I’m happy to be welcoming Jayne Bamber back to the blog with her latest book, Handsome, Clever & Rich. It’s a Pride & Prejudice variation but some of you might recognise this title as being words Austen uses to describe Emma Woodhouse…
Let’s have a look at the book blurb and then I’ll hand you over to Jayne, who has brought us both an excerpt from Handsome, Clever & Rich and an ebook giveaway.
Book Description
What if Elizabeth is not a Bennet by birth, but by marriage?
When Netherfield Park is let at last, the village of Meryton is inveigled in romance, intrigue, and a few less-than-happy reunions. The Bingley siblings return to the home of their youth, an estate purchased just before the death of their father. The neighborhood, especially the Bennet family, is ready to welcome them back with open arms, but Mr. Bingley’s attempt to make a good impression on his community backfires so badly that it is his awkward friend Mr. Darcy who is obliged to salvage the situation in the aftermath of Mr. Bingley insulting Jane Bennet at the Assembly.
Young widow Elizabeth Bennet begins her acquaintance with Mr. Darcy on amiable terms, but the reckless folly of his friend and the regrets from her own past create a bumpy path to Happily Ever After for them.
Not long after an injury obliges Elizabeth to recover at Netherfield Park, her estranged sister finally discovers Elizabeth’s whereabouts, and journeys from Highbury to Meryton in all haste, suitors in tow.
When
one unexpected betrothal arises out of necessity, Jane Austen’s most notorious
matchmaker is inspired to work her magic at Longbourn, Netherfield, and Lucas
Lodge – but she, too, will have met her match in matters of meddling &
mischief….
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Excerpt from Handsome, Clever & Rich, Introduced by Author Jayne Bamber
It’s great to be back at Babblings of a
Bookworm! Today I am here to share another excerpt of my new release, Handsome,
Clever, & Rich, which is now available on Kindle Unlimited.
As you may guess from the title, this Pride & Prejudice
variation features appearances from several characters from Emma,
including the titular heroine herself! The biggest deviation from the original
story, however, is that Elizabeth is a Bennet not by birth but by marriage in
this retelling.
For those of you following my blog tour, you may also know that
the Bingleys have history in Meryton – they grew up at Netherfield, and have
returned, after a considerable absence, just in time for the Meryton Assembly,
where it is Bingley that insults Jane with those infamous words, “She is
tolerable, I suppose….”
Poor Mr. Darcy is more accustomed to giving offense himself than to
seeing his amiable friend do so, and now he is taking on the arduous task of
damage control – unfortunately, the neighborhood has already decided against
Mr. Bingley, and even the Bennets have slammed the doors of Longbourn in his
face! Despite an amicable beginning between Darcy and Lizzy, the dubious
courtship of Jane and Mr. Bingley will remain a point of contention between
them, as you can see in the excerpt I am sharing today….
***
Elizabeth closed her eyes and let out a long, trembling exhale. Silent tears slid down her cheeks, and Darcy stood at once, offering her his handkerchief. “Please, Miss Bennet.”
“I am not Miss Bennet,” she snapped,
shaking from the force of her distress. “I am –”
“You are upset, and you have every right to be,”
Darcy said. He seized her hand and thrust the handkerchief into it, letting out
a sharp breath at the realization that neither of them were wearing gloves. He
took a step back as she peered up at him, her eyes wide and glistening with
powerful emotion. Her lips parted, but she appeared too stunned to speak.
Darcy pressed on. “I have no wish to cause you
dismay, nor allow my friend to cause anyone in your family further pain. My
only hope is that you might all come to understand, in time, that Bingley truly
does have the best of intentions toward all of you, but most of all Miss
Bennet. Last evening, you questioned why a man of my intelligence would keep
such company as the Bingleys, and I hope it pleases you to know that I have
given that matter considerable thought this morning. Bingley has been foolish,
but he is not without merits. He is a man of tremendous feeling and complexity,
and he wishes to improve himself.”
Elizabeth scoffed at this, but Darcy stepped
closer to her and continued to argue his case. “You do not know him as I do,”
he murmured, looking imploringly at Elizabeth. “You also said that you
perfectly understood the reason for Bingley’s blunder, but I have heard his
justification myself, and though I cannot like it, I can understand the reason
for his lapse in judgment last evening. My history with him is such that I know
him to be capable of better. He wants only an opportunity to explain himself,
and to apologize for his grievous error in decency. Can you not approve? If not
for his sake, for mine, as your friend, and for your sister, who need not feel
his behavior as keenly as she does at present.”
Darcy could scarcely account for what had moved
him to make such an impassioned appeal; he pushed away the creeping sensation
that he might not have fought so hard had not his prospective ally been a
beautiful woman. He held Elizabeth’s gaze, each of them staring at the other in
a state of heightened feeling as the air between them grew thicker; for a
moment Darcy cherished some little hope that he might have touched her
heart.
The sky suddenly flashed white, the bright light
piercing through the green canopy above them, and Elizabeth flinched at the
subsequent peal of thunder. In an instant she was roused from her reverie, and
took several steps backward.
“I hardly know what you imagine I should have to
do with it,” she quipped. “As I said last night, it can have little to do with
you or me. If Jane did not wish to see Mr. Bingley this morning, the least he
can do is respect her wishes, and surely Mr. Bingley is just the sort of man to
do the least he can. As to our friendship, Mr. Darcy – I enjoyed our debate
last evening, and you are a very fine dancer, but beyond that you have no right
to presume.”
“I presume nothing,” Darcy insisted, holding up
his hands in a defensive pose as he watched all the good will he had built with
her come rapidly unraveled. “You said yourself that your opinion, good or bad,
might rise or fall – that your resentment was not implacable, and yet….”
“And yet it is my good opinion of you that
begins to alter, rather than my low estimation of Mr. Bingley,” she spat. “What
else can you expect by making such an appeal? Perhaps it is only right that you
care more for the best interest of your friend, rather than Jane, but the
reverse is just as true for me – I will not be party to anything that hurts
her, and I despise such meddling tendencies as you wish to contrive with me.
Did you really expect me to rejoice in the prospect of such a scheme? To
welcome such addresses toward my sister, from an inferior man who would send
his friend to do his bidding?”
Her chest was heaving from the energy of her
outburst, and Elizabeth was glowering at him still when the rain began. Darcy
moved closer to her, hardly knowing what to say; she backed away again.
“I cannot stay here,” she murmured, averting her
gaze. “I ought never have allowed you to stay, to speak to me so….”
“It is three miles back to Longbourn,” Darcy
blurted out. “Let me escort you home – it will be faster on horseback.”
She looked over at Shakespeare and groaned, her
expression of horror obscured by the rain falling harder now. “No,” she cried.
“No, I do not like horses. I cannot stay here a moment longer.”
She turned and fled. Darcy called out to
her, despite the weighty knowledge that he had already transgressed more
thoroughly than even Bingley had done. “Elizabeth, please!”
She spun around, her eyes wide and furious, and
she began to shout at him. “How dare you….” The force of her movement on the
slippery slope was too quick on unsteady ground, and she tumbled backward
before finishing her sentence.
Darcy reacted at once, skirting the thick patch
of hawthorn as he rushed to the place where Elizabeth had fallen. It had been
muddy even before the rain began, along the banks of the creek; he proceeded
with caution as he approached, but when he saw her laying sprawled out on her
side in the shallow water there, he abandoned every concern for himself to get
to her.
He rolled her on to her back, careful as he
placed his hand on her shoulder and crouched over her. The side of her face was
muddy, and a small amount of blood trickled from her temple. “Good God, Miss
Elizabeth!”
Her eyes fluttered as she shook her head.
“Mmmph… Benjamin.”
“No, it is not Benjamin – it is Mr. Darcy. I am
here, I will help you.” Darcy quickly assessed her position, hoping nothing was
broken as he gently lifted her in his arms. This was the easy part; though she
groaned with discomfort, she did not cry out in any acute pain as he cautiously
shifted her in his embrace. The hard part, he knew, would be in ascending the
muddy bank without taking a tumble himself.
Darcy looked about, finding a place where the
foliage on the ground was thickest, that it might give his boots better
purchase as he took slow, deliberate steps away from the creek bed. Once he was
back on level ground, he assessed Elizabeth’s condition once more. The heavy
rain had caused the blood to streak down the side of her face, but the gash
itself was a small one just above her ear. He slowly shrugged his right
shoulder, where her head had come to rest, and a moment later she looked up at
him.
Her whole body tensed, and she pressed a hand
against his chest as her startled cry gave way to a moan of pain. “Mr. Darcy!”
“You fell,” he said softly.
“I know!” She squirmed in his arms and cried out
again. “Put me down!”
“I will, if you can bear it. I fear you are too
injured to walk.”
Elizabeth began to writhe and kick at him. “Put
me down this instant, or I shall scream!”
“I doubt anybody would hear you, to come to your
aid – which is what I am trying to do,” Darcy retorted. “I will set you down if
you would kindly cooperate with me a moment longer – I have no wish to see you
hurt, even if we are not to be friends.”
Elizabeth clenched her jaw and glared up at him
as Darcy slowly lowered her to her feet, her body cold and trembling against
his. She shoved him away as soon as her feet touched the ground, and in the
next instant she was doubled over in pain, holding herself about the ribs as
she cried out in anguish. The side of her dress that was covered in mud had
also ripped, and Darcy could see her lift one foot off the ground, her ankle
twisting as she tumbled backward onto the grass. A few yards behind her, his
horse let out a restless cry, and Elizabeth covered her face with her hands and
shrieked.
“You are injured,” Darcy said, kneeling beside
her as he blinked away the raindrops that pricked his eyes.
“This is not happening,” she cried, sobbing and
shaking.
“It is, I am afraid. You need a doctor.” Darcy
reached for her ankle to examine it, but she scrambled backward. She looked
over her shoulder at Shakespeare and screamed again, her body quivering with
fear.
“Leave me alone – take your horse and go,” she
shouted at him.
“You cannot even walk,” Darcy huffed, his
frustration mounting. “If I leave you here alone and injured in the rain, you
will die.”
Again Elizabeth screamed, rolling over onto her
uninjured side as she pounded the earth with her fist. Darcy knew they could
not remain at such an impasse, despite the impropriety of their circumstances,
and all her other reasons for disdaining his assistance. She could be angry all
she liked, once they were both safe and dry. Without warning her of his
intentions, Darcy scooped her up in his arms once more, and began to carry her
toward his horse.
“No,” she cried. “Please, no! It is too
dangerous!”
“I will not allow any further harm to come to
you, I swear it,” Darcy replied. “It is the only thing to be done.”
Elizabeth clutched his lapel and looked up at
him in high alarm. “Please, I beg you – I do not like horses.”
“Do you know how to ride?”
“No, I was never permitted to learn. Benjamin
was going to teach me, but he…”
Elizabeth’s words gave way to sobs, but Darcy
swiftly guessed the rest. Mrs. Bennet had told Bingley that her son broke his
neck in a fall; Darcy began to imagine what sort of fall she had meant.
“Shakespeare and I will not let you fall,” Darcy
whispered into Elizabeth’s ear, tightening his grip on her just enough to give
some reassurance without harming her injuries. They reached the place where his
horse was tethered, and Darcy murmured a few placating words to the great
stallion before he began to lift Elizabeth up. “All you have to do is hold on
for a moment. Can you do that?”
Elizabeth slumped forward and wept as she clung
to the reins, but she managed to stay on the horse while Darcy removed his coat
and wrapped it around her before climbing up behind her. Once in the saddle, he
drew Elizabeth closer. “Lean back against me,” he said softly; she gasped and
trembled against him, but in the end she complied. “I will make sure you do not
fall. We will take it slow so that you are not jostled about too much, but
there is some need for expediency – Netherfield is much closer.”
Elizabeth made no reply, though he had expected her to protest. Her body slumped back against his as the horse began to descend the muddy hill, and Darcy realized Elizabeth had fainted in his arms.
***
So sorry to leave you all hanging at such a crucial moment! As you may suppose, it will be Elizabeth to convalesce at Netherfield. What might that mean for Jane and Mr. Bingley? How will Mr. Darcy make amends when angry Lizzy regains consciousness? And will Mr. Darcy play matchmaker, or will some other Austen character step in to take on the role? Follow my blog tour for more glimpses into the twists and turns of Handsome, Clever, & Rich - and don’t miss your chance to win a free digital copy of the book!
Author Bio
Jayne Bamber is a life-long Austen fan, and a total sucker for costume dramas. Jayne read her first Austen variation as a teenager and has spent more than a decade devouring as many of them as she can. This of course has led her to the ultimate conclusion of her addiction, writing one herself.
Jayne’s
favorite Austen work is Sense and Sensibility, though Sanditon is a strong
second. Despite her love for Pride and Prejudice, Jayne realizes that she is no
Lizzy Bennet, and is in fact growing up to be Mrs. Bennet more and more each
day.
* * *
Same, Jayne, same. I always dreamed I’d be Elizabeth Bennet, but sadly I am closer to Mrs Bennet. My poor nerves!
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Buy Links
Handsome, Clever & Rich is available to buy now in Kindle and Kindle Unlimited. I believe a paperback is due to follow soon.
• Amazon US • Amazon UK • Amazon CA • Add to Goodreads shelf
Giveaway
Time
Jayne Bamber is giving away an ebook of Handsome, Clever & Rich. To enter please use the Rafflecopter
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Another new book to add to tbr pile! I love when there's references etc to other books by Jane
ReplyDeleteLOL, she's quite the tartar in this segment. What a teaser excerpt! ;)
ReplyDeleteloved the excerpt.
ReplyDeletePoor Lizzy!
ReplyDeleteCongratulations on your new book. Interesting changes in the story. Always eager to read blending of characters (Buturot)
ReplyDelete