheaded, she staggered, and it was quick action by the two men grasping her arms that kept her upright.

“Darcy?” his physician inquired.

With a whisper to her ear begging her forgiveness, Mr. Darcy placed one arm across the back of her shoulders and the other under her thighs to effortlessly scoop her up. Feeling safe and secure, Elizabeth wrapped one arm around his neck.

Mr. Bennet appeared cross but did not further his daughter’s indignity by trying to take over carrying her above stairs. He commented on the convenience of young men when ladies swoon, trying to avoid the seriousness of the development.

“Send for Mr. Jones,” Elizabeth muttered.

Mr. Darcy shushed her as he wordlessly carried her to the room, he knew to be hers from before. After laying her chastely upon the bed, he was shooed away by Jane as she worried at how vulnerable her sister was in such a state.

Mr. Darcy nodded and realizing that he could not bear to see her again in pain, retreated from the room. Doctor Stevens remained behind with Mr. Bennet and Miss Bennet.

Author's Note

This chapter was a real emotional rollercoaster to write, especially seeing Elizabeth bravely endure those painful treatments. Her sharp wit still shines through during the chess game, even amidst her pain and vulnerability; it's so essential to who she is. And that heartbreaking revelation about Charlotte? It truly binds her and Darcy, setting the stage for a complicated connection neither of them expected.

You have been reading A Test of Fire...

He called her “tolerable.” Then he became her savior.

Mr. Darcy’s cutting dismissal should have been the worst part of Elizabeth Bennet’s evening. Instead, it was the fire that nearly killed her—and his desperate rescue that changed everything. Now the proud gentleman who publicly snubbed her has become a constant, concerned presence at Longbourn, and Elizabeth doesn’t know what to do with a debt she can never repay.

Survivor’s guilt meets devoted protector.

As Elizabeth battles serious injuries and grieves her lost friend Charlotte, Darcy brings his personal physician from London and becomes her chess partner during long recovery days. But every shared glance makes her heart race—and she can’t tell if it’s love or gratitude.

When pushy cousin Mr. Collins proposes and Darcy’s intimidating aunt arrives to forbid any attachment, Elizabeth’s feelings are put to the ultimate test.

Sometimes you have to survive the fire to find your forever.

A Test of Fire is a feel-good path of healing and overcoming survivor’s guilt for Our Dear Couple. You don’t want to miss it!†

†This story was produced using author‑directed AI tools. This is a re-release, newly edited with bonus scenes and other enhancements. Elizabeth is a founder and owner of Future Fiction Press.

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