Sunday, August 18, 2013

POPULAR by SUMMER DAY (Step Into Tomorrow: chapter twenty-two)

Chapter Twenty-two
Step Into Tomorrow    
    I wound up hovering near the returns shoot all by myself.
    It was quiet inside, of course. I was reminded me of that ancient scene in Doctor Zhivago when Lara and Yuri meet again in the library after being apart for so long. It’s such a great classic, romantic movie. But where was my yummy Yuri in real life ?
    I’d left Ethan standing in the street. How could I have come to the local library expecting to find him?
    I didn’t. I’d come here to hide.
    What had come over me? Running away from true love maybe?
    Here I was, in Sunrise library, acting like a total nerd, acting like… Rafe Martin.
    And there he was, sitting in the corner. When he looked up and saw me I noticed even Rafe Martin looked down again quickly. He pretended he didn’t know me.  
     I was shunned in my own neighborhood. I stood by the wall, seriously, and for the first time since I was six, I walked into the stacks and cried.
    “Honey?” I stopped sniffing, wiped my eyes and turned around. He put his hand on my shoulder.
    It was Rafe, through all my unintended meanness, the object of my derision had reached out to me.   
     “What’s up?”
     “I was just…” I picked up a copy of How to Forge the Right Teen Path and Follow Your Teenage Bliss.
    “Looking for this?” He asked.
     “Kind of...”
    I wiped my eyes again. I didn’t think I’d been noticeably shedding tears until Rafe handed me a tissue.
    “I told Hilary the ‘misunderstanding’ about the dance, well, it was all my fault…” I sniffed.
    “Oh, it’s okay. I just texted her. We’re going to the movies on the weekend. She explained everything – how she was sorry and how she’d regretted not hanging out with me earlier… She said she thought she’d liked someone else but that was just for a moment.”
    “So she…” I realized Hilary had changed her mind, ignored my advice and made the first move. Maybe she’d just pretended to want Ethan to annoy me. Actually, it was the second move because Rafe had approached her in the first instance, but whatever. It served me right.
    “That’s great,” I said. “That’s so great that you guys are getting together… maybe.”
    Rafe smiled.
    “Honestly, I used to intensely dislike you Honey Woodhouse. But, if it hadn’t been for you, I don’t think Hilary and I would have overcome our obstacles in the first place. I wanted to take her to the dance but I never thought about her beyond the point of that. You made me think long and hard about why I was disappointed that she rejected me. I even went away for the weekend to forget her. I liked her heaps more than I even realized. Don’t blame yourself, Honey. You may be out of fashion now, but tomorrow it will all be different, you’ll see.”
    Who’d have thought Rafe would have turned into the emotive voice of sunshine? Nothing was as I expected. Still, it was nice of him to try.
    “I gotta go,” I said. Everyone else’s teen worlds were coming together just as mine was falling apart; but I could never begrudge Rafe and Hilary their happiness.
    “Are you sure you’re okay now?” he asked.
    “I’m going to be,” I said.
     Then, like magic, as I walked into the sunshine (just like one of my favorite literary characters of all time - Ponyboy Curtis - from The Outsiders) and walked into tomorrow, a certain boy was there to meet me.
   “What’s up?” Ethan asked indifferently. “C’mon, you’re acting really weird. Let’s go home.”
    I wondered if Ethan would come over to go swimming at my place, as usual, the next morning. Maybe he’d even act as if nothing had happened between us. And let’s face it, nothing had. Perhaps him liking me was just all in my over-active imagination. My little romance was over before it had even begun. I did what any smart heroine from a true romance does… I took to languishing once again, on my antique, chaise lounge (the one Phoebe gifted me years ago). It was re-covered only recently in pink velvet-like material. I pulled my mohair blanket over me and read.
    I was obsessing over another great SE Hinton novel Phoebe had recommended to me – That Was Then This is Now, effectively still sulking in my room. It suddenly occurred to me that drowning my sorrows over lost romance and yet another hot marshmallow-laden chocolate was perhaps not the way to mend fences. Isolation would not help me get over being rejected by my besties, my friends, my social networks but mostly the boy next door.
   I shrugged.
   It was so obvious Ethan was just using me for my facilities. He loved my swimming pool, my game boy, my flat screen, even my tennis court. I was so spoiled, why wouldn’t he? Still, there was no sense in being a huffy little princess about it. Nobody likes a girl who can’t put on a happy face. Then it occurred to me that Ethan had all of those facilities next door. We were a pair of spoiled teens and yet I couldn’t get it together emotionally. Suddenly I was filled with more self-doubt. It must have been because my parents had over protected me. They had a distant marriage and my mom is an obsessive vacationer, but at least they tried. No, it wasn’t about them. It was all about me; too much about me. I got up and added extra hours to my roster the following week to help out at the animal shelter.
    Now, others have been taken care of, so what about me? Just then, the doorbell rang. It was Ethan.  Maria let him in.
    I snapped shut my lap top.
    I found my most fabulous swimsuit and some gloss. I grabbed the large, floppy hat that totally made me look like a glamorous movie star from the sixties and added sunglasses. Who said just because I don’t have social form any more, I shouldn’t be fabulous anyway?
   Splash.
   I swan dived into the pool. Who cared if I felt more like a duck? After a few minutes there was another splash in the water.
   Ethan swam up to me as I bobbed my head up.
   “I’ll race you underwater,” he said.
   Ethan let me win. As he surfaced, I spoke:
   “I suppose you’ve heard all about my social pariah-ism. How even the Princesses might be voting me out of my own club for being a mean, conniving matchmaker.”
   “I don’t think you’re mean – maybe a matchmaker.”    
    Huh?
   “My good matches are only by default, even you said so.”
   “I kind of lied.”
   The waterfall chugged in the background of our conversation.
   “Well, color me in. You must’ve saved the best match for last.”
   “Which one are you talking about? Ariel’s? Gigi’s?”
   “Ours.”
   If it’s possible to blush red in water, I did.
   “Race you to the waterfall…   winner gets… dinner,” he said, to deflect his embarrassing comment no doubt.
    I took off. This time, I thought about what he’d said underwater. I thought about every memory I had of him and they were all good – mostly. When they weren’t, it was just because Ethan was the only one of my peers who cared enough (or dared enough - maybe) to tell me the truth. This time, I considered letting him win but thought better of it.
    Then the strangest thing happened during the race, for the first time. We were level until mid-way, then Ethan forged ahead, beating me, just by a few seconds, to the far side. Our hands reached out almost simultaneously, but his fingers touched the wall faster.
   We were both puffed when the race ended. In our underwater world, I looked over through the haziness. While I held my breath, Ethan reached through the blue and kissed me.
   “You must have known,” he said when we surfaced, “that there has never been anyone in the history of Sunrise quite like you, Honey Woodhouse.”
    “And you should know, Ethan Knightly, that I used to be afraid of water, until we met.”
    We stood in the shallow end of the pool; under the waterfall, kissing. Ethan was taller but we matched perfectly. It was an awesome first kiss that led to a spectacular second one.  
    I have no idea what Phoebe or Dad or the dogs thought of our mushy display of emotion. I have no idea what my friends might say in future because they’re not talking to me - yet. Wednesday’s trying to mediate but so far, they’ve voted Hilary as the next head of the Princesses. I guess you reap what you sow.
     As Ethan and I lay side by side on our sun lounges, sunglasses on, cool factor in hand, I checked the temptation to connect the charger to my cell phone to see if any of my ‘friends’ had decided to start texting me again. As Sunrise got busy for the afternoon and all the unmade couples and match made couples and friendships fought for, lost and won, sorted themselves out, alone and together, Ethan and I finally made sense.
     Somehow, we were right.
     Or maybe we were just right now… 
    “Honey,” Ethan asked, “If we go to different colleges…”
    “As I’m sure we could,” I added… “after all, it’s probably more likely I will get accepted into Harvard than you…”
    “As I said, if we do… do you think you might want to marry me even if we don’t see each other much for the next few years?”
    “Well, you never know, Ethan,” I said as I looked up from my novel. “You’ll have to think about that when you decide to propose to me in a few years.”
     He smiled again.

    “Stranger things have happened,” I added as Ethan Knightly splashed me with some water. I smiled in return. It’s wild how a match happens like that, like ours, just when we least expected it; with no planning at all. I think one day, I’ll be able to tell our grandchildren all about how we met when we were neighbors and how we really didn’t like each other much at first… then we became friends and then… well, I think you know the rest. But I’ll let Phoebe tell you anyway.

POPULAR by SUMMER DAY (Epilogue by Phoebe Knightly)


Epilogue by Phoebe Knightly
Post college graduation
    It was a perfect day when Ethan and Honey got married.
    At first, we were all going to go to the most exclusive hotel in town for the reception but Honey wanted to have it at home, around the pool, near long trestle tables covered in food and drinks and lights, near the waterfall where she and Ethan fell in love.
   Honey had six bridesmaids but the head bridesmaids were me and Wednesday (Mouche’s half-sister) and little Emily Mouche, my daughter,  who was the flower girl.
    I couldn’t help but think of my best friend forever and how much Mouche would have loved such a beautiful day. 
    Mark and I gave a huge hug to Mouche and Jet Campbell’s daughter – my goddaughter, Sienna – such an adorable girl and a great ballet dancer. I’m not sure if she’ll join a dance company, but she’s so good, I think she’ll be asked to join one of the top companies if she wants to make dance her career.  It’s likely she’ll do whatever she sets her mind on  – just like Honey and Wednesday and my little Emily Mouche who is already making her opinions felt on a consistent basis.
    I don’t see enough of Sienna since she and Jet live in New York City (should I say Boston here – would they have moved from NYC or stayed?)  but when we get together it is as if she never left. Sienna loves Wednesday and Honey and Emily Mouche as well.
    It was wonderful to all be together again: the Knightlys, the Campbells and the Woodhouses. We celebrated until midnight over long trestle tables laden with flowers, ribbons, food and lights. Honey brought us all together like a lucky charm.  
    I never saw a couple (in recent years) more in love – although they denied it. Right up until the week before they actually got married. Honey was trying to over organize everything.  I told her she was in danger of becoming a bridezilla, so she stopped.
   “You are so right, Phoebe. I just want everything to be as perfect as possible.”
    And it was.





Monday, August 12, 2013

THE HOTNESS by Summer Day is on my blog now!






I hope my lovely readers are enjoying THE HOTNESS (the final chapter is now the first on my blog, so you have to go back to the beginning to read it in sequence!). This is a bridging story between PRIDE & PRINCESSES and POPULAR (but I wrote P&P and POPULAR first). Readers familiar with Pride and Prejudice are going to recognize most of the characters in The Hotness. It's not too deep, just a little bit of fun posted as written on my blog. POPULAR is pretty special to me and I'm putting that up soon. I'd like to thank my amazing readers  - because of you this blog is heading to sixty thousand views and I'm aiming towards a hundred thousand views as my goal. If you read and enjoy, please tell your friends about my blog:) lol Summer oooxxxooo.  My Blog link: http://summerdaylight.blogspot.com/




Saturday, August 10, 2013

THE HOTNESS: A Modern Teen Pride and Prejudice (chapter fifty-nine: The Truth About Darcy Donovan)

Chapter Fifty-nine
The Real Truth About Darcy Donovan

   After driving Paige home in silence, Darcy was just trying to cover for the whole evening. He was mortified. He’d never have taken Paige there if he’d known everyone was home. Blair was lovely but beyond that, his extended family were an embarrassment to an outsider.
   A joke.

That night in her room, lying in her bubble bath exasperated - apart from anything else there was no shower in the bathroom - Paige tried to distract herself from reading over her debate notes.
    Suddenly, the topics weren’t so important anymore.
    Paige stopped hoping, stopped wondering that Darcy might even be the one. He was not relationship material, he never had been, Paige told herself. Her feelings were an illusion. She had no idea why they’d spent so many days together. The evening had been a disaster. Besides, they’d never even kissed. How could she have possibly imagined he liked her? How could he expect her to like him after all those family insults? Paige was reading over her closing argument notes, when the knock at her door came.   

Paige pulled on her robe and opened the door slightly.
   Darcy Donovan was standing outside, bottle of champagne in one hand bunch of pink flowers in the other.
   “Hey, Paige.”
   “Hi Darcy.”
    “I wanted to apologize for my extended family. My Aussie family are slightly less… pompous. My sister and I… we’re really, nothing like them. Do you forgive me… again?”
   Paige paused, surprised.
  “Forgiven not forgotten… I suppose it was all quite funny in the end.”
   Darcy smiled.
  “I thought you might like to join me in a college tradition.”
  Paige paused for a moment, not understanding why she was so happy. Then she smiled, “Just a minute… I gotta… get dressed.”
  Darcy waited outside.
  He wore his favorite jeans and had a long, dark cashmere overcoat because the weather, even in summer, was chilly at midnight. They’d been teamed up against each other. For once he didn’t want to win if it meant Paige would lose. He told himself to snap out of it. That maybe this is what love is. If the winning prize was a trip to Sydney next year, he wanted her to be the one to win it.
    He didn’t know what would happen tomorrow, but he was going to make an attempt to celebrate tonight. He’d waited so long to impress Paige and although he didn’t expect anything from her, he needed to know… everything.   He thought of all the ways Paige had influenced him as he stood there in the landing. Well, she hadn’t exactly changed him, but her attitudes about certain things had rubbed off on him.
   For example, he stopped and talked with and bought lunch for, a homeless person when he was shopping in Chelsea recently. He may not have thought about doing that before he met Paige. He may not have even noticed the homeless person was a human being. He remembered Paige saying in debate class, “we are all a reflection of the way we treat society’s weakest and most vulnerable.” Deluded members of his own family had taught him that the weakest and most vulnerable had probably done something wrong to deserve their situation but Darcy knew this attitude was wrong. All human beings were just one step away from misfortune… or fortune. It was just a trick of his birth that he’d been born with so much money and he had an obligation to do the right thing. He’d found his conscience because of Paige.
    When he was interning at his uncle’s law firm, he had more compassion for the disadvantaged people he met and even advised his uncle that they should take more pro bono cases and his uncle agreed. 
    So, Paige could never know how much he meant to her, how much she had changed him – unless he told her. But, he didn’t want to be rejected, he didn’t’ know what he’d do if that happened. He’d have to wait until the right moment. He couldn’t believe he was even contemplating… and he knew they were both young, but he didn’t care. He loved Paige. They’d hardly touched but he knew how he felt. He just hoped she hadn’t taken what his grandfather said to heart. There was no way he ever wanted to marry for money.
     He felt the hotness; the appeal of a girl who didn’t even know she was the one. And for once, he knew the hotness wasn’t all about him – it was mostly about her. That’s why he’d arranged, long ago for her little sisters youtube footage to be extinguished, for Rys to keep his distance and bad influence from them. Why he’d also arranged for Ryan (who was mysteriously missing in action) to have left England yesterday on a plane, bound for LA, to meet up with Shiloh at the restaurant… right about now and declare his true love.
     Paige was the best, most amazing, most wonderful girl he’d ever met. There was nothing he would not do for her or to please her.  
     Moments later, Paige appeared.
     She was wearing her summer coat and carried a blue college scarf.
    “Okay, so where are we going?”
    “To the rooftop. I have some plans for us, c’mon.”
    Paige followed Darcy in the dark. He’d placed tea lights in a trail, flickering like presents in the night air.
    She realized there were few, if any, people she’d follow anywhere. She placed her trust in Darcy, and she’d only spent a few days getting to know him as an adult, but he was so changed from the arrogant teenager he’d been. Paige would almost describe him as humble. Hot, but humble.
   He reached out and grabbed her hand as they walked up the stairs and Paige felt thrilled. This was the one, she was sure of it. He was so cool, so Aussie, so hot.
   “This way…”
    Up they climbed to the rooftop.
    Darcy took Paige up a hidden staircase, higher and higher, they wound faster and faster up until they reached the roof of the college.
    “Look, You can see the world from here.”
    “Wow, it’s amazing. It really looks like a fairy tale.”
    Darcy laughed.
    “It’s different, it’s nothing like where I really come from.”
   “What do you mean?”
   “The sun in Australia is so strong, it makes an incredible sunset. I’d… I’d like to show it to you one day... because I love you.”
   “I’d like to see it,” Paige said, hardly believing what she heard. Paige smiled. She loved him too. It was so obvious, from the start, wasn’t it?  
   Darcy brushed her hair away from her face and leant in towards her.
   They kissed and it was perfect; they made out and it was even better.
   And then…

Honey: Do you think they did it?

Wednesday: I don’t know, Paige never told me… the scene just ‘faded to the stars’ and all of that…. But perhaps we’ll find out and write about it in Popular… and then again, maybe we won’t because when Popular starts (a few years later) I’m filming my television series and there is so much happening in your life, Honey, that we get caught up in the drama and forget about the hotness and when we first met  Darcy Donovan and Paige Bennet…

Honey: But didn’t you… I mean, in another sequel… in the final part of the Sunrise trilogy, didn’t  you get to meet Darcy at UCLA Where he’s studying film directing as a graduate student and you are an acting major? And don’tcha think that maybe, at the end of the day, they were too young to make a commitment, so then maybe Darcy was available  a few years later and you and he… when you’re older… get a chance to be together?

Wednesday: In his dreams. Are you joking? Oh, please. I have so many suitors by the time I’m a famous actress that I barely gave him a second thought beyond freshman year, but… Well, of course, don’t tell our readers all of that stuff yet…

Honey: Sure, well, the truth is I have no real proof either way of whether they did it that night… but let’s leave them together in one of the most picturesque places in the world…

Wednesday: Of course, our readers would never forgive us for not giving them their happiness.  So, Paige and Darcy were macking all over one another…

Honey:  Like… ‘Atonement’ without the tragedy.

Wednesday: So true. True love . Real love. Mr Darcy and Elizabeth Bennet type love or Edward Cullen and Bella Swan type love or…

Honey:  Or Sookie Stackhouse and her hundred plus year old soldier boy love… But, let me just say, before they dated a while,  before Ryan married Shiloh and Darcy married Paige (even though Paige won her final debate ), before they live happily ever after, I happen to know they sealed the deal.

Wednesday: Are you sure?

Honey: Of course I’m sure. I saw the film didn’t I? You know, Darcy’s graduate film which was all about two opposites meeting at high school and then finding romance at Oxford… At least that’s what I heard Paige telling Shiloh who told Coco who told Melody who told Mackenzie who told me.

Honey: So in the end, which was just the beginning…
Wednesday: of their story…
Honey & Wednesday: (which became our story)
Honey: They found true love.
Wednesday: The end… now go read Popular (it’s even better than Pride & Princesses).

Until then...



THE HOTNESS: A Modern Teen Pride and Prejudice (chapter fifty-eight: space cadets)


Chapter Fifty-eight
Space Cadets
    Paige wondered what planet he was on, but made excuses on account of his age.
Was it her imagination or did Lord Darcy actually pat her knee under the table as he slurped his Eton Mess pudding?
   “Pass the cream, dear,” was all he said as he licked his lips.
   This was like a horror film.
   It got worse, then Mackenzie arrived and sat in the seat on the other side of Paige.
   “Hey Paige, what a surprise.” Mackenzie leant in, “I got therapy, found myself in Mexico,” she said, “I’m not saying it fixed me but I’m better than I used to be, not nearly so jealous since I’ve owned myself. By the way, my modeling career is going well…”  Mackenzie talked on as Paige inched towards her and away from Lord Donovan who’d started snoring at the table.
    After dessert was served (or ‘pudding’ as it was called in England) they all (Darcy, Blair, Mackenzie and  Ryan – who’d just arrived to pick them all up and go back to town), burst into fits of giggles.
   “Paige, Blair tells me you play piano,” Lady Donovan gestured towards the grand piano in the corner of the dining room. “Let’s see how good you are.”
  “Oh, I haven’t played keyboards for a long time.”
   “Well, that’s not what Darcy said. He said he loved hearing you play when you both went to school in LA,” Blair said.
   “Yes, play Paige,” Ryan added.
   “Oh play,” Mackenzie agreed, “anything to drown out the snoring,” she added under her breath. Paige got up tentatively and walked over to the corner, sat down and played. She played an acoustic version of a pop song her youngest sister, Rebel liked.
   Then Blair reluctantly got up at her great-aunt’s urging and smiled as she sang along to Paige’s fairly hesitant playing. All the while Darcy Donovan lent in the corner and worried about the effect his difficult family would have on Paige. The music, to informed ears, was tuneful but average, but to Darcy’s ears it was perfect.
    “That’s how music sounds when the one you like performs it, even if it is out of tune and harsh, it is a welcome sound.” Blair assured him afterwards.
   Lady Donovan noticed Darcy’s look. It was admiring. At first she thought he was merely paying attention to the girl, so as not to hurt his sister’s feelings but then Lady Donovan noticed his gaze rested firmly on Paige Bennet. Lady Donovan knew she needn’t consult the family’s ancestry specialist. Paige Bennet was not part of their society. She wasn’t upper class or middle class… she wasn’t even English. She was American.
    Lady Donovan did not want her grandson going all the way to America – Australia was bad enough – but they had links there, that in itself was a worry to Lady Donovan who was becoming slightly hysterical at the thought that Pemberly could one day be taken over by Miss Paige Bennet. After all, who was her father? Who were her family and relatives? Of course, many would think this form of social snobbery no longer existed in this day and age but it was alive and well in the Donovan family.
   When the girls finished playing their song, Lady Donovan spoke up.
  “That was lovely Blair. Paige, you are right, you are not a musician to my ear.”
  Ah, that’s what I tried to tell you, Paige thought, instead, giving way to age over beauty, Paige smiled. She’d be out of the house soon enough and if Shiloh were here, she’d never make a fuss.
   Darcy looked over at Paige, horrified by his great-aunt’s rudeness.
   “Paige doesn’t want to be a musician, Aunt. Paige is going to study International Relations and maybe go to Law School...”
   “If I get in,” Paige said.
   “You will, I’m sure of it,” Darcy replied.
   “I’d like to work in human rights and be an advocate for the disadvantaged.”
  “Oh, you have a lot of those in America do you?”
   “No more so than here, Lady Donovan, if the streets of London are anything to go by,” Paige answered quickly.
   Paige had decided to fight fire with fire. Blair and Mackenzie were enjoying this.
   “Aunt, London is not like Oxfordshire and your country estate,” Darcy assured his out of touch great-aunt.
    Lady Donovan scrunched up her nose and rang the bell for tea.
   “I suppose you would like coffee, Paige, that’s very American, isn’t it?”
   “Tea will be fine, Lady Donovan.”
   Lady Donovan raised her eyebrow and when the servant was slow to arrive said, “Oh well, I’ll go and find the maid, now where is she?”
    Ryan grabbed his car keys.
   “Don’t you think we’ve had enough, Darcy? It’s almost nine?”
   “Of course,” Darcy grabbed everyone’s coats. “Let’s get out of here.”
   Darcy’s great uncle had the final say of the night.
   He spoke as if Paige had already left, as if the evening hadn’t gone badly enough.
  “Good pair of hips on that girl, Darcy. Good for breeding. Have you found out if she’s interested in marrying you yet? You know, no point in having an estate if you remain a bachelor…”
   Darcy wondered what planet he was on.
   Blair started laughing out loud but Darcy froze.
   Paige also froze as she collected her coat. It was impossible to pretend she hadn’t heard.

  When they arrived back at the college, Paige spoke first.
 “Is that true, what your uncle said?”
 “It is, sort of. He’s kind of… touched… in the head. I take no notice. I intend to make my own way in the world and not be reliant on any of my relatives.”
 “Oh,” Paige said.
 “Great gene pool, huh?”
 “I’m not sure your family would ever accept an outsider.”
  “My great-aunt already has someone lined up for me to marry, but it’s kind of a joke because, well, my sister and I have decided we don’t care if our relatives don’t leave us the houses and the businesses. I mean, there is no way my sister is ready to marry anyone… and neither am I.”
  “Oh,” Paige said. It was pretty clear Darcy had run hot, then cold. Suddenly the whole estate didn’t seem so beautiful anymore.


THE HOTNESS: A Modern Teen Pride and Prejudice (chapter fifty-seven: interrogation nation)

Chapter Fifty-seven
Interrogation Nation
  Before dinner, Darcy’s great-aunt came into the drawing room to introduce herself to Paige.
   “How do you do?” she asked rather formally, looking Paige up and down. “Where are you from dear?”
   “America, Los Angeles.”
   “Oh, really?” She looked at Darcy distastefully. He suddenly knew introducing Paige to his great-aunt so early on – before Paige was officially his girlfriend, was probably a mistake.  
   “Well, we’re really hoping Darcy ends up back in Australia with the other half or stays here after he’s finished all of this study nonsense. Wouldn’t happen if he married an American now would it?”
   Paige noted she said the word ‘American’ as if it were an infection of some sort. Paige felt like she had to defend herself, “Ah… really, we’re just friends.”
    “Yes, well, he always liked Mackenzie at school but I’m hoping he’ll warm to my Mariah when he meets her.” Lady Donovan leaned in with a whisper, “So, I’d keep my hands off him if I were you. It’ll only end in tears.”
    Paige didn’t know whether to laugh or cry.
    “Actually, we just ran into each other in town… I’m here for my college debate final.”
   “Oh…” Darcy’s great-aunt peered at Paige, “Friends as well as lovers, then. Well, I’d keep my claws off him all the same.”
   
    Darcy had started fidgeting in the corner of the room, apparently he hadn’t heard what his great-aunt said. As he wandered over, his great-aunt started smiling again, pretending to be nice.
   Thankfully, he hadn’t heard his great-aunt’s most recent insult or it would have been all out war. The pale look on Paige’s face said it all. He should never have left her alone with his great aunt and if she was this bad, imagine how much worse his great uncle (Darcy was his sole heir) might be.
   “At least he’s back from Australia,” (she pronounced it Orst-ralia), “fearfully hot place, full of colonials and the Irish, well, I suppose it takes all sorts to make a world…”
   Paige heard a cough in the corner of the room and noticed Darcy’s great-uncle in the corner hunched over an atlas.
   “This is going to be fun,” Paige thought sarcastically as the dinner party walked into the dining room and Lady Donovan talked up the value of her creepy antiques.
   Paige couldn’t wait to get home to text her sister.
   When it came to dinner, Lady Donovan had the table placements pre-arranged.
   “No no, Darcy, you sit here,” Lady Donovan patted the seat beside her. Paige was placed at the other end of the table near Lord Donovan who had not yet spoken. Let’s just say, Paige’s first meal at an English country mansion was something to remember – and not in a good way.
     Finally when pudding was served, or did she imagine it, Lord Donovan looked up from his newspaper and spoke, “nice day for hunting then?”



THE HOTNESS: A Modern Teen Pride and Prejudice (chapter fifty-six: meeting Darcy's family)

Chapter Fifty-six
Meeting Darcy’s family

   Darcy and Paige had seen each other every day since they’d reconnected. On this particular day, Darcy, Paige and Blair decided to have brunch together. They unpacked the picnic basket, laden with food, in the meadow near the Donovan estate.
  “It’s been great to meet you, Paige. Before we met, my brother described you as the most talented, clever and prettiest girl he’s ever met.”
   Paige blushed and looked confused.
   “Obviously, he exaggerated.”
   Blair smiled, “My brother never exaggerates.”
   Darcy looked embarrassed as his sister continued, “Great aunt Donovan is way too strict, but it’s going to be great now that Darcy has given me an excuse to escape. Hey, you guys have to come see my band – we’re playing in town. We just started it. Jethro – we met in a coffee shop in town - well, he’s the guitarist. You have to meet him.”
    Blair started to pack up after they’d finished eating then dragged Paige towards the stables.
   Jethro, who looked about sixteen, was making sure the horses were fed and looked up and waved as Blair spoke.
   “He looks nice.”
   “Just nice?”
   “Also cute,” Paige added.
   “What do you think of my brother? I’ve decided, you both make the perfect couple.”
   “Wow, I wasn’t expecting you to be so… subtle, Blair,” Paige laughed. “I mean, we’ve only just reconnected but… I like him more than I ever thought I would. He’s… he’s amazing.”
   “I know,” Blair said, “for a brother.”
   Paige was taken aback and didn’t’ know what to say as they spread the blankets out, a view of the Donovan estate surrounding them
   “In the beginning, I’m sure he’s told you, we weren’t even friends. We really hated each other…”  
    “Mmm… well, he told me all about you. How you were the smartest girl he’d ever met and how much he admired you. It took him ages to stop talking about you once we got back to Sydney.”
    “Ah yes, but he did stop.”
   “Well, everyone stops at some time. Without any encouragement it’s impossible to continue. You should know, I don’t give my approval lightly,” Blair joked, “but my brother is the best person I know. He really is. Ryan and his friends will tell you he’s a player but that’s only because he hasn’t met the right girl… until now.”
   Blair looked straight at Paige and smiled as she threw some flat rocks across the pond.
   “Do you play any instruments, Paige?”
   “Oh, keyboard, just a bit.”
   “You should come to our practice up at the house this afternoon.”
   “Well, I have debate finals tomorrow. The two winning teams win a prize for themselves and their university… another overseas trip to wherever the finals are held next year, I suppose. Rumor has it, it’s Sydney, Australia.”
   “Good,” Blair said, “But you have to eat so you and Darcy are staying for dinner. It’s so boring with just family, even though I love them all of course. The only thing they have to talk about is me and my scandalous career in music and if I’m eating well or if I’m depressed, you can imagine.”
   “Sort of,” Paige said.
   “Good. Soon you have to meet the relatives. Darcy can’t keep putting it off forever. Somehow he’s managed to avoid them, until now.”

   After lunch, which was delicious, the sky covered over.
   Instead of going swimming in the lake the group decided to go back to the house. Once there, they dried off and Paige was waiting in the library when Darcy came in drying his hair. He took Paige’s hands.
   “I hope you can stay for dinner. I have to warn you, though. Ryan and Mackenzie said they have nothing planned this weekend, so Aunt invited them… but I think you’ll find Mackenzie has changed quite a lot over the previous two years… and we could always leave early. My family are going to be… insulted though, if we don’t make an effort.”
   Paige paused then said, “I better brush up on my manners.”     .
  “Don’t be stupid. They’ll need to brush up on theirs. I should warn you, they are all a bit… cray cray.”
  Darcy smiled, “Apart from that, thank you for giving me a chance to impress you again,” he smiled.
   Is that what she was doing? Paige hardly knew her own mind when she was around Darcy. His world was both weird and intoxicating.


THE HOTNESS: A Modern Teen Pride and Prejudice (chapter fifty-five: The beginning of how it all went down)


Chapter Fifty-five
The Beginning of how it all went down

We (me and Wednesday) have wondered how to tell the next part of the story… the beginning of the end, so to speak.
    There were many dates, debates, conversations and interactions over that fortnight but we’ve decided to leave most of them out and focus on the romance…

The next part is an account of the events that took place in England  during that week of summer when the final debate was drawing near. It all went down when Darcy and Paige were (obviously) loving on  each other and when Paige had finally  realized Darcy wasn’t quite the person she’d been led to believe, but so much more.


 *Again, Paige Bennet told us all about the story upon her return to the USofA… but you still have to suspend disbelief as we take you into this other world – this world of another country a whole other ‘class system’ and some seriously weird friends & relatives…