tom_lefroy: (dark thoughts)
It has been a long morning, and after the church sermon, Tom finds himself standing by the edge of the creek by the church, looking out, deep in thought.

It has been a difficult week. Nay, weeks.

His family have been sending him letters he simply could not postmark a reply for quick enough; life has been complicated as it is in London and in Hampshire, and yet his family's debts have been rising. Everything has been growing hopeless, but he could never tell a soul this. His uncle would say the fault was their own, and while he had friends, none of them were the sort he could ... share this sort of bad news with.

They were for forgetting his problems, not sharing them.

And of course, there was the matter of his Door, the one that would take him to the bar at the end of the universe. He hadn't seen it for quite some time now; he was beginning to wonder whether he would ever see it again.

Finally, there was the little matter of Miss Austen, whom he has been watching a little more closely.

"I have read your book," a voice calls out to him.

He turns around, thoughts forcefully pushed aside. He pulls his hat off and bows politely, a smile - genuine, surprisingly - appearing as (speak of the devil) Miss Jane Austen approaches.
tom_lefroy: (a bit of a charmer)
He hops out from the carriage without much effort.

"Oh no! We're so late -" says Lucy, as she tries to get out as quickly as possible.

Tom holds out his hand to his little cousin, Lucy. "Oh thank you, Tom!"

"Hurry - hurry!" she says as she glances back towards her mother, and his aunt.

They stand over the top, watching the group for a moment. Tom spots a certain someone, who amuses him greatly. It's that Miss Austen. Some clumsy lout has just stepped over her foot. She glances up. He smiles, amusedly.

---


"...Well, I call it very high, indeed. Refusing to dance when there are so few gentlemen."

Henry glances at her, then briefly towards something behind her. "Jane."

"Henry." She continues, and Henry gestures towards something. Tom exchanges an amused look with his friend.

"Jane," he warns again.

"Are all your friends so disagreeable?" she continues without fail. "Where exactly in Ireland does he come from, anyway?"

"Limerick, Miss Austen."

For a moment, the group pauses. Slowly, smiles begin to cross their faces.

Jane slowly turns around in what appears to be embarrassed realization. Tom's expression hardly changes, though he wonders what could bring a girl like Jane to view him in such a way - so seemingly below her - when she hardly seems experienced in what he has seen for himself. It is, to be quite honest, intriguing.

Daring to prove her views of him wrong, and remembering Will's rather forceful advice, he smoothly asks of her, "I would regard it as a mark of extreme favour if you would stoop to honor me with this next dance."

She stares at him, as though calculating his intentions. He simply watches her, a true mark of innocence. He awaits her reply, half-expecting her to refuse him, but knowing propriety would forbid her from doing so.

"...all right." Henry takes her glass and Tom bows, leading her down the staircase and towards the floor to join the rest of the dancing couples. The band starts up another song.

Aligned with the others in the room, they stand across from each other before bowing their heads. The music is light and very active, getting them to move to the rhythm in particular movements as is asked of the dance, making short turns about each other.

"Being the first to dance with me madam," he starts, "I feel it only fair to inform you that you carry the standard for Hampshire hospitality."

"Ah - then your country reputation depends on my report." She turns to look at him, pausing as they wait for the other couples to have their turn before it is theirs. Her expression is cheeky, slightly daring. He responds in kind with another blank look in her direction. "This, by the way, is called a country dance," she explains, "after the French: contre dance."

They dance. They make short jaunty steps around the couple to their left before joining hands as they continue the assembly.

"Not because it is exhibited at an uncouth rural assembly." Uncouth? Tom thinks, raising an eyebrow. For a woman brought up in this world of so-called 'uncouth rural assemblies', she certainly speaks of it negatively. "With gluttinous pies. Execrable Madeira, and truly anarchic dancing."

His amusement rises as he tells her, "You judge the company severely, ma'am."

"Mm - I was describing what you would be thinking."

Oh, is that so? "Allow me to think for myself," says Tom.

"Give me leave to do the same, sir, and come to a different conclusion."

The dance forces them to pause in their conversation, as it had done so several times this evening. It allows Tom to gather a sense of this young woman for all that she is, and all that she has said to him thus far. Most peculiar, the way she assumes his thoughts. While mostly true, he must admit that this is one of the less dreaded visits.

Indeed, it hasn't been particularly bad thus far.

"Will you give so much to a woman?" she asks as they come together once more.

"It must depend on the woman," replies Tom. "And what she thinks of me."

"But you are -" she pauses for only a breath's moment before continuing, "above being pleased."

"And I think that you, Miss - what was it?"

"Austen," she replies. "Mister..."

"Lefroy."

Most amusing, indeed, if she is to assume that this is how he thinks, when perhaps - well... "I think that you, Miss Austen, consider yourself a cut above the company." Standing beside each other, they take several steps forward, before they must break apart again to take the hands of the couple beside them.

She looks at him incredulously. "Me?"

They separate again momentarily, taking a turn around another person as the dance begins to come to its conclusion.

"You, ma'am." Pausing, he allows himself to smile more to himself than anything. "Secretly."

As the music fades, the crowd applauds the band for a wonderful dance. Tom and Jane join in politely. Tom is certain he has succeeded in ruffling her feathers when it was she, most likely, who had tried to do the very same to him.

He begins to walk off, leaving her with those last words.

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Tom L. Lefroy

January 2011

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