Fitzwilliam Darcy, Rock Star

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Fitzwilliam Darcy, Rock Star Page 51

by Heather Lynn Rigaud


  Darcy: “We anticipate sometime this summer.”

  Mark: “That sounds like you have quite a bit of work planned.”

  Charles: “We’re really fortunate in the team of people we have working for us, because it’s a lot of work. What you see here”—gestures to indicate the group—“wouldn’t be possible if it weren’t for our team.”

  Mark: “And some of them are family members, too?”

  Charlotte (laughing): “That’s right, my brother Alex is the general manager at Pemberley and Charles’s sister Caroline manages both the bands.”

  Richard: “We’re always busy, but that’s good. The worst thing in this business is to do nothing. Right now we’re in a really good place, both business-wise and creatively, to do the things we’ve always wanted to do.”

  Mark: “Lizzy, Charlotte, Jane, it’s been a little over a year since your first CD was released, less than a year since you met Slurry. Some people have called your story a ‘modern-day fairy tale.’ Did you ever imagine you would be here?”

  Jane: “We always knew we had the talent and the drive. And I will admit that before we met Slurry, I didn’t know if we were ever going to make it really big. But when I met Charles, and he asked me to sing with him, I knew that our lives would be different.”

  Charlotte: “It is like a fairy tale. I read the news reports and even I can’t believe it. I mean, the three members of a girl group marrying the three members of a rock band. That just sounds so hokey. If you tried to sell our story to a movie studio, they’d just laugh, so I try to forget about all that and stay grounded in the here and now. It isn’t hard to do when you are living out of a tour bus and wondering when you’ll next get a chance to do your laundry.”

  Elizabeth: “I never thought this would happen, and in truth, I fought it the longest. I wanted LBS to make it on our own, but in the end, I knew that this was the way it was going to go.” Elizabeth smiles at Darcy. “And I’m glad it did.”

  Darcy: “Me too.”

  Mark: “We are almost out of time here, but do you have anything to add on how Slurry has grown?”

  Darcy (slowly): “I started Slurry as a way of coping with the loss of my parents. Over time it’s not just helped me deal with the loss of my family, but it’s become my family, both figuratively and now literally. It’s surpassed everything I ever imagined for it, and it just continues to grow. I’m humbled by what we have created and the lives we have touched. It was a long, hard road to get here, but this past year has been very healing, for Slurry as a band and for its individual members. We’re now stronger and able to move on to the next level, whatever that may bring.”

  Mark: “I want to thank you all for coming to talk to us about what is being called the ‘wedding of the year’ and about what we can expect from Slurry and Long Borne Suffering. I’d like to wish you all good luck with your future and a happy Valentine’s Day.”

  Cut away from the studio and play “Journey to You” video while the credits roll.

  The End

  Acknowledgments

  This book was written at a breakneck pace requiring not just the energies of myself but also several dear women who proofread and edited, as well as listened to any number of weird songs I threw at them, all without complaint.

  My thanks go to Abigail, Dorothy, Elaine, Amy, Jean-Louise, Debbie, and Sylvie.

  About the Author

  Heather Lynn Rigaud is fascinated by the comparisons between life in earlier times and modern times. Thus, she spends much of her time thinking about how Regency-era characters would exist now and how a wife and mother would have lived in the past. She is a professional writer with degrees in music therapy and teaching who lives with her husband and two sons in Kingston, New York.

 

 

 


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