Part 1

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A/N - It has been so long since I wrote and posted anything new here but I was working on this fun little post-P&P Christmas-in-July story and thought it might be fun to share here before publishing. Hope you enjoy! Meg x

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"It is so warm today!" Mrs Elizabeth Darcy declared, fanning herself furiously with a letter she had lately received from Jane and was writing a reply to. "I was given to believe that it was cooler to the north of the country!"

"It is often so," her husband, Mr Fitzwilliam Darcy conceded, as he exchanged an amused glance with his sister, Georgiana. "But rarely in July. It is midsummer, dearest. If you want to escape these temperatures I fear you will have to go to the very tip of Scotland and that is not a journey I see fit to undertake." He tugged at his collar, the only evidence he would permit of his own discomfort. "Especially when it is so warm today."

Elizabeth shot him a look that was half affectionate, half murderous and flopped unceremoniously into a chair.

"Poor Lizzy," Georgiana said, stepping to her new-sister-in-law's defence, as she often did. "You cannot imagine how we ladies suffer, Fitzwilliam. And you are rarely as sympathetic as you might be."

"I am very sympathetic." Darcy's voice was one of indifference: he was bowed once more over his letters, his dark eyes rapidly passing over lines of scribbled text that only he could make any sense of. "But I do not see what can be done about it. I am not a wizard, Georgiana. I cannot conjure up storm clouds out of nowhere."

"How unfortunate you are not!" Elizabeth sighed. "I would settle for a slight breeze, you need not trouble yourself to summon a tempest." She blew her husband a kiss and he rolled his eyes at her before returning to his letter, the smile playing about his lips betraying the fact that he had become rather used to this bickering way the newly-married Mr and Mrs Darcy had about them.

Georgiana smiled too. For so long the summers had stretched endlessly at Pemberley, with her brother alone for company. She could not begin to count the ways her life had improved since he had returned home with a wife in tow. And what a fine wife Elizabeth Bennet had turned out to be! She seemed to understand Fitzwilliam almost as well as he understood himself and was quick to laugh him out of any tempers he fell into so that life in Derbyshire had become very jolly indeed, despite the present heat.

"Perhaps we should venture outdoors for a walk, Lizzy. We might enjoy what little breeze there is for an hour in the shade of a tree."

"That is an excellent idea. Will you join us, my love?"

Fitzwilliam's head was still bent over his letter and it took two attempts for his wife to catch his attention. At last, he looked up.

"We are going for a walk," Elizabeth said, speaking slowly and carefully as if she were addressing a foreigner or a fool and Fitzwilliam applied a patient smile to his face, taking the gentle censure as it was meant.

"A fine idea. I give you leave to enjoy it."

"We shall go with or without your leave! Come, Georgiana, your brother is being obtuse. Let us leave him to his very important correspondence." She glanced over her own letter once more and laid it by. "Perhaps I will feel more in a humour to write to Jane after a little fresh air to clear my head."

"I shall request tea to be brought upon your return," Darcy said, with a good-natured wave. "You will not be more than an hour, I suppose?"

"Probably," Georgiana said.

"Perhaps," was Lizzy's caveat. Her eyes danced and she grinned at her sister-in-law. "Who knows what adventures may befall two young ladies at the boundaries of their estate!"

"Try not to enjoy yourself too much, my dear! And do take care to return my sister in one piece."

Georgiana and Elizabeth could hear Fitzwilliam's laughter as they made their way down the corridor and tried to resist joining him.

"I've half a mind to invent just such an adventure to tell him on our way back. That will put paid to his teasing." Lizzy slipped an arm through Georgiana's as they walked. "Come, Georgiana, you must help me compose it. Where shall we begin? A highwayman?"

"But we shan't be near a road."

"Quite so! Hmm..." Lizzy withdrew her arm just long enough to reach for her bonnet. "A vagabond, then! Or several?"

"A peddler. Come to sell his wares." Georgiana tied the wide blue ribbon of her bonnet securely under her chin and the two young ladies emerged into the bright afternoon sun.

"A fortune teller!" Elizabeth beamed. "Yes, we shall say we crossed paths with a fortune teller, who told us both the secrets of the days and weeks to come." Light danced in her eyes as she thought over this. "We might orchestrate several little follies over the next few days to persuade him of her accurate predictions. Oh, yes! How merry a joke that will be." She rubbed her hands with glee and Georgiana stifled her laughter.

"One day he will tire of you making such mischief."

"I dare say he tires of it already, but I shall not let that deter me!" Elizabeth laughed. "I am so fortunate to have married him, and I love him dearly, but your brother can be so very serious at times! He is a young man, still! He ought to act freely and without care at least once in his life!"

"I dare say he did, in asking you to marry him," Georgiana said, stubbornly. "Recall that his first attempt was not met with success."

"Oh, do not remind me!" Lizzy flushed from embarrassment at this recollection as much as from the heat. "I dare say he told you many terrible things about me during that particular period of our acquaintance. I am only grateful you did not believe them all! For imagine how terrible it would be to marry Mr Darcy only to have you, his treasured sister, despise me!"

"I never could!" Georgiana was dedicated in her affections, and she had liked Elizabeth from the first moment of their meeting, even before she knew that this was the Elizabeth Bennet who had so captured her brother's heart. She had secretly longed for the pair to resolve their differences and be wed and was only too delighted when the longed-for wedding took place. Marriage had not only brought her brother happily home again to Pemberley, with no desire to leave it, but it had also brought her the one thing she had always longed for: a sister. Georgiana felt as if life was very nearly completely perfect.

If only I might one day have such a love of my own... She closed her eyes, forcing away the memories that sought to consume her whenever she thought of love, however fleetingly. Her one experience with romance had been enough to make her wise to its promises for life. George Wickham had broken her heart, but enough time had passed now that that strong vessel had begun to mend. Perhaps one day I will learn to love again, Georgiana thought. If only I might meet the right man...

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