Thank you so much, Maria Grazia, for hosting the first leg of the blog tour for Mistaken. I’d like to celebrate the occasion by sharing with your readers a scene that didn’t make it into the finished novel. There were quite a number of outtakes strewn across my virtual cutting room floor by the time I finished writing; I thought this one would give readers a wonderful introduction to some of my favourite characters. It’s dated, as is every scene in Mistaken, so readers can place it within the story. In it, we join Colonel Fitzwilliam, his brother Lord Ashby and their incorrigible grandmother Tabitha Sinclair, as they discuss Darcy’s uncommon state of melancholy.
Saturday, 30
May 1812: London
“Ho, Dickie! Just the man!”
Colonel Fitzwilliam excused himself from the conversation with his
companions and turned to look for his brother in the crowds. It could only be
Ashby; nobody else ever hailed him thus. Finding him was not difficult, for he
was sitting as proud as a peacock in his largest, shiniest curricle, wearing in
a hat of absurd elevation, a coat of the most outlandish azure and a
cloth-of-gold cravat. He was very likely visible from France. Rather more
surprising than his typically gaudy attire was his choice of companion. Ashby
did not often trouble himself to entertain Mrs. Sinclair.
“Well met, Brother,” Fitzwilliam called up as he reached the side
of the vehicle. “And delightful to see you, Grandmother. ’Tis a fine day for
taking the air.”
“There is not much air left to be had in this crush,” she replied,
looking about at the throngs of passersby with a comical expression of slightly
bemused contempt. “What on earth are all these people doing here?”
“’Tis the fashionable hour, madam. They are promenading.”
“That is one word for it, though not the one I would use.” She
turned to her other grandson. “Is this why you insisted I come with you? To
give you an excuse to parade yourself around like a great coxcomb in that
ridiculous hat of yours?”
“No, indeed,” Ashby replied insouciantly. “I insisted you come
because Father insisted that I insist. You are driving him to distraction,
madam.”
“Am I?” she replied more cheerfully. “Oh good.”
Fitzwilliam chuckled when she winked at him. Resting a boot on the
curricle’s first step, he leant an elbow on his knee and enquired, “For what is
it that you believe me to be ‘just the man’ then, Ashby? Have you a war that
needs fighting?”
“Not I, though my cousin seems to have foregone diplomacy in
favour of hostilities, so you might need to take up arms in his defence.”
“Which cousin? And who is the enemy?”
“Darcy.”
“And the Gorgon of Kent,” Mrs. Sinclair added gleefully.
“Lady Catherine? I find that hard to believe. Darcy has ever been
the most tolerant of her ways.”
“’Til now, mayhap,” Ashby replied. “But now her ladyship has
discovered he does not mean to marry Anne, and it seems he did not take kindly
to her attempts to scold him into compliance.”
“Darcy has never intended to marry Anne. What has brought the
issue to the fore?” Fitzwilliam fancied he could guess. It was not two weeks
since Darcy had confessed his heartbreak; it was too great a coincidence to
think this was not connected in some way.
“My aunt has heard a report that he means to marry ‘a ghastly little
upstart from Hertfordshire,’” Ashby informed him, veritably resonating with the
joy of such delicious gossip.
Fitzwilliam licked his finger and rubbed at a smear on the rim of
the carriage door. Elizabeth Bennet had much to answer for. “You know as well
as I, Darcy would never condescend to marry anyone even remotely ghastly. Lady
Catherine ought to know better.”
“She never has had much in the way of sense,” Mrs. Sinclair
opined.
“Besides,” Ashby said, “by all accounts, Darcy’s defence of the
woman has convinced her the report is true. Father says she is furious.”
“Oh, she is!” Mrs. Sinclair agreed. “I never saw her so angry, and
I was there the day Sir Lewis gambled away her underclothes in a card game.”
“Well, that is very unfortunate,” Fitzwilliam said, “but I still
do not see what you think qualifies me as ‘just the man.’ Surely you do not
expect me to reason with her?”
“Of course not,” Ashby replied. “If she would not pay heed to
Father, I hold no hope that she will listen to you or me. Since de Bourgh died,
the only person to whom she has paid heed is Darcy, and I sincerely doubt,
after this, he will be in any humour to speak to her again soon.”
“All the sense was evidently bestowed upon the Darcy side of the
family,” Mrs. Sinclair opined. “No offence,” she added, reaching to pat
Fitzwilliam’s cheek. “You inherited the Sinclair charm to make up for it.”
“Ha! Seems you were short-changed on all fronts, little brother,”
Ashby scoffed. “At least I inherited the money.”
“I hope you have not spent it all
on that preposterous coat. You might inherit the sharp end of my sword as well
if you do not come to the point and tell me why I am ‘just the man.’”
Ashby flashed him a cocky smirk. “Who better to tell us what is
really the matter with Darcy?” Both he and Mrs. Sinclair then fixed him with
identical looks of expectation.
He lowered his foot to the ground and crossed his arms. “I have no
idea what you mean.”
“You never were any good at lying, Dickie. It is obvious something is afoot, for I have never
known Darcy as dull as he was at Father’s dinner two weeks ago. He barely spoke
a word, even when Leighton began expostulating on the evils of Enclosure.”
Mrs. Sinclair nodded her agreement. “I must say, I recall him
being far better company when he was younger. Most men grow out of petulance.
He seems to have grown into it.”
“And I could have sworn he was half cut by the time he left.”
“I am surprised you noticed, Brother—you were cut to pieces by the
third course,” Fitzwilliam replied. “Darcy had a headache that evening, nothing
more.”
“You are fooling nobody. Do not think I have not heard about his
scrape at Jackson’s. Darcy has not received serious injury in a fight since
Nathaniel and he boxed each other off Pemberley’s veranda the summer before Mother
died. If he has done so now, it is because he allowed it to happen.”
Fitzwilliam could not argue with that, so he did not.
Ashby gave a self-satisfied nod. “That and the way you are
squirming in your regimentals lead me to suspect there is more truth to Lady
Catherine’s claims than my father would believe.”
Curse his brother’s nose for scandal! “You must know I would not
break Darcy’s confidence, even were I in it.”
“Oh, how excessively disappointing!” Mrs. Sinclair said abruptly
and with the utmost disdain. “He is in love.”
“What makes you say that?”
“You would have told us were it aught else. Love is the only thing
stupid enough to warrant your obstinacy in keeping it a secret—and the only
thing dreadful enough to warrant his sulking.” She turned away from him to face
the horses. “I have lost interest. Let us talk of something else.”
“Nay,” Ashby objected, “let us talk of this, now we have got to the crux of it at last. Is it this upstart from Hertfordshire
with whom he is involved?”
“I did not say there was a woman involved.”
“Neither did you deny it. Is she truly the penniless niece of a
tradesman? Are her connections truly that dire?”
“Well, if they are not now, they soon will be, for she will gain
the devil of an aunt with the husband,” Mrs. Sinclair said huffily.
“What does it matter what her connections are?” Fitzwilliam
replied impatiently. Darcy would never be required to contend with the ignominy
of Elizabeth Bennet’s low connections, for Elizabeth Bennet did not want him!
“So there is a woman
involved?”
He bit back an imprecation and feigned an easiness he did not
feel. “What would you do about it if there were? You could never talk Darcy out
of it.”
Ashby shrugged. “Probably not, but forewarned is forearmed. You of
all people ought to know that. I would know if Darcy is about to make a fool of
me.”
Fitzwilliam eyed his brother’s hat and privately challenged anyone
to make a greater fool of him than he already had himself. “I am sorry to
disappoint you, Brother, but I can say with authority that Darcy is not engaged
to anybody and certainly not to a fortuneless young nobody from Hertfordshire.”
He vividly recalled the wretchedness with which Darcy had admitted as much.
“The most you must prepare for is Lady Catherine’s disappointment.”
Ashby snorted. “’Tis not I who must prepare for that. You are the last unattached male
cousin—and Anne will need to marry somebody.”
“Over my dead body!” cried Mrs. Sinclair, forgetting her tiff and
twisting in her seat to glare angrily at Ashby.
“Make certain not to repeat that in my father’s hearing,” he
warned her, unperturbed by her displeasure. “It will only see Dickie down the
aisle sooner.”
Mrs. Sinclair returned to facing forward in high dudgeon. “For
heaven's sake, take me home, boy, before I am asphyxiated by foppery.”
Fitzwilliam watched them roll off through the park with a resigned
sigh. He hoped Darcy would be suitably grateful that the secret of his
disappointed hopes had been preserved only by dint of him skewering himself
squarely on Lady Catherine’s.
About the Book
Fitzwilliam Darcy is a single man in possession
of a good fortune, a broken heart, and tattered pride. Elizabeth Bennet is a
young lady in possession of a superior wit, flawed judgement, and a growing
list of unwanted suitors. With a tempestuous acquaintance, the merciless
censure of each other’s character, and the unenviable distinction of a failed
proposal behind them, they have parted ways on seemingly irreparable terms.
Despairing of a felicitous resolution for themselves, they both attend with
great energy to rekindling the courtship between Darcy’s friend Mr. Bingley and
Elizabeth’s sister Jane.
Regrettably, people are predisposed to mistake
one another, and rarely can two be so conveniently manoeuvred into love without
some manner of misunderstanding arising. Jane, crossed in love once already, is
wary of Bingley’s renewed attentions. Mistaking her
guardedness for indifference, Bingley is drawn to Elizabeth’s livelier company;
rapidly, the defects in their own characters become the
least of the impediments to Darcy and Elizabeth’s happiness.
Debut author Jessie Lewis’s Mistaken invites us to laugh along with
Elizabeth Bennet at the follies, nonsense, whims, and inconsistencies of
characters both familiar and new in this witty and romantic take on Jane
Austen’s beloved Pride and Prejudice.
About the Author
I’ve always loved words—reading them, writing
them, and as my friends and family will wearily attest, speaking them. I
dabbled in poetry during my angst-ridden teenage years, but it wasn’t until
college that I truly came to comprehend the potency of the English language.
That appreciation materialised into something
more tangible one dark wintry evening whilst I was making a papier-mâché
Octonauts Gup-A (Google it—you’ll be impressed) for my son, and watching a
rerun of Pride and Prejudice on TV. Fired up by the remembrance of
Austen’s genius with words, I dug out my copy of the novel and in short order
had been inspired to set my mind to writing in earnest. I began work on a
Regency romance based on Austen’s timeless classic, and my debut novel Mistaken is the result.
The Regency period continues to fascinate me,
and I spend a good deal of my time cavorting about there in my daydreams,
imagining all manner of misadventures. The rest of the time I can be found at
home in Hertfordshire, where I live with my husband,
two children, and an out-of-tune piano. You can check out my musings on the
absurdities of language and life on my blog, Life in Words, or you can drop me a
line on Twitter, @JessieWriter or on my Facebook
page, Jessie Lewis Author, or on
Goodreads, Jessie Lewis.
Buy
Links
Mistaken
(Amazon US)
Mistaken (Amazon UK)
Mistaken is also available on Kindle Unlimited
Giveaway
Excited to follow this blog tour and read this new Austenesque book! ;)
ReplyDeleteThe Colonel, the best friend ever
ReplyDeleteGreat excerpt Jessie! Love Mistaken and am so excited to see this tour kicking off!
ReplyDeleteAwesome peek behind the scenes, Jessie! Lots of fun to see the interactions of the (mostly) clever Fitzwilliams. Congratulations on the blog tour's kickoff!
ReplyDeleteSounds intriguing!
ReplyDeleteI am excited about this tour. Great excerpt Jessie! And the cover is beautiful.
ReplyDeleteCongratulations on the release of this great book.
Jessie,
ReplyDeletePoor Richard,having to fend off questions about Darcy's love life,or lack there of!
It's bad enough that there's an element of truth to be found in the rumour,what makes it so painful is the fact that nothing would give Darcy more pleasure,satisfaction or happiness were it completely true and he was actually engaged to a penniless girl from Hertfordshire! He would joyfully proclaim it from the rooftops,all the way from Gracechurch Street to Hyde Park!
Love the premise of this book and am really looking forward to reading it.
Best of luck with it and your future writing endeavours! 😊☘
Thanks for hosting and kicking off the tour, Maria! Good job, as always.
ReplyDeleteLoved the outtake, Jessie! Thank you for putting where it would have come in the book. Too bad it got cut!. I can already tell I will like Tabitha Sinclair! :)
Enjoyed the vignette and love the character of Mrs Sinclair.
ReplyDeleteThanks so much everyone! And thank you Maria for hosting me here at My Jane Austen Book Club. It's a delight to share some of the material that otherwise wouldn't have seen the light of day. Besides, Tabitha gets tetchy if she doesn't get enough attention ;)
ReplyDeleteHoly cow, this sounds amazing! Can't wait to read it!
ReplyDeleteThanks so much for the preview! I think this is going to be a great read....for one of my Monday's at the beach!!!
ReplyDeleteHow prommissing, loved to “see” more of the Colonel :)
ReplyDeleteThank you Leah, Danielle and Jo's Daughter, who all posted while I was asleep last night. I certainly hope the Colonel will brighten up those idyllic afternoons at the beach-along with the rest of the cast! Thanks all for popping in :)
ReplyDeleteI am so glad I found this! I have been following the wonderful reviews of this book on Amazon and had already put it on my "Must Read" list and now I am even more looking forward to it.
ReplyDeleteIt's a joy to find such good writing.
And what a fabulaous cover.
Everything about this book looks exciting.
Congrats on the release! Can't wait to read it!
ReplyDeleteThank you ladies! The cover is the lovely creation of Zorylee Diaz-Lupitou and she's done a wonderful job of creating the lighter side of the story with the fresh colours and quirky characters. I do hope you enjoy the read!
ReplyDeleteWhat a fun and entertaining scene, Jessie. I really wish this vignette has not cut off from the book.
ReplyDeleteAh, thank you Luthien! I'll let you into a secret ... when I finished the first draft of Mistaken it was over 300,000 words long!! There are so many scenes I love that I wish I hadn't had to cut, but I'd have been rivalling War and Peace for length if I hadn't lopped them out! Really glad you enjoyed this one - thanks for dropping in to leave a comment :)
ReplyDeleteLove Colonel Fitzwilliam. Thanks for sharing that scene. I can't wait to read the novel!
ReplyDeleteThanks Dung Vu! I hope you enjoy the whole book just as much :)
ReplyDelete