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Every Savage Can DanceHistorical · Lory Lilian
Every Savage Can Dance is a romantic story of Elizabeth and Darcy, recommended for readers of all ages. It contains moderate angst, fast pacing, many unexpected turns of events, and some changes in several characters. It will reveal Elizabeth and Darcy slowly falling in love with each other and taking care of each other in a shared endeavour to solve difficult problems. Twists that appear along the road will induce them to act in ways a little bit out of character and out of decorum — which hopefully will please readers and put a smile on their faces.
The story begins in line with canon, with Mr Wickham’s arrival in Meryton. Unlike canon, though, Mr Wickham’s new employment in the regiment proves to be part of an elaborate plot that involves other characters and causes significant consequences.
Darcy decides to warn Mr Bennet and Colonel Forster about his nemesis’s true nature, but he is only partly believed. His life is put in danger, and he is found injured by Elizabeth and Mrs Bennet and taken to Longbourn. Fear for his health also brings Miss Darcy and Colonel Fitzwilliam to Hertfordshire, allowing the two families opportunities to mingle.
Darcy’s road to recovery is sprinkled with sweet interactions with Elizabeth, as well as with struggles to solve an enigma and thwart a conspiracy.
The Netherfield ball plays an important role in the story, though not in the way we are accustomed to.
And Mr Darcy will admit not only that he is deeply in love with Elizabeth and that she is his perfect match, but also that he adores dancing with her, on any occasion, even though he once called her tolerable and claimed every savage can dance.
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Honour, Decorum & PrudenceHistorical · Lory Lilian
What if there was a previous connection between Mr Bennet and the Darcy family through Mr Darcy's uncle, the widower Lord Matlock?
Fitzwilliam Darcy has always been a man of self-control who has always tried to keep his weaknesses under good regulation. His main concern in life is the care of his sister and his duty towards Pemberley, his family's legacy, and his name.
Part of this duty is to find a wife — someone to fulfil the responsibilities attached to the name of Mrs Darcy — the most difficult of all his tasks.
His beliefs and principles are called into question when he joins his friend Mr Bingley in Hertfordshire and meets a young woman with a quick mind, unrestrained manners, a strong character, and a pair of the most beautiful eyes in a pretty face. A woman who enchants and charms him as nobody else ever has — especially when she spends a few days at Netherfield, nursing her sister — and attracts him so strongly.
Towards the end of November, a week before the Netherfield ball, three gentlemen arrive in Hertfordshire to disrupt the peace and to alter Darcy's plans: Mr Collins, a cousin of Mr Bennet's who is visiting Longbourn; George Wickham, a former acquaintance who is joining the militia regiment encamped nearby; and Lord Matlock, the brother of Mr Darcy's late mother.
Several years after losing his wife, Lord Matlock is enjoying life to the fullest and is determined that his too-serious nephew Fitzwilliam Darcy do the same.
What nobody in Meryton knows is that Lord Matlock has a previous acquaintance with Mr Bennet, and the two were friends in their youth.
Furthermore, there is a dramatic secret that has bound the two former friends through the decades, which, once revealed, could significantly harm Lord Matlock's family.
The unexpected reunion between Mr Bennet and Lord Matlock will bring some disruption to the people of Meryton, Longbourn, and Netherfield and will change the course of events as we know it from canon.
Will this change be for the better or worse? Will Mr Bingley and Jane's and Mr Darcy and Elizabeth's journeys towards happiness be shorter or longer than those we already know?
We shall find out together in this romantic, witty story, recommended for readers of all ages.
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