New Release Spotlight + Giveaway
Disguise of Any Sort
I am delighted to announce the release of Disguise of Any Sort, a Regency-era novel that begins with one irreversible moment and unfolds into a story shaped by secrecy, consequence, and quiet courage.
To celebrate, I am hosting a giveaway for readers.
Giveaway details:
One winner who comments on this post
will receive a copy of the ebook Disguise of Any Sort.
The giveaway is open now and ends February 28th.
The winner will be announced shortly thereafter.
About the Story
Every family has a moment that changes everything—sometimes before anyone realizes it has occurred.
Disguise of Any Sort opens in Hertfordshire in 1806, at Longbourn, where the Bennet household is already unsettled by fear and uncertainty. A walk meant to escape anxiety leads to a discovery that will quietly alter the course of multiple lives. What begins as a single act of bravery becomes the foundation for years of secrecy, sacrifice, and unanswered questions.
This story explores what happens when duty overrides safety, when truth is postponed “for now,” and when a child’s future is shaped by choices made in silence.
Excerpt
September 1806
Hertfordshire
“Come, girls! Let us go out into the gardens.” Millie, the nursery maid, held Kitty and Lydia’s hands. Both girls seemed to shrink as another shout echoed from upstairs.
“Is Mama going to be well?” Mary asked hesitantly, wringing her hands as Jane and Elizabeth grabbed bonnets and hurriedly tied the ribbons under their younger sisters’ chins.
“Bringing a wee babe into the world is a miraculous thing, dear Mary.” Millie released Kitty’s hand and brushed a finger over the third Bennet daughter’s cheek. “Your mama has done it five times before.”
Elizabeth could not help but notice the maid did not fully answer Mary’s query. But the reply calmed the girl, and soon enough they were outside in the sunshine.
It was September, and the warm days would fade before too long. Elizabeth loved the outdoors and loathed the forced confinement winter would bring. She and Jane joined hands with Mary as they strolled around the house to the little wilderness. There were still flowers aplenty there, and Millie quickly tasked Kitty and Lydia with making her a crown out of the blossoms.
“‘Tis good practise,” she said wisely. “Someday, you will have bonnets to trim.”
The girls giggled and agreed, running to and fro collecting all manner of blooms.
Seventeen-year-old Jane sat on a bench, her calm demeanor betrayed by her hands, which were tightly clenched in her lap. The eldest Bennet daughter wore her bonnet and gloves—the picture of a perfect lady. Having been out in society since her fifteenth birthday, she was well-versed in the requirements of a young woman and strove to be an example to her younger sisters whenever possible.
Elizabeth had turned fifteen just a week prior. Mrs Bennet had assured her daughter of a grand celebration in her honour, though they must delay given her present confinement. Elizabeth had agreed; in truth, she thought fifteen too young to be ‘out’ and relished the chance to be a child for a while longer.
Mary, at fourteen, was everything prim and proper. She strove to emulate Jane, though she had lately taken an unhealthy interest in sermons. Her moralizing was mocked by Kitty and Lydia, and at times, their father. Rather than wilt at this criticism, Mary had resolved to put herself above it all and clung to her dusty books harder than ever. Now, she sat beside Jane, pulling one such tome from her pocket. Their sister, upon noting it, gently began a conversation, forcing Mary to put it away or risk being impolite.
I ought to make more effort, Elizabeth mused. Jane should not be the only sister to befriend Mary. Indeed, if left unchecked, the middle and most often overlooked sister might become unbearable.
She watched Millie with the two youngest for some time before growing restless. Elizabeth paced for a time before resolving to take a stroll.
“Millie.” Elizabeth skipped to the edge of the blanket that had been spread for the girls to sit on. “I wish to walk down the lane—possibly to the top of the mount. Have you any objection?”
Millie looked uncertain, biting her lip for a moment before nodding hesitantly. “You have walked the path before. Be careful and return quickly.”
Elizabeth turned to her sisters. “Jane, Mary, would either of you care to join me?” Kitty and Lydia had not so much as glanced up as she put forth her petition so she did not bother to issue them an invitation. Both her sisters shook their heads, bent together in conversation.
Elizabeth’s mind wandered to her mother. She had been confined to the mistress’s chambers for several days now, though the true chaos had not started until two nights prior. Papa had sequestered himself in his study yet again. Mr Bennet had grown increasingly distant from the time of Elizabeth’s tenth birthday until they discovered Mrs Bennet was expecting again. Lydia was nine when the announcement came.
The baby was a welcome surprise. Mr Bennet had been thrilled, telling everyone who would listen that he could tell this one was his heir. “We are very blessed,” he boasted. “Providence has favoured us—Longbourn will not fall to my cousin.”
The dreaded entail… It had shaped the Bennets’ lives for as long as Elizabeth could remember. Mama’s nerves had worsened with every girl child, and after Lydia the midwife had told them that there would be no more children. Mrs Bennet sank into a deep melancholy, unwilling to leave her bed for weeks after her daughter’s birth. Mr Bennet’s disappointment knew no bounds, and he remained locked in his study until his wife was churched.
Whilst the master of the estate became more apathetic, Mrs Bennet became determined. She lavished attention on her daughters, badgering her husband to hire a governess to help educate them and prepare them for the marriage mart. Mr Bennet had pushed back, but his wife had won the day.
Unfortunately, Miss Gertrude Lane, their governess of the last eight years, was currently in Surrey, helping her sister with her lying in. Mrs Bennet had insisted she go and that the girls would be well cared for by the maids.
Elizabeth’s aunt—her mother’s sister, Mrs Philips, had intended to be at her sister’s lying in. Sadly, the lady had gone on holiday with her husband, and then Mrs Bennet’s pains had started weeks early…
She shuddered. The maids whispered behind their hands, falling silent whenever a member of the household approached. Elizabeth could see the concern written on their faces.
“It is too soon.”
“The babe will not survive.”
And then that day, just before they left the house: “The mistress is not well. She will not live to see her little one take a breath.”
After that, Millie had rushed them all to the little wilderness, intent on keeping the girls’ minds on other things.
“I am not a child,” Elizabeth said aloud, kicking a stone out of her path. She sighed and came to a stop. There was a fork in the path. The left took her towards the lane that would eventually connect to the Great North Road. The right would take her to Oakham Mount. She had never been allowed to venture down the first path…not alone, anyhow.
Shrugging, she turned her feet towards the left fork. I shall just walk this way for a short time, she assured herself, though nerves made her stomach churn unpleasantly. Taking a deep breath, she continued on her way, humming a merry tune in an effort to drown out the protesting voices in her head.
Elizabeth saw a cloud of dust approaching, though at too great a distance still to be seen clearly. She backed into the trees, peering out at the road. The carriage barrelled away from Meryton, and she wondered if it had stopped or just continued on its way. Her stomach dropped. The coach was approaching the curve far too fast.
The bend was perhaps one hundred paces away from where Elizabeth stood. The conveyance continued to come closer, and she watched in horror as the driver tried to navigate the abrupt change before them, causing the carriage to tilt, and the horses to squeal in panic as they were pulled off their feet. The driver and another figure on the roof tried to jump clear, and she lost sight of them as dust billowed into the air.
Wheels still spinning, the carriage lay on its side in the ditch next to the road. Through the cloud of dust, she thought she saw a figure emerge from the door, which now acted as the roof of the conveyance. Elizabeth rubbed her eyes. But when the dust had settled, there was no one there.
She stood frozen for what seemed an eternity before instinct pushed her forwards. Elizabeth ran as quickly as she could towards the wreckage, her breath coming in gasps. Never had she witnessed such…such a dreadful scene!
I must be brave, she told herself, slowing her steps as she approached. The horses were making a terrible, frightening noise, but she would not allow that to deter her. She drew a steadying breath before she circled the carriage. Of the two men she had seen who tried to jump clear, both were pinned to the ground and not moving. She touched them lightly, but it was obvious they had not survived the crash. The horses continued squealing loudly—a quick glance told her their legs were broken.
A low moan drew her attention, and she quickly climbed the side of the overturned vehicle. The door that faced up was open, and she frowned at the sights, recalling the figure she had seen through the dust. Another moan spurred her into action again, and she lowered herself carefully down into the wreckage.
A woman was curled on her side at the bottom. The gown she wore was very fine—the height of fashion, if Elizabeth had to speculate. There was a gash on her head that looked serious. The blood ran down into her hair, and she coughed weakly. More blood trickled out of the corner of her mouth as she turned her head.
Her eyes were unfocused until they landed on Elizabeth. Suddenly, her gaze cleared. A frail hand reached out and clasped Elizabeth’s arm. “Take him,” she whispered hoarsely. With great effort, she shifted, revealing a basket. Inside, wrapped in blankets, Elizabeth could see a small child. “Take him,” the lady repeated.
“I shall,” Elizabeth promised. “Then I shall return for you.” Quickly, she lifted the basket, which weighed very little, and climbed the seats to the open door. She pushed the precious bundle out and onto the side of the carriage before following.
The carriage leaned at an angle that made it easier for Elizabeth to slide down, basket clutched to her chest. Once she was safely on the ground, she tucked the basket under her arm and carried it a safe distance away. Placing it behind a bush, she ran back to the carriage, making the same journey down to the lady’s side.
The woman’s chest was still. Elizabeth put a hand to her mouth. Feeling no air, she sighed heavily. Gone. Wiping tears from her cheeks, she observed the scene. The poor lady was very young—not more than two or three years older than Jane. Her face looked…peaceful. Glancing around, she noted a valise on its side. Elizabeth grabbed the handle and looked around for anything else that might reveal the lady’s identity. She saw nothing—not even a necklace or jewelry. And the carriage had no markings.
There is nothing more I can do, she reasoned. Elizabeth climbed out with the valise and hurried to the baby’s side. She pulled back the linens to reveal a tuft of golden hair. The child inside was very little. She remembered what Lydia had looked like when she was born. Is this babe so young?
Unsure what else she could do, Elizabeth gathered the basket on one arm. It was large and cumbersome, but with some juggling, she managed to carry the valise in the other hand. The image of the lady, broken and silent, invaded her consciousness. She knew without a doubt that she would never forget the sight. Glancing back over her shoulder at the wreckage, she turned her steps towards Longbourn. Papa will know what to do.
He watched the girl traipse off into the woods, the infant-laden basket balanced on one arm, a battered valise in the other. She moved quickly despite the burden, driven by duty, perhaps, or simply fear. He did not know her name, only that she had arrived with a wide-eyed resolve and a hesitance that suggested she had never handled a situation like this before. But what lady had? Still, she had done what was needed. That was more than he could say for himself.
He had been careful—painstaking, really—to retrieve his possessions from the wrecked coach before fleeing. His knapsack, light but essential. The jewels, of course. He had taken them from the lady’s limp body, not bothering to pretend sorrow. He told himself they were owed to him, a payment of sorts. A bridal price for a wedding that would never come.
His companion’s injuries were fatal, though she still breathed—crushed ribs, a bloodied face, skin already cooling. He had lingered only long enough to be sure she would not recover. He had not the heart to close her eyes, which fluttered slightly as she moaned, but neither did he stay long enough to see them dim.
Without his future bride, the entire scheme was in shambles. The infant had been born a fortnight too early, arriving into the world unblessed by either priest or law. Illegitimate. Baseborn and useless.
And with the mother now gone, so too were his prospects. Had they only reached Gretna Green, had they crossed the border and whispered their vows before some drunken blacksmith, all she possessed would have been his. Her dowry. Her inheritance. The favour of her influential, powerful family. But the crash had stolen everything. Her life. His claim. Their future.
Her mother would give no quarter. She was a woman of iron and salt, the kind who viewed sentiment as weakness and scandal as war. She would never accept the child born in secret, nor the man who had

gambled on marrying her daughter before the truth could reach her ears.
He could almost hear her shrieking voice already: “My bloodline is ruined!”
He shuddered involuntarily and rubbed his arm. It ached with a deep, grinding pain, and he suspected a fracture. Yet even this injury—this raw reminder of mortality—could not distract him from the truth: he was alone, nearly penniless, and on the run.
Turning away from the wreckage, he adjusted the strap on his shoulder and pocketed the stones—diamonds mostly, with a few emeralds he would sell discreetly, one at a time. The boy—his son—was better off gone. A burden. A complication. One he could no longer afford to shoulder.
He told himself the child would be cared for. The girl who had carried him away looked young—eighteen, perhaps?—but not poor. Her clothes were modest, but clean. A lady’s maid, maybe, or a tradesman’s daughter. Someone with a roof and bread and a name untainted by scandal. That was more than he could offer.
Still, when he closed his eyes, he saw her again. The way her skirts clung to her calves as she climbed through the coach wreckage, heedless of propriety. The way her dark curls slipped from her bonnet as she bent over the baby. She had not screamed, nor fainted. She had acted. Brave and capable and…almost noble.
He wondered briefly what her family would make of the child. Would they raise him kindly? Would they lie and call him a cousin, a foundling, a pity case? And would the boy ask one day where he came from?
Would he know his father had watched from the shadows and walked away? Ridiculous sentiments.
A sound—a snap of reins, the thunder of hooves—broke his thoughts. Riders approached. Locals, perhaps. They could come across the wreckage soon enough.
He slipped into the shadows just as a group of riders approached the remains of his shattered future. He melted into the trees, footsteps light despite the pain. He was good at disappearing. Vanishing for a time and then reappearing as a reinvented man.
And the child—his son—was behind him, fading like smoke in a forest that never remembered names. Good riddance.
Final Thoughts
This opening chapter lays the groundwork for everything that follows: the cost of secrecy, the weight of responsibility placed too early on young shoulders, and the long shadow cast by one man’s choice to walk away.
If you enjoy Austenesque fiction rooted in character, consequence, and emotional realism, I hope you will consider entering the giveaway—or picking up your own copy of Disguise of Any Sort.
Giveaway closes February 28th.
Thank you, as always, for reading and supporting my work.
47 comments
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Oh wow! Can’t wait for the book to come out.
Looking forward to reading this, the excerpt has me hooked!
Very excited to read this story!
This looks like the beginning of a great story. Intriguing!
Can’t wait to read this! Thanks for another book 😀 (probably next read for KU!)
Wow, that is intriguing! Thank you for the excerpt and giveaway. Congrats and best wishes on the new release!
This is a premise full of promise! I hope I get lucky.
Your book sounds really intriguing – the opening really drew me in. Can’t wait to read it! I shall definitely be downloading it on 28th Feb.
Definitely intrigued! Poor Elizabeth!
Oh, this is a fascinating start! I cannot wait to read it.
Sounds very intriguing. Can’t wait to read it.
Oh very intrigued. Is the father of the child Mr Wickham? I’m interested how Mr Bennett would react.
Oh heavens! I am already making guesses here! The identity of the man, what will happen to the tiny baby boy when Mr Bennet sees him, how this will affect their lives. But then I’m stuck so I will have to read the book to see if I’m right so far and what happens next! Great excerpt thank you! 🥰
This is a solid start of a fantastic read! I can’t wait to read it.
OMG. I’ve got to finish this tale. So many questions in my head. Today is my birthday so this would be a great gift.
Great teaser! Can’t wait to read it!
Great excerpt and I am looking forward to reading more . Best wishes!
I’m wondering if it is Wickham who is the baby’s father. Is the baby raised as Mr. Bennet’s heir? I am intrigued! Thank you for the excerpt and giveaway.
So very intriguing! I’m already making guesses as to who the people are and what will happen
This is so interesting! Can’t wait to see what happens. I have my guesses, though!
Can hardly wait to read the whole boom. One of my favourite authors.
The excerpt is intriguing and tempting. Am looking forward to reading this book. Will it tell us who was the babe’s mother?
I’m hooked and ready for more.
Can’t wait to read this!
I can’t wait to read this!
You certainly know how to bait a hook. Your excerpt has me hooked! I look forward to reading this.
Sounds great! Thanks for the giveaway.
I can hardly wait to read your new book. It sounds so intriguing.
What an exciting start to the story. I am amazed what will happen next to all the characters who walk from this accident.? I can hardly wait!!
Thank you for give away prospect. Ann
looking forward to reading this one
This excerpt, the opening of the book, has me thoroughly intrigued. I’m looking forward to reading this story, finding out about the child, and the reveal of the names of the father and mother–although I am already guessing! Congratulations on publishing another tale.
I cannot wait to read this! This sneak peek chapter has me hooked!
Great snippet, I will definitely be downloading this from KU to read tonight
So many questions left unanswered with this excerpt! Love it already
Enjoyed reading the excerpt.
I’m looking forward to reading it, as I do all of your books!
Ah! Some of the descriptions make me think: Wickham. Anne DeBourgh. Lady Catherine. Guess we will find out!
Thank you for the chance to win a copy.
This looks so awesome! And a very unique story too… Ive read a lot of fan fiction and haven’t come across anything like this! I’m also pretty sure the man is Wickham😉
Yes, I’m also thinking Wickham, Anne DeB, and Lady Catherine. What a great opening scene!
OOOOOOOhhhhhhhhh! Excited to read this!! Thanks MJ!!!
I can’t wait to read this. thank you.
Thank you for the opportunity. I woould love to read this.
That was so good. I can see so many plots… great hook!!!
Wow – I can see a potential tangle of troubles when Elisabeth gets home with this little bundle! Looking forward to putting this in my to be read pile.
Love the suspense! I can see several directions the story might go. I’d love to win a book so I can see which one you chose. (I’m voting that Mrs. B passes the child off as her new baby son.)
Wow! The story is chock-full of intrigue and then some!
You’ve introduced such a suspicious (and not in a good way!) man lurking behind the bushes. Could that possibly be the greedy Wickie? And the death of a young woman… Anne de B., perhaps? 👀
Yoh have me imaging all sort of scenarios and wondering:
• Will the baby boy replace Mrs. B’s child if her own does not survive?
• Will the rest of the Bennet girls ever learn the truth, or will Lizzy be persuaded to carry such a heavy secret alone?
• Why do I have this gut feeling that the father will reappear years later, just when the child is grown, ready to blackmail the Bennets? That possibility feels ominous and entirely plausible!
You’ve left us with more questions than answers, and I mean that in the best way. I can’t wait to see how all of this unfolds! Love it already!
Congratulations. A great beginning to what I know will be a wonderful book