Fitzwilliam Darcy never
forgot the little girl, with the beautiful dark eyes, who saved his life
fifteen years ago… though he never expected to meet her again. But when he
comes to Rosings Park to spend the Advent season with his aunt, he discovers
that at Christmastime, miracles - and wishes – can come true…
DARCY'S CHRISTMAS WISH is a sweet, clean standalone Pride and Prejudice
variation - a holiday romance inspired by Jane Austen's classic novel!
PRAISE FOR PENELOPE SWAN
"Penelope Swan has captured
the essence of the characters and their "voices" so well that one
would think the text was written by Jane Austen, herself."
~ Ingrid Holzman
"This is not a book you want
to miss out on. It has the perfect amount of romance and intrigue that you
would expect from a good JAFF novel." ~ Tina
Carter, Half Agony Half Hope Blog
"Jane Austen would have been
proud of this adaptation of Pride and Prejudice. Classic, witty and romantic
with mystery and intrigue. Beautifully written with vivid descriptions."
~ Christine Evans on THE NETHERFIELD AFFAIR.
About Penelope Swan
Penelope Swan is the pen name of author, H.Y. Hanna, who also writes
best-selling romantic suspense, mysteries and sweet romances under her other
name, as well as award-winning children's fiction. She has been an avid Jane
Austen fan since her teens and is delighted that she can now live out her
Regency fantasies through her books. You can find out more about her and get in
touch at: www.penelopeswan.com
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Excerpt from Darcy’s Christmas Wish
Fifteen years ago…
“You will come and sit here next to me,
Fitzwilliam.”
Fitzwilliam Darcy got up reluctantly and
eyed his aunt, Lady Catherine de Bourgh, with slight apprehension. It was not
that he was scared of her, exactly, but she was an intimidating woman, with her
tall, imposing figure and flashing dark eyes. She had a loud voice and a way of
looking down her long nose at people which made one feel nervous and
insignificant. He glanced across at his mother, with her pretty, soft face and
her gentle manners. Sometimes he wondered how Lady Catherine and his mother
could really be sisters—the only thing they seemed to share were their dark
hair and high, arched eyebrows!
Still… Darcy straightened his shoulders. He
was nearly twelve years old now and his father had said that it was time he
began to conduct himself like a gentleman. He could still remember the recent
discourse his father had given him on the subject:
“A
gentleman must at all times be courteous and considerate to others,
particularly towards the ladies. It is not merely enough to be well-bred—a true
gentleman must be of both good birth and noble character, always willing to
fulfil his obligations and behave according to the highest ideals of chivalry and
personal integrity.”
Furthermore, his father had emphasised that
to take his place as a gentleman in society, Darcy would have to learn the
niceties of social conduct, including, occasionally, enduring conversation and
company which was not necessarily pleasing to him. Naturally, his father had
hastened to add, this was not required if he was among strangers or those of
inferior social class, but with his own family and those of similar consequence
he must take the trouble to make himself agreeable.
Thus, Darcy pinned a polite smile on his
face and walked across the salon to Lady Catherine, who gestured to the sofa
next to her. Darcy sat down obediently in the space indicated—next to his
cousin, Anne, who gave a delicate little cough into the lace handkerchief she
held in her hands. Her governess hurriedly placed a shawl around her shoulders
and fussed over her charge as Darcy shifted uncomfortably next to them.
Anne sneezed and dropped her handkerchief,
which fluttered to the floor. Darcy bent over to retrieve it and as he
straightened and handed it to his cousin, he caught his aunt eyeing him with a
speculative gleam in her eyes. She leaned across to his mother and nodded
smugly.
“There, you see, Anne? Behold how well they
suit each other. I knew it would be a good match! Have we not always planned
this union from the cradle?”
Darcy shifted even more uncomfortably. He
hated the way his aunt was always talking about him and Anne, wriggling her
eyebrows and smiling in that meaningful way. Father had laughed and told him
not to take the comments to heart but it was difficult to ignore them when Lady
Catherine seemed to talk of nothing else.
Marry
Anne? Darcy glanced surreptitiously at his cousin.
He could not imagine being married to anyone. That was something that grown-ups
did and even though Father had said that he was now no longer a boy but on the
way to becoming a man, marriage still seemed too far away to even think about.
Besides… he glanced at his cousin again.
What a bore it would be having Anne for a wife! He would certainly not wish to
spend his life with someone so pale and insipid. She never said anything,
except for the occasional whisper in answer to her governess’s question about
whether she was too hot or too cold, or had too much or too little light on
her… Darcy did not really know what he should like in a wife but he knew it
would not be someone like Anne.
No,
I’d like someone fun, he thought. Someone who enjoys reading like I do and who
can talk about anything, not just silly girls’ stuff… someone who’d come
exploring with me in the woods and we could have adventures together and climb
up—
“Fitzwilliam? Did you heed what I said,
Fitzwilliam?”
Darcy came back to the present with a
start. He realised that his aunt was addressing him and wondered desperately
what the right response was. He had no idea what she had been saying.
Thankfully, his mother came to his rescue:
“Your aunt was just suggesting that you
might like to read to your cousin this morning,” said Lady Anne, smiling at her
son.
Lady Catherine nodded. “I have purchased a
new book of poetry which Anne should enjoy. Her health, unfortunately, prevents
her from reading herself—much too much strain for her eyes—but I know you
should like to read to her, Fitzwilliam.”
“Oh… er… certainly, Aunt,” said Darcy,
though there was nothing he wanted to do less.
He glanced at his cousin again and felt a
small stab of guilt. It was not as if he really disliked Anne—in truth, he felt
a bit sorry for her: cooped up in this great mausoleum of a house, with his
aunt dictating her every move and no other children for company, save for the
occasional visits from himself or one of his other cousins. Nevertheless, he
had no wish to spend an entire morning in Anne’s dreary company.
No, what he really longed to do was to go outside and try out that sled! It had
been a stroke of luck finding the old sled in the hut at the rear of the
estate. Benson, the Rosings Park head gardener, had helped him pull it out from
beneath the pile of broken furniture and discarded gardening equipment, and
cleaned it off for him. It was waiting for him now in the front foyer, and he
was itching to try it out, especially since the new snowfall they’d had
yesterday.
Darcy leaned slightly to the right to look
out of the windows on the other side of the salon. He could see the glittering
white banks of fresh snow beckoning to him. How he longed to be outside,
feeling the cold pinching his cheeks and the wind rushing against him as he
sailed downhill on the sled!
He stifled a sigh. Instead, he was forced
to remain here, listening half-heartedly as the grown-ups conversed and trying
to sit with his hands on his knees, his face the picture of courteous interest,
as his father had instructed him. He looked across at Georgiana, who was being
held in his mother’s arms, and almost wished that he could be a baby like her.
No one expected anything of Georgiana for she was barely a year old and could
hardly even stand upright.
“I am going to write some letters now,”
said Lady Catherine, standing up from her armchair beside the fire. “You will
want to attend to your correspondence too, I am sure,” she said to Lady Anne.
“I believe I may go and lie down for a
period,” said Lady Anne as she handed Georgiana over to the nurse, who had been
standing quietly at the side of the room. “I am feeling a trifle fatigued.”
Darcy glanced at his mother. She had been
looking pale lately and seemed to often be fatigued, spending much time in her
room. He knew that Mother had had a hard time when Georgiana was born, but
Father had always reassured him that she would recover with rest. He watched
now as his father helped his mother solicitously to her feet.
“Fitzwilliam, you may come with me and Anne
to the library—you may read to her there while I write my letters,” said Lady
Catherine, waving her hand imperiously.
Darcy rose slowly, then on an impulse,
turned to his parents and said, “Mother—Father—may I go outside for a short
while first? I should like to have a go on the sled.” He looked eagerly at his
father. “Can I? Please, sir?”
Lady Catherine frowned and started to say
something but Mr Darcy interrupted her. He smiled and nodded at his son.
“All right, Fitzwilliam. I know you have
been champing at the bit to give that sled a try.” He glanced out of the
windows. “It looks like we have had some good snow. It would certainly be an
excellent opportunity to test the sled.”
“But—” Lady Catherine started to protest.
“It is advantageous for Fitzwilliam to get
some air and exercise,” said Mr Darcy quietly but firmly. “Not good for the boy
to be cooped up indoors all the time.”
Lady Catherine compressed her lips into a
thin line but did not say anything more.
“Thank you, sir!” cried Darcy happily,
turning to leave the room.
“Wait. Fitzwilliam—” called Lady Catherine.
Darcy stopped and turned back warily. He
hoped that his aunt would not ask him to take Anne out sledding with him. Then
he remembered the way his cousin was cosseted and protected—surely there would
be no chance of Lady Catherine allowing her out in this cold!
“Have care where you take the sled,
Fitzwilliam,” said Lady Catherine. “Make sure you stay away from the north side
of the grounds, particularly near the pond. The hill there is very steep and
you could have a bad fall.”
“I have
been sledding before,” said Darcy indignantly. “I am not afraid of steep
slopes—”
“Benson has advised me that the area is
most dangerous,” said Lady Catherine, giving him a stern look. “You are not to
go there, is that understood?”
“Yes, yes, all right,” said Darcy
impatiently. Then before his aunt could say anything else, he turned and rushed
out of the room.
Darcy sat up in the snow and laughed as he
brushed some off his face. He got to his feet and righted the sled, which had
flipped over as it hit a hump at the bottom of the hill. Thus far, the old sled
was turning out to be everything he had hoped for. Despite the faded wood and
old metal runners, it glided easily across the snow and ice. The only thing
was… well, maybe it was not quite as fast as he could wish.
Darcy looked back up at the slope he had
just come down and frowned. If only he could find a bigger hill! He was sure
that with greater height, the sled would gain more momentum and therefore
faster speed. He turned and scanned the snowy landscape, looking for a hill
worthy of tackling. The grounds of Rosings Park stretched out around him. Darcy
realised that he had come farther from the house than he had thought—he could
see it now, small in the distance, the plumes of smoke rising from the
chimneys. He doubted that they could see him so far away and felt pleased. He
did not like the thought of Lady Catherine watching and judging his every move
from the windows. It was nice to think of being outside her influence.
He turned and looked to the other side of
the park. The ground sloped downwards in that direction and in the distance he
could see a faint line running across the landscape. A fence, he realised. That
must be the border with the neighbouring estate. And just before it, he saw
that the land dipped, dropping away from sight.
There must be a sort of shelf there, Darcy
realised. Maybe where the land suddenly dropped sharply downwards. A steep
slope! He grabbed the rope on his sled and began to walk towards the ledge with
mounting excitement, pulling the sled behind him. The snow crunched beneath his
boots and he felt a few flakes drift down and land on his face, melting almost
instantly. The cold nipped at his cheeks but he was pleasantly warm from his
recent exertions and did not really mind.
Darcy arrived at the spot to see that his
guess had been right. The land curved over the edge and swept downwards in a
steep slope which ended beside a small pond surrounded by fir trees. The sight
of the pond reminded him suddenly of his aunt’s warning: “Make sure you stay away from the north side of the grounds,
particularly near the pond.” Had Lady Catherine meant this pond? He looked
around. Yes, he was on the north side of Rosings Park, but he could see nothing
that looked dangerous here. The snow lay in thick folds across the landscape
and, below him, it covered the slope in a smooth layer of white powder which
was particularly inviting. Everything looked pristine and peaceful.
Darcy thought of his cousin. Richard was a
few years older than him and always seemed so confident and daring—he had told
Darcy that he wanted to become an officer when he grew up. When he had been at
Rosings together with Darcy in the past, he was always leading the way into fun
and mischief. If Richard were here,
Darcy thought, he would not be
hesitating. No, Richard would laugh and say, “Old Benson the gardener is just
fussing for nothing!”
Darcy set his sled down on the edge of the
slope with sudden decision. He might be three years younger but he could be
just as brave as his cousin! Quickly, he sat down on the sled, tucking his feet
into position, then took a deep breath and looked down the slope once more. At
the bottom, the surface of the pond gleamed dully and he realised that it must
be frozen over. Perhaps he might investigate it when he reached the bottom—see
if it might be suitable for a spot of ice-skating!
Eagerly, Darcy pushed off, giving a shout
of delight as the sled dipped forwards, then shot downhill. He felt that
familiar thrilling lurch in his stomach. The wind rushed into his face as he
gathered speed and the landscape around him became a white blur as he went
faster and faster…
… And faster…
The blinding snow began to make him dizzy.
Darcy stretched his legs out, pushing his heels into the snow to attempt to
slow the sled. But the snow was so soft that there was no resistance. The sled
continued gaining speed as it rushed towards the bottom of the hill.
Darcy felt uneasy. The sled felt like it
was careening out of control. He thrust his legs out harder, trying to keep his
balance and remain upright as he jammed his heels into the snow. In vain, he
threw his weight backwards but that only seemed to tilt the sled and cause it
to shoot sideways down the slope.
“Ahhh!” cried Darcy, as the sled skidded
and turned, then gave a great jolt as it hit something hard just beneath the
surface of the snow.
The sled flipped.
Darcy was thrown through the air.
Everything was upside down and spinning, then he felt himself dropping and saw
the row of fir trees rushing up to meet him.
CRACK!
He landed on something hard. The breath was
knocked from him and he cried out in pain. There was a terrible cracking sound
and the next moment, he felt himself dropping again—only this time it was not
through air but into icy water.
Darcy cried out again but the cry was cut
off as he went under. He resurfaced, choking and spluttering as cold water
filled his mouth and went into his nose. He gasped and kicked, paddling with
his hands to keep his head above the surface. He must have fallen into the
pond, he realised, and if he didn’t get out soon, he would drown in its icy
depths. He shook the wet hair out of his eyes and looked desperately around. He
was not far from the edge—just a few feet—and the surface ice of the pond was
broken all around him.
He kicked as strongly as he could, but his
legs felt curiously leaden and his fingers were swollen and numb. He could
hardly feel them. His teeth chattered, and his body seemed to be seized by a
violent trembling. He kicked again. Slowly, agonisingly, he managed to make his
way to the edge of the pond, but by the time he reached there, he was almost spent.
His breath was coming in great gasps and his entire body shook uncontrollably.
He had his elbows on the bank, but he could not find the strength to haul
himself out of the water.
“Help!” Darcy called weakly. “Help!”
He felt a sense of dread as he realised
that no one could hear his faint cries. He was too far from the house. Who
would be out here to hear him? Yes, they might start to search for him soon,
but would they find him in time? Indeed, he had promised not to venture to this
side of the grounds so they would not think to look here for him at first.
Suddenly, Darcy almost wished that his aunt had
been watching him from the windows—at least that way, she would have noticed
his absence.
Once more, he tried to pull himself out of
the water but he had no strength. Indeed, he was overcome by a sudden urge to
just lay his head down and shut his eyes. He was so tired… so tired… he would
just shut his eyes for a moment and rest… yes, rest… he was so sleepy…
Suddenly, he felt something tug at him. He
raised his head, looking around in a daze, and, to his surprise, saw a young
girl crouching next to him. She was bending over and grabbing a fold of his
jacket, pulling with all her might. She was not very big—indeed, she looked to
be no more than six or seven years old—but she was surprisingly strong and
determined.
“Hold on!” she cried.
She heaved again and Darcy attempted to
help her, grasping at whatever handholds he could find to pull himself out of
the water. His strength was nearly gone but the girl’s determination galvanised
him afresh. Slowly, slowly, he felt himself being hauled out of the water
until, with one last heave, he collapsed on the snow. Panting, he rolled over
and lay there shivering as the girl knelt down next to him. He looked blearily up
at her. In the dazzling brightness of the snow, and with ice forming now along
his eyelashes, he could barely see her properly. He had a hazy sense of dark
hair and enormous brown eyes, bright and intelligent. She was peering at him
anxiously.
“Are you all right?”
Darcy tried to nod, wrapping his arms
around himself as he began shivering violently. He had no strength to speak.
The girl stood up. “I must get help,” she
said. “I will call Aunt and Uncle. Don’t worry—I’ll run as fast as I can!”
Again, Darcy tried to nod but he did not
know if his head was simply jerking as part of the spasms that wracked his
body. He saw the girl look worriedly at him, then she turned and scanned the
area around them. She started suddenly towards the row of fir trees. In a
moment, she was back. Darcy squinted and tried to focus on her. What was she
doing? She was bending over, panting as if she had been walking with effort,
and he felt something drop softly on his body. A sharp, fresh smell came to his
nostrils. Memory stirred. Pine needles.
Darcy turned his head and saw that the girl
was covering him with several fallen branches from the fir trees.
“Keep you warm…” she said breathlessly,
pulling one last feathery branch over his head.
Darcy tried to say something but nothing
came out of his mouth other than a hoarse croak. The girl did not seem to
notice. She bent down and looked at him one last time.
“I’ll be back as soon as I can!”
Then she was gone. Darcy heard the sound of
her running feet and even in his dazed state, he marvelled at the rapid rhythm.
The little girl must have been a very good country walker to cover ground so
confidently.
Then his thoughts drifted… to Mother and
Father… would he see them again? His little sister, Georgiana… Pemberley… his pony…
his cousin Richard… even his aunt, Lady Catherine—he didn’t want to die here
and never see them again… He had to try and stay awake and wait for the girl to
return… But he was so sleepy… so sleepy…
His eyelids felt so heavy. Darcy let them
fall. He wrapped his arms tighter around himself, curling into an even smaller
ball and shivering beneath the layer of branches spread over him.
So
sleepy…
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To
celebrate the launch of Darcy's Christmas Wish, here's
a giveaway for a Print edition + a Jane Austen Centre
£25 Gift Voucher! Get your holiday shopping in early with some
beautiful Jane Austen-inspired gifts.
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luck! :-)
7 comments:
sounds like a lovely read
Denise
Thanks for sharing with us and for the giveaway.
I am italian and I want to ask if can I partecipate ??
Awesome excerpt. Makes me want to scream "What happened next?" I look forward to reading it.
Yes, of course, Chiara, the contest is open internationally :-)
Thank you for featuring my new book and the giveaway, Maria! :-)
And thank you to everyone for your lovely comments about the book. I hope you'll enjoy it.
Good luck to everybody - and Happy Holidays!
best wishes,
Penelope Swan
This sounds like a womderful stoey I would very much enjoy reading!
Thank you for the excerpt sounds a lovely & sweet story !! I would love to read it :) Thanks for the giveaway :)
Miette
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