Excerpt from my new book!

Yes, the new book is still coming, and I need your help! It still doesn’t have a title (more on that later) and has one scene left to be written, but it’s time to start sharing the early chapters because the publication date is December 2. Yay! This is the high-angst plot bunny where Elizabeth is engaged to someone Darcy cares about deeply. Yes, I absolutely promise a happy ending for Elizabeth and Darcy, and I won’t kill anyone off to get it.

If you haven’t read it yet, please read the first chapter which I posted some time ago first! It’s brief, but it contains crucial information. Today’s chapter starts two weeks prior to that, giving the background on how this terrible situation came to pass. I’ll be posting another chapter next week, and then things really start rolling!

So, the title. This is where I need your help! Most of my best titles have come from reader suggestions and I’ve got a list of great ones from this Facebook post. I’ll list some of the top ones at the end, and I’d love your thoughts and suggestions!

This is a very low-angst chapter, just setting the stage for the storms to come, so, unlike the first one, it’s safe to read before bed! It starts with Elizabeth in Derbyshire with the Gardiners, just after her visit to Pemberley, but in this story, Darcy hadn’t yet arrived there. And so it begins…

~~~

The small mirror in Elizabeth’s room at the White Hart Inn in Lambton reflected her fatigue as she plaited her hair for the night. It had been a long, trying day. The journey from Bakewell had been pleasant enough, and she could not complain that their tour of Pemberley had lacked either beauty or interest. But seeing Darcy’s home, even in his absence, and hearing the housekeeper’s praise of the Master of Pemberley had brought up painful memories and regrets. Fortunately he was not there himself, and was not due for a fortnight, by which time she would be heading back to Longbourn, so at least she was spared the embarrassment of meeting him again.

A tapping came at the door. “Lizzy? Are you still awake?” It was her aunt’s voice.

“Yes. Do come in.” What could Mrs. Gardiner want? After all, they had spent the entire day together. As her aunt slipped inside, Elizabeth asked, “Is something the matter?”

“That is what I came to ask you,” Mrs. Gardiner said. “You were very quiet today, not at all yourself, and I wondered if perhaps our tour is not to your liking, or if you are displeased with Derbyshire.”

“Oh, no! I cannot tell you how much I have enjoyed our travels. The countryside here far exceeds my expectations. I love the steep hillsides and the starkness of the terrain. I believe I could happily remain in Derbyshire for a very long time.” It was all true, and perhaps it would distract her aunt.

But Mrs. Gardiner was not easily fooled. “Is something else troubling you, then? I do not wish to pry, but even your uncle noticed you seemed out of spirits at dinner.”

It would probably be simplest to tell her the truth, or at least some of it. There was no reason to tell her aunt that seeing Mr. Darcy’s home had left her melancholy, half-regretting the opportunity she had missed. “I have been thinking about my future,” Elizabeth said quietly. “Jane and I had a talk before I left Longbourn, and it made me see how difficult our current position is. Neither of us will find husbands in Meryton. The few marriageable gentlemen there have their sights set elsewhere. Even when Meryton was overrun by single militia officers, none of them showed serious interest in us, and why should they? Who would be willing to marry one of us, when it would mean someday caring for our sisters and mother as well? Even Jane’s beauty and sweetness are not enough to overcome that disadvantage.”

“You are afraid of ending up a spinster?” her aunt asked gently.

Elizabeth shook her head. “I do not mind that idea; I have thought it rather likely for some time. But I always assumed Jane would marry, and that after my father’s death I could live with her family. But Jane has not had even a hint of an offer, and she is now speaking of trying to find a tradesman to marry simply to avoid being a burden on our relatives. It made me realize how selfish I have been to rely on her to secure my future.”

“I do not think the situation is that bleak,” her aunt said. “After all, you are but twenty. But there may be something to what you say about being at a disadvantage in Meryton where your family is well known. Perhaps we should make more of an effort to introduce you to eligible gentlemen in London.”

“Jane just spent five months with you in London.” And came home without an admirer.

Her aunt sighed. “True, but she was pining for Mr. Bingley, and we made no effort to put her forward. I know men who might be interested in you or Jane. Perhaps not the marriages your parents would have dreamed of for you, but good men with reliable work and prospects for the future.”

Elizabeth did not want to spend her entire life in London. It was an enjoyable place to visit, but after a time there, she always craved the freedom of the countryside. “I am not desperate yet, my dearest Aunt!” She tried to sound amused, even if she did not feel it. “If I cannot marry a man I respect, I would rather find a position as a lady’s companion. Perhaps that would allow me to see more of the world.” But she could not help remembering Miss de Bourgh’s fawning companion, who saw nothing of the world and had to tolerate every whim of the lady she served.

“I hope you know your uncle and I will always do what we can to provide for you.” The assurance with which Mrs. Gardiner spoke told Elizabeth that this discussion had already taken place. The Gardiners were well aware of her situation.

Elizabeth hugged her aunt. “You are all that is kind and generous.” But the Gardiners had four children of their own, and having to support five Bennet sisters would be an enormous strain on them.

Her aunt smiled. “You are very dear to us.”

Elizabeth forced herself to rally her spirits. “But enough of this gloom! What plans have you for tomorrow?”

“I thought we would call on Mr. Morris at the rectory. He was very kind to me after he took over the living when my father died, and I confess I would like to see the house I grew up in once more.”

“I should like that, too,” said Elizabeth.

***

“My dear Mrs. Gardiner!” said the elderly gentleman with a fringe of white hair. “Why, you do not look a day older than when you were keeping house for your father all those years ago.”

“What a flatterer you are, Mr. Morris!” exclaimed Mrs. Gardiner warmly. “Why, I have four children now. Pray permit me to present my husband and my niece, Miss Bennet.”

The rector shook Mr. Gardiner’s hand heartily. “It is a great pleasure, sir. Miss Bennet, are you enjoying your visit to Derbyshire?”

Elizabeth curtsied. “Very much so.” There was something about the old man’s warm smile that made her trust him instinctively.

Mr. Morris gestured to a tall young man standing the opposite doorway. “Drew, come meet my new guests! Are you already acquainted with Mrs. Gardiner from the days when she lived in Lambton? She would have been Miss Carlisle then, the daughter of old Mr. Carlisle, who had this living before me. She left Lambton not long after I became rector here.”

“That would have been before my time,” said the younger man with a friendly smile. “But I am honored to meet you.”

“In that case, Mrs. Gardiner, may I present Mr. Darcy, my former student and – if dare I say it – my current protégé?” asked Mr. Morris. “He has recently been given the living at Kympton.”

Elizabeth started. Darcy? Not the Mr. Darcy she knew, thank heavens! Apart from his height, he bore him no resemblance. This gentleman’s straight, light hair, angled jaw and cleft chin were unlike Mr. Darcy’s dark curls and chiseled face, and he lacked the habitual haughty expression. Instead, his open countenance seemed to be all affability. But given his name, and living not five miles from Pemberley, he must be a relative, perhaps a cousin of some sort. A distant one, most likely, as she had never heard mention of cousins on the Darcy side. His clothing seemed to suggest a poor relation – tidy, but not particularly fashionable, with his coat sleeves showing wear at the elbows. No, obviously not a close relation to Mr. Fitzwilliam Darcy, thank heavens.

Mrs. Gardiner exclaimed, “Kympton – why, that is a lovely village! I remember visiting the parsonage there when I was a child. A charming house.”

A shadow seemed to cross the young man’s face. “I am still becoming acquainted with Kympton.”

“It takes time to settle into a living,” said Mr. Morris. “May I invite you to sit down?” He ordered a tea tray and began gently encouraging Mrs. Gardiner to tell him about her travels and her life since leaving Lambton. Almost by default, the two young people were left to sit together on a loveseat. Elizabeth felt a certain trepidation that this new Mr. Darcy might yet prove as haughty as the one she could not forget, but, as the conversation between Mrs. Gardiner and Mr. Morris turned to people she had never heard of, she said, “Lambton seems a charming town. Do you know it well?”

He smiled, setting aside his tea and cake untasted. “I lived here for two years when I was a boy, studying with Mr. Morris, but I have been away since then, first in London, then serving as a curate until two months ago. Mr. Morris has been very helpful to me in learning what is expected of me here.”

“I imagine he would be a good mentor.” Elizabeth took a sip of tea. It was so bitter she had difficulty keeping from making a face. No wonder Mr. Andrew Darcy was not drinking it!

“Terrible, is it not?” he said in a cheerful undertone. “My advice is not to try the cake, especially if you are fond of your teeth.”

Elizabeth could not help smiling. “I thank you for your kind advice, but I would not wish to offend our host.”

The young man took the teacup from her hand and placed it beside his own. “He will not be offended. He is too kind-hearted to dismiss his cook when she has nowhere else to go, but he is well aware that her food is nigh inedible.”

“A kind gentleman, then,” she said.

“The best I have ever known,” he said simply. “But I have learned never to pay a call here when hungry.”

No, this Mr. Darcy was generous in spirit, quite unlike the one she had met in Meryton and whose memory still haunted her, especially after visiting his home the previous day. Why could she not simply forget him?

Mr. Morris leaned towards Mrs. Gardiner, saying something softly. At her nod, he said, “Andrew, I believe Mrs. Gardiner might enjoy seeing the upstairs rooms, but my old knees are too tired to give her the tour. Would you be kind enough to do the honors?”

“Of course, sir.” The young man rose to his feet.

“How very kind of you!” exclaimed Mrs. Gardiner.

“He knows the house almost as well as I do,” said Mr. Morris. “Mrs. Gardiner might be interested in hearing about your Parsonage House, too, Andrew.”

“Indeed, sir,” he said politely. “This way, Mrs. Gardiner.”

After the two had left the room, Mr. Morris rubbed his hands together with a twinkle in his eyes, encompassing both Mr. Gardiner and Elizabeth in his gaze. “Forgive me for failing to offer you the tour as well, but I have my reasons. I believe Mrs. Gardiner may be in a position to offer young Drew some much needed advice, and I wished to give them an opportunity to talk. When the Lord is good enough to send a kind lady who was raised to run a parsonage just at the moment when Drew was begging me for advice on that very subject, the least I can do is to offer them time for discussion.”

“He is unmarried, then?” asked Mr. Gardiner.

“Yes,” said Mr. Morris. “He was a curate before coming here, so he is familiar with his pastoral duties, but that position did not include a parsonage. The one that comes with his living was not well-maintained by the last incumbent, and the servants are a slovenly lot. Servants are always a challenging issue for clergymen since they are both our employees and our parishioners, and poor Andrew has no experience at running a household.”

Mr. Gardiner chuckled. “Whenever I compliment my wife on her household management, she always says it is much easier than running a parsonage. I assumed that was because she was still a girl when she took over the household after her mother died, but she says her duties were different, with parishioners coming by and the responsibility to them.”

“You have a very capable wife. She made it look simple. I did not realize how difficult it was until I watched my late wife struggle to learn the duties of a clergyman’s wife.”

Elizabeth’s brows drew together. Her friend Charlotte never complained of finding her duties onerous, but perhaps that was because her servants lived in terror of Lady Catherine de Bourgh’s frequent inspections of the parsonage. Charlotte would never have to worry about discharging a bad servant, because Lady Catherine would have long since done so on her behalf.

Mrs. Gardiner and Mr. Andrew Darcy did not reappear for over a quarter of an hour. When they did, Mrs. Gardiner’s face was alight with interest as she told the young man, “We shall find a way, never fear!”

“Ah, my dear, I recognize that expression!” said Mr. Gardiner. “You have a new project.”

Delicate color rose in Mrs. Gardiner’s cheeks. “Only a very small one. It will not take away from our holiday, I promise you. I am simply going to visit this young man’s parsonage and perhaps offer some advice on how to manage it; that is all.”

Mr. Gardiner smiled broadly. “And help him find a new housekeeper and staff, and suggest how he might redecorate it, and half a dozen things that I cannot even dream of.”

Mr. Andrew Darcy drew himself to his full height. “Mr. Gardiner, I have no intention of imposing myself on your wife in any way.”

Her uncle guffawed. “Lad, my wife is never happier than when she has a new project! It will undoubtedly be a high point of our trip for her. And now I will not need an excuse to sneak off to find a fishing stream, as Mr. Morris has kindly offered to loan me his tackle.”

The younger man visibly thawed. “There is a fine trout stream that runs not far from my parsonage. Perhaps you would care to try your luck there.”

Mr. Gardiner beamed. “That sounds delightful.”

Elizabeth smiled dutifully, though she had no interest in fishing, refurbishing a parsonage, or calling on even a distant relative of Mr. Fitzwilliam Darcy, no matter how amiable he might be. But her aunt and uncle had been kind enough to invite her on the journey, and it was her job to be pleased by whatever activities they selected. Perhaps she could go exploring in the hilly countryside while her aunt and uncle were occupied.

***

Paying a call to Mr. Andrew Darcy’s parsonage sounded dull, but there was nothing Elizabeth liked as much as exploring new places, and she certainly could not complain about the drive. The countryside had an invigorating loveliness, with steep hills rising on each side of the road, and sheep dotting the hillsides under a clear blue sky. The village of Kympton was delightfully picturesque, with neat stone cottages lining the road and a square-towered church rising above it.

The parsonage stood at the end of a gravel lane, a large house covered with ivy, its lines more impressive than Mr. Collins’s parsonage in Hunsford. The ivy needed trimming, and a workman was repairing some missing fence slats. Roses bloomed by the doorway, but the bushes were scraggly.

Elizabeth, still uncomfortable with the idea of spending time with a relation of Mr. Darcy, hung back while her uncle knocked on the door. She bent down to sniff one of the roses, closing her eyes as the sweet fragrance filled her. At the sound of the door opening, she straightened to see the young clergyman himself in the doorway, looking past her aunt and uncle, gazing at her with an arrested expression.

Oh, dear. So much for not attracting his attention. Not that she had been doing anything provocative, and there had been no reason to think he would answer his own door rather than have a servant do it…except that the reason for their visit was that he was having problems with his servants. Of course, she had not thought she had done anything to attract Mr. Fitzwilliam Darcy’s interest, either.

She put a practiced social smile on her face as they entered the house and did her best to fade into the background, saying nothing as he instructed her uncle on how to find the trout stream and then showed the ladies to the sitting room.

“I apologize for the state of the room.” Mr. Andrew Darcy gestured to the mismatched furniture. “The previous incumbent used it as his sickroom when he could not manage the stairs, and we are still restoring it.”

Mrs. Gardiner stood in the middle of the room and turned around slowly, inspecting it thoroughly. “Still, the structure appears good, as does the woodwork. The paint looks fresh. I think it will do very well.”

“The steward at Pemberley made some repairs before I arrived, but I told him I preferred to take responsibility for the rest.” He sounded a bit stiff about it, as if he disliked working with the steward. “As I told you before, the staff are my greatest concern. There is conflict between the ones who were already here and the two I brought from London, and I do not know how much to trust the housekeeper. She is now suggesting I hire another maid, which seems excessive to me, but I know nothing of how to manage a household.”

Mrs. Gardiner said, “Perhaps that is where I can be helpful. You live here alone, do you not?”

He nodded. “Yes.”

“How much entertaining do you intend to do?”

“Entertaining?” He looked surprised at the question. “I suppose I must be ready to receive calls from parishioners and neighbors, but I think it would be inappropriate for a single clergyman to hold any sort of party.”

“And how many servants do you have?”

He counted on his fingers. “The housekeeper, the cook, two maids, and a gardener were already here. I brought my personal manservant and his sister, and said that we must dismiss one of the maids. The housekeeper was very unhappy about that.”

Mrs. Gardiner’s eyebrows rose. “All for taking care of one gentleman living alone who does not entertain? It is a large house, admittedly, but I fear your housekeeper is taking advantage of you.”

He sighed. “I was afraid of that, but my lack of domestic knowledge has hindered me in arguing with her. I would be most grateful for your view of how many servants are necessary.”

Mrs. Gardiner pursed her lips. “While you might need a little extra help while setting up your household, your housekeeper and cook should be able to take on other duties in the household, so a maid and one manservant should be able to meet your needs adequately. If you were married and had a family, it would be different, although if you had a wife, you would not need a housekeeper at all.”

Mr. Andrew Darcy flushed. “Alas, the right young lady has not yet come my way. Your assessment sounds sensible, but leaves me with the question of whom I must ask to leave.”

“I would suggest that your housekeeper is already trying to take advantage of you, and you might be better off without her. I assume you would like to keep the servants you brought with you?”

The young clergyman straightened. “I most certainly would. That is part of the problem, too. The cook has taken a strong dislike to them.”

Mrs. Gardiner nodded. “I think it would be best if I could meet your staff. Perhaps we could begin with a tour of the house, and you could introduce me to the servants as we go. That way it would appear less as if I am here to judge them.”

The young clergyman nodded. “A good plan. Shall we start with the kitchen?”

Elizabeth trailed along behind them as they proceeded to the rear of the house, but before they even reached the kitchen, a woman’s raised voice reached her. “Stay away from me, I tell you!”

A quieter voice spoke soothingly, but Elizabeth could not make out the words.

The first woman shrieked, “Keep your filthy hands off me!”

“Oh, dear,” groaned Andrew Darcy. “It appears you are about to see my cook at her worst.”

“Is she always this temperamental?” asked Mrs. Gardiner.

His mouth twisted. “No. Only when it comes to the servants I brought with me. She hates foreigners.”

“Ah. Just as well to know the problem, if we are to try to fix it,” said Mrs. Gardiner.

“True.” He stepped back to usher them in.

The kitchen was large, replete with the aroma of chicken and onions. A pile of chopped turnips and apples sat on the table, perhaps ready to go in the pot hung over the fire. The sight of half a dozen tiny puppies nursing on a dog in the corner next to the hearth caught Elizabeth’s eye and made her smile.

On the opposite side of the room, a lanky, middle-aged woman in a soiled apron stood with her back pressed against a tall cupboard, a bloody cloth clutched around her hand. A smaller, dark-skinned girl with a colorful scarf wrapped around her hair stood before her and spoke in a musical, accented voice. “The master knows I am a healer, and—” She stopped as she noticed the newcomers.

“Myrtilla, what seems to be the matter?” the young clergyman asked.

The dark-skinned woman shrugged. “Cook, she cut her hand, and she won’t let me help her. There is no one else, and it must be sewn.”

“I want none of her filthy witchcraft,” muttered the cook. “She’s a devil!”

Elizabeth grimaced. There would be no simple solution for this problem. Africans were a common sight in London, but likely less so in rural Derbyshire.

“It is not witchcraft,” said Andrew Darcy. “Myrtilla’s master in Antigua was a surgeon, and he trained her to assist him and to provide treatment to other slaves. She can help you.”

The cook scowled ferociously. “She’s not touching me!”

The young man sighed and turned to Mrs. Gardiner. “You see the difficulty.”

“I do indeed.” Mrs. Gardiner eyed the cook. “Since you are unwilling to accept your employer’s direction, I suggest you find someone else to treat your injury.”

With a heave of her shoulders, the cook gave the young clergyman a wounded look and stomped out of the kitchen.

Myrtilla’s lip curled. “The maid will stuff that cut with spiderwebs and give her an infection, but only touch her with pure English hands.”

Elizabeth stared at her, unused to servants expressing disdain so openly in the presence of their employer, but Andrew Darcy seemed unsurprised.

“I am sorry, Myrtilla,” said the clergyman. “It is wrong of her to speak so to you.”

Myrtilla’s only response to this was a swift, wordless glance.

Mrs. Gardiner said briskly, “Mr. Darcy, might I speak with Myrtilla privately? I would like to understand her situation here better.”

He nodded. “Myrtilla, I have asked Mrs. Gardiner’s advice on the staffing of the parsonage. Pray speak truly to her about your experience. Do not tell her what you think she wishes to hear, just the truth.”

The former slave sniffed. “As you wish.”

“We will leave you to discuss it, then. Miss Bennet, would you care to join me in the sitting room?” the young clergyman asked.

Elizabeth glanced at her aunt, who waved her away. This was just the sort of situation Mrs. Gardiner excelled at resolving, and since she looked perfectly in her element, Elizabeth returned to the drawing room with the clergyman. It was so odd to hear him called Mr. Darcy, especially given how very different he was from the one she knew. She imagined servants would scurry to obey that Mr. Darcy.

Her current companion said, “I dearly hope your aunt can help with this. Myrtilla will not answer my questions about what happens below stairs. It is unlike her to be so resentful and angry, and I suspect there is a reason for it.”

“She is a freed slave?” asked Elizabeth.

“Yes, as is her brother.”

“People who have lived here all their lives may be predisposed to dislike newcomers,” said Elizabeth diplomatically.

He gave her a rueful look. “Perhaps, but I fear there is more to it than that, and I am ill-equipped to deal with it. In the household where I lived in London, there were several freed slaves among the servants, and no one seemed troubled by it.”

“In London, it is hardly unusual–” She broke off in mid-sentence when a large ginger tabby jumped up on her lap. One of his ears was bent and scarred from an old injury, but he rumbled a purr. She scratched his cheeks until he turned in a circle and curled up.

“Oliver, you are not supposed to be in here,” Mr. Andrew Darcy said mildly.

“Is your name Oliver?” Elizabeth asked the cat. “It suits you.”

“Forgive me. He is supposed to stay out of the sitting room, but he is such a friendly fellow that he always wishes to be where people are.”

“He is perfectly welcome on my lap.” She leaned down and examined his scarred ear. “Apparently he is not as friendly with other cats, or was it perhaps the dog I saw in the kitchen who did this? You must be an animal lover.”

He flushed a little. “I am fond of animals, it is true. I never intend to adopt them, but somehow it happens. Oliver came to me when I rescued him from a group of boys who were mistreating him. The dog is not actually mine, only the puppies. A farmer was going to drown them, and I persuaded him to let me take them instead. I had to bring their mother here to care for them, but once they are weaned, the farmer wants her back.”

“You would get along well with my sister Mary. She is always trying to rescue animals. What will you do with all those puppies?”

He turned his hands up with a wry smile. “I have not the least idea, only that I could not watch them drown. Their mother is apparently a good sheep dog, so perhaps they will take after her and other sheep farmers will want them.”

Most likely he would have difficulty placing them, since there were always more dogs than homes, but being soft-hearted was hardly a crime. It showed how different he was from his cousin, the Mr. Darcy she knew, whom she could not imagine taking in a litter of mongrel pups, no matter how generous the Pemberley housekeeper had claimed he was. The very thought of that proud man in such circumstances made her smile. She stroked the cat’s back, the vibrating purr soothing her. “It is very hard to resist a puppy.”

They chatted for some time before Mrs. Gardiner rejoined them. “That was interesting. Myrtilla tells me you told her she was to be the cook’s assistant. Is that true?”

“Yes. She finds England chilly, and so prefers to work in the kitchen because it is always warm.”

“It appears that she is actually working in the scullery because the cook will not permit her to touch any food destined to be served, while the former scullery maid is now the parlor maid because your housekeeper would not permit a woman with Myrtilla’s complexion to work above stairs.” She ran her fingertip along the mantelpiece. “Good enough, I suppose. Your cook disobeyed your direct instructions to your face. Another issue.”

Andrew Darcy frowned. “Myrtilla has mentioned none of this to me.”

Mrs. Gardiner gave him a sympathetic look. “She grew up in the land where a slave who complained about a white servant would be whipped. While she thinks you are a good employer and well-meaning person, you are still a white man. That means the best you can hope for is to be the most trustworthy of Satan’s minions in her mind.”

Lines etched between his brows. “No doubt her life has given her reason to believe that. What would you suggest I do?”

“That depends on how much you wish to keep Myrtilla here. The simplest solution would be to find her another position, but that still leaves you with an insubordinate cook.”

“Myrtilla stays. She has done nothing wrong, and has suffered enough for the prejudices against Africans. She is hard-working and has valuable skills.”

Tilting her head to one side, Mrs. Gardiner said, “That is important, though I would be remiss if I did not point out that Myrtilla also tends to insubordination, and she does not show you proper respect.”

He smiled ruefully. “It is true that she can be difficult, but I prefer to overlook it because Myrtilla also has non-domestic duties, and I appreciate those characteristics there.”

Mrs. Gardiner drew back, her eyes widening. “I see,” she said in a voice that dripped ice. “Perhaps I was mistaken in thinking I could be helpful to you. Lizzy, let us go find your uncle.” She rose to her feet in obvious dismissal.

Andrew Darcy immediately leapt up, looking confused and worried. “I am sorry if I offended you. I do take your concerns seriously.” He paused, looking inward as if reviewing his words, and then said angrily, “Good God, if you thought I meant…I assure you, madam, it is nothing of the sort! I would never, ever…” He bit down on his words, obviously struggling to restrain himself. “Myrtilla assists me in my work for the abolitionist cause. She provides a first-hand account of the experience of slavery. To be willing to argue powerfully for her truth when others deny it requires a certain willingness to be disrespectful and difficult.”

Mrs. Gardiner’s stiff posture relaxed, and she pressed her hand to her chest. “In that case, I apologize most sincerely for my misapprehension. I fear I have seen too much misuse of servants in my day, and I am very glad to hear your reasons are quite different.”

He was still breathing heavily, and Elizabeth wondered if he would accept her aunt’s apology. But he said, “You are quite forgiven, and I am happy to know there are people like you who stand up for the rights of servants.” He gestured to the chair Mrs. Gardiner had vacated, an obvious olive branch.

She apparently accepted it, for she sat down. “I see, then, why you would not wish to quell Myrtilla’s attitude.”

He looked amused. “Stronger men than I have tried that, and using weapons I would never employ. Myrtilla is what she is. It has made it difficult for her to remain in employment, which is why she was willing to take this post so far from her family and friends in London. Hence my great reluctance to dismiss her.”

Mrs. Gardiner nodded, as if this answer satisfied her. “My advice, then, would be to tell your cook that her services are no longer required. Put Myrtilla in her place. Tell your upstairs maid to that she is expected to assist Myrtilla as needed, including in the scullery.”

“The housekeeper will be unhappy. The cook is her friend and ally.”

“Then you would do well to look for a new housekeeper, for more than one reason. Myrtilla claims she has mistreated her.”

He winced, and then spread his hands. “I thank you for convincing her to confide in you when I was unable to do so. How would you recommend I find a housekeeper who is more trustworthy than this one?”

Mrs. Gardiner pursed her lips. “I would advise you to ask the housekeeper at Pemberley for recommendations. She is likely to be aware of who might be available and who should be avoided.”

“Not Pemberley.” There was an edge to his voice. “I prefer to leave Pemberley out of my domestic issues.”

Elizabeth studied him, her interest piqued. His reaction was odd; after all, he had just been given a valuable Pemberley living, so was presumably in favor with the Master of Pemberley. What could be the source of the tension? Then she stopped herself. The subject of Mr. Darcy of Pemberley was one she would be wisest to leave alone.

“As you wish,” Mrs. Gardiner said equably, but Elizabeth thought she was a little taken aback. “I can make some inquiries among my friends in Lambton. They might have some ideas.”

The parsonage

~~~

So, now you’ve met Drew Darcy through Elizabeth’s eyes! What do you think of him so far? Next week you’ll get to see more of him, as things start going wrong. Very wrong. 😉

I’d love to hear your thoughts about a title, as I’m getting a bit desperate here! Or any other ideas for a book that tells what happens to Darcy when the woman he loves is engaged to the man he’s sworn to protect? Main themes in this story are family secrets (why was Drew disowned?), duty to family, and Darcy’s steadfast loyalty. Obviously, Elizabeth’s engagement to Drew is the key obstacle. Abolitionism, tropical botany, and a desire to explore uncharted lands (both Darcy and Elizabeth) all play major roles. Here are just a few of the reader suggestions so far: The Price of Pride, Uncharted, His Brother’s Keeper, Mr. Darcy’s OathHis Brother’s Betrothed. Do any of those jump out at you? Any other brilliant ideas? If you come up with the title I choose, I’ll credit you in the acknowledgments and send you a signed copy. 😉

I hope you’ll come back next week for more!

Edited to Add: We have a title! It’s The Price of Pride, suggested by J. Dawn King. Thanks, Joy!

 

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    • J. W. Garrett on October 13, 2020 at 12:58 am
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    You mentioned something that would be a good title to consider in your opening paragraphs. ‘The Storms To Come.’ I think that covers a lot of ground and leaves the reader knowing that it is going to be a stormy ride.

    I went back and read your previous chapter… with the evil plot bunny. I remember that and thought I had responded with a comment. I went through the list twice and didn’t see my name. Perhaps I was too stunned to comment. LOL! What on earth did you have for dinner that put such a story in your head? This is a nightmare. I am so glad you promised that D&E would be together. I don’t think I could stand it if they didn’t. Whew! I may have nightmares now. Thanks for the troubled stormy night ahead of me. LOL!! Blessings on this work. I look forward to seeing what you have next for us.

    1. Yes, it’s really not like my usual plot bunny! Thank heavens, since I don’t think I could face writing another high-angst one like this. I like “The Storms to Come”!

    • Patty Edmisson on October 13, 2020 at 1:32 am
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    I like His Brother’s Keeper. It seems Elizabeth may be entering this situation as Charlotte did if I am to glean anything from this chapter.

    Congratulations, looking forward to next chapter.

    1. You’re doing a great job of picking up the hints! Elizabeth refused Mr. Collins because he was stupid and Darcy because she disliked him, but Drew really doesn’t have anything going against him and would be a good match, apart from the excess of puppies and the wrong last name. 😉

    • Nicola on October 13, 2020 at 3:04 am
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    Hi Abigail,
    you’ve got me more and more curious about this book 😉
    The first title that came to my mind was “Love Triangle”, but I think there are many other romantic stories out there with that title. From your list above, I personally like “The Price of Pride” the best – I think we’ll have a lot of proud people in this book, whose fate could be a lot easier if they only talked to each other or were willing to compromise. “His Brother’s Keeper” speaks the least to me, because I associate it with prison and oppression, which Drew might feel, but Darcy, too?
    I loved to read about the many good sides of Drew, and how far this goes in the management of his household. He is in sore need of a wife and I think I have an idea who might at long last be the right woman for him 🙂 And I’m too curious what caused the delay for Darcy so that he could not impress Lizzy with his wet shirt to make her love him instantly? 😉 Will we be seeing much of Georgiana in this book?
    Curious, curious….
    As it will be available in December, will there be a Christmas chapter in this book?
    Many questions, I know, but of one thing I’m quite sure – it will be a great read, since you always put so much thought and research into your work!
    Hugs, Nicola

    1. Drew is in sore need of a wife! He really doesn’t know what he’s doing, trying to run a household. No Christmas chapter, I’m afraid – it’s only a December release because I missed my early planned release dates. This should have been out last March, but the book was battling me!

    • Simone on October 13, 2020 at 8:54 am
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    I remember the only Darcy brother Theophilus Darcy in the Darcy Brothers. 🙂

    But who is this DREW-Guy? I do miss some information?! What is his story? Why is he to Fitzwilliam anything but happy to have him as brother? He said to Darcy he loves Elizabeth. Can Drew loves her after such a short time, only days after making her acquaintance? No, not wholehearted. And Elizabeth? She thinks often of Darcy. She made a mistake in refusing him in such harsh ways and has regrets after visiting Pemberley without meeting Darcy.
    I wish to be a little bunny to see and hear when Darcy and Elizabeth are the first time together after the proposals. My heart is for Darcy. Does she takes knowledge of her feelings for him? A weird encounter certainly. This was the 3rd proposal for Elizabeth. My suggestions: Durability and Sincerity of Proposals or Disappointment and Sincerity in love matters.

    And I like the book-title: The Price of Pride

    1. This is my third Darcy Brother – Theo in The Darcy Brothers, Kit in Conceit & Concealment (aka ‘the unplanned brother’ – I never intended Darcy to have a brother in that book, but then he knocked on a door and Kit opened it, so there I was!), and now Drew. He has a lot of backstory which will be slowly revealed through the book. Darcy’s shadow is indeed already falling on Elizabeth, and she’s not without feeling for him, too. A very tricky situation indeed!

    • Kris on October 13, 2020 at 9:04 am
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    I lean toward the price of pride from first glance. I too cna see who Drew might end up with in the end and think that will be nice. I wish they didn’t have to go down such a bumpy path to get where everybody belongs but then where would the story be haha.

    1. Drew does get a happy ending of his own, but it’s a very bumpy path! Seems like The Price of Pride is a popular choice.

    • Lara on October 13, 2020 at 9:31 am
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    Loved the excerpt and like His Brother’s Betrothed for a title. Highlights the complexity of this love triangle while not giving away the rich themes this book has in it’s pages. Thanks for sharing.

    1. Thanks! I like that title, too. 🙂

    • Carole in Canada on October 13, 2020 at 9:37 am
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    There was one word in this intriguing excerpt that jumped out at me and from there this title popped in my head “Shadows of the Past”. As I thought on it more, I thought of “Shades of Pride”. I’m not on Facebook so don’t know what the others are. Good luck in your decision! Can’t wait to read it!!

    1. Ooh, good ones, Carole! I like them both!

    • Frances Fischer on October 13, 2020 at 11:14 am
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    I was so engrossed in reading this that I forgot for a moment that it was only an excerpt. I am already feeling sorry for Darcy. As I have several of your books and found no problems, is this a clean read? Thank you.

    1. Yes, poor Darcy has a hard time in this one! There aren’t any sex scenes in this book. There’s a fist fight and someone is badly injured in an accident, and there are references to enslaved people.

        • Frances Fischer on October 13, 2020 at 5:27 pm
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        Thanks

    • Ginna on October 13, 2020 at 12:13 pm
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    This sure looks like it will be an exciting ride!
    I have read other stories where Elizabeth has a relationship with someone else, but of course ends up with F.D. I do dislike when the other person’s feelings are hurt though. I’m hoping that since Drew only recently met her, that his emotions are not that deep, and he won’t be hurt.

    1. Thanks, Ginna! I’ve done my best to make this a happy ending for all.

    • TJones on October 13, 2020 at 12:15 pm
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    Maybe it is only my wishful thinking. But think Kris and I may have seen the same foreshadowing in who may have a say in Drew’s happy ending. Other than all the animals.😺

    1. Surely all those puppies are enough to make anyone happy. 😉 Not giving away any other secrets yet, though!

    • Dominique AUBRY on October 13, 2020 at 2:35 pm
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    For the title I like Mr Darcy’s Oath. May I suggest you : In favor of a brother

    1. Thanks! That’s a good one!

    • Catherine on October 13, 2020 at 4:26 pm
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    I am intrigued by these Brothers in need of a Wife! And Elizabeth’s desperation for a major change in her life leads to an engagement in 2 weeks? My goodness, how impulsive of her! How can she imagine spending her life as a near neighbor and sister-in-law of Mr. Darcy? What is she thinking? I see the appeal of Drew’s goodness and his obvious need for an intelligent, compassionate and competent wife, and cute animals are an added bonus, but still, what’s going through her head as she promises herself to Drew? Looking forward to more of this anxiety-provoking story – perfect for our challenging times.

    1. I didn’t really plan to write a high-angst book in a high-angst time! It’s added extra challenges. As for Elizabeth’s reasons, you’ll find out more next week, muahaha!

    • Terri on October 13, 2020 at 7:02 pm
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    Without reading the whole novel but with hints in this book maybe The price of pride.

    1. Thanks! I think that fits the story well.

    • Diana Birchall on October 14, 2020 at 12:37 am
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    Unputdownable! The Price of Pride is too good a title not to use.

    1. Thank you! I’m inclined to agree with you.

    • Meg on October 14, 2020 at 4:27 pm
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    I like His Brother’s Keeper: The Price of Pride Combining two of the suggestions above that seem to both spark my immediate interest and be themes in the book.

    Drew has some secret fault that Elizabeth must find herself without Fitzwilliam Darcy’s help and Fitzwilliam Darcy will show his magnanimity and true self to Elizabeth by his genuine welcoming Drew’s return to Derbyshire. What an interesting premise you’ve created! I look forward to the publication and purchase.

    1. Thanks, Meg! Both Drew and Darcy have their faults in this one, and one thing Darcy has to cope with is discovering that Elizabeth understands his brother better than he does. It’s a bitter pill to swallow for the Master of Pemberley!

        • Meg on October 16, 2020 at 2:14 pm
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        That would be a bitter pill for someone like Darcy. Now I wonder about Elizabeth’s role? Can hardly wait.

    • Jen D on October 14, 2020 at 7:32 pm
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    This is going to be truly an excellent novel, especially with abolition and also Drew fighting against animal cruelty (another of Wilberforce’s causes besides abolition). Drew seems to be good; I have a feeling somehow Fitzwilliam 1) either actually mistreats BIPOC characters and animals or 2) somewhere Drew only has the appearance of goodness and has another evil and Fitzwilliam is actually sympathetic toward the abolitionist and animal welfare causes. Somehow I am thinking more of #2 though I think possibly both men have truly dark sides that must be revealed and of which Elizabeth needs to know before she makes a horrible decision. I am truly on the edge…

    1. Fortunately, Darcy is also sympathetic to the abolitionist cause, though not all of the extended family is! Lord Matlock doesn’t come off so well in this book, I’m sorry to say. 😉

    • Buturot on October 15, 2020 at 12:55 am
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    Thank you for another excerpt of your new story. We all look forwad to it (and of course it’s release) For the title: I like His Brother’s Betrothed … Just wondering maybe

    “Yearning for His Brother’s Betrothed”

    1. Ooh, that sounds good!

    • Sabrina on October 15, 2020 at 1:06 am
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    I think the perfect title would be “An unhappy alternative” for 3 reasons:
    1. It’s a quote from pride and prejudice (Mr. Bennet to Lizzy after Collins’ proposal)
    2. Darcy will either loose Elizabeth or his Brother (but I rely on you to create a miracle, so that he can have both 😉
    3. Elizabeth won’t be happy with her choice when she realizes she could have married for love, if she hadn’t misjudged Mr. Darcy.

    1. Ooh, that’s a great idea! And it is indeed an unhappy alternative…

  1. Nice excerpt, Abigail. How about ‘Other Than Darcy’ or ‘What Drew Her in?’

    1. Ooh, those are good,thank!

  2. Why were Darcy and Drew separated for such a time? It seems that Drew must have spent a large part of his life in someplace like the Caribbean. No wonder Darcy lacks understanding of his brother. Hope Elizabeth doesn’t decide that Charlotte’s attitude towards marriage is a viable one also for her. I too favor The Price of Pride.

    1. The reason for Darcy and Drew’s separation won’t come clear for a time, apart from that old Mr. Darcy disowned Drew, and Drew’s pride didn’t allow him to take an olive branch from Darcy. But you’re asking the right questions!

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