Only days after his disastrous proposal, the untimely death of Anne de Bourgh draws Fitzwilliam Darcy and his cousin Colonel Alexander Fitzwilliam back to Rosings Park before Elizabeth Bennet has left the neighborhood. Their return finds Rosings swathed in mourning. In death, Anne is revealed as having lived a rich life of the mind, and she plotted rather constantly to escape her loathsome mother, Lady Catherine de Bourgh. Anne's journal-spirited into the hands of Elizabeth and Charlotte Collins-holds her candid observations on life and her family. It also exposes her final, and sadly fatal,...
Only days after his disastrous proposal, the untimely death of Anne de Bourgh draws Fitzwilliam Darcy and his cousin Colonel Alexander Fitzwilliam bac...
"Jane Bennet had a heart to break after all, and I am a party to it." --Fitzwilliam Darcy
One simple, uncharacteristic subterfuge leaves Fitzwilliam Darcy needing to apologize to nearly everyone he knows When Charles Bingley reaps the sad repercussions of Mr. Darcy's sin of omission, Elizabeth Bennet's clear-eyed view of the facts gives her the upper hand in a long-distance battle of wills with Mr. Bingley's former friend. By the time Mr. Darcy and Elizabeth meet--repeatedly--in the groves of Rosings Park, neither knows the whole truth except that somehow,...
"Jane Bennet had a heart to break after all, and I am a party to it." --Fitzwilliam Darcy