The Atlantic Ocean hated her. It was the only feasible explanation.

Elizabeth Bennet stared out at the horizon, her surfboard bobbing lazily between her legs. The sunrise painted the clouds in grays and yellows and pinks, colors reflected in the endless expanse of water ahead. It would have been a perfect morning, really, except for the one problem: the water was absolutely flat.

Lizzy squeezed her eyes shut and lifted her face to the sky, silently praying to whoever might be listening: Come on. All I want is one wave. Just one, and I promise to go the rest of the summer without rolling my eyes at anybody. Please?

A moment, then she peeked out at the water around her. Still flat as a pancake.

Well, that settled it. Mother Nature was a sadist.

It was no secret that the beach break off East Hampton was mediocre at best, especially this late in May. Yet somehow the waves had been fantastic over the past two weeks⁠—something akin to a miracle. But toady, the one day Lizzy really needed it, the ocean had flatlined.

It wasn't that the summers in East Hampton were awful, per se. Lizzy used to love them when she was younger and would steal muffins from the family bakery to eat amid the dunes on the beach. But as she grew older, she began to recognize how, for three months every year, their small village became something else entirely. Starting Memorial Day weekend, traffic clogged Montauk Highway all the way from the city to the eastern tip of Long Island. Manhattanites crowded the beaches, more intent on posting photos to social media than swimming. The local gossip mill consumed every family conversation, nourishing her mother more than anything they made at Bennet Bakery. It was the same every year.

And Lizzy could just about face it all⁠—she really could⁠—if she could just catch one last wave before summer officially began.

The ocean had other plans, apparently.

She pushed the wet strands of her long red hair away from her face and closed her eyes again, ready to offer the last twenty-one dollars in her savings account⁠—maybe even a few of Bennet Bakery's popular sour cherry muffins⁠—when a sharp ping pierced the silence. She glanced down at her wrist to where her old digital watch was blinking.

5:30 a.m.

Time to go to work.

For a half second, she debated ignoring it. Her dad was probably at the bakery already. He would turn on the ovens, put the cinnamon rolls in the proofer, take the scones out of the fridge, and⁠—

The thought was cut short by a familiar pang of guilt. Wasn't this the whole reason she had put graduate school on hold a few months ago? So she could help out at the bakery while her dad recovered from his stroke and the rest of the family came up with a plan?

You mean the same family who hasn't been able to agree on a movie to watch together in over a decade? a small voice whispered in her head.

Lizzy frowned. It was true, long-term planning was not a Bennet strong suit.

She avoided that sobering train of thought⁠—and the second round of guilt it introduced⁠—to send one last glance out at the ocean ahead.

A minute passed, then a seagull bobbed by. It stared at her expectantly.

"What?" she asked.

It cawed at her.

"I know, I know." She sighed. "I'm going."

The bird looked doubtful.

To prove her point, she turned away and began paddling her board toward shore. That's when something in the periphery caught her eye. Just there, set back on the dark beach.

The lights were on at Marv's Lament.

Huh. Now, that was different.

Elizabeth of East Hampton, Audrey Bellezza & Emily Harding

Elizabeth of East Hampton, Audrey Bellezza & Emily Harding