Letter to Georgiana: A Sweet Pride and Prejudice Variation
David Núñez

Fitzwilliam Darcy always writes two letters to his sister.
One is honest, unfiltered, emotional, never meant to be sent. The other is safe, revised, and appropriate.
But while Elizabeth Bennet is staying at Netherfield Park to care for her sick sister, Darcy makes a mistake. In a moment of distraction, he pours his carefully repressed feelings into the first version… and sends it.
When Georgiana receives the letter, she assumes it’s a declaration of his engagement to Elizabeth. Days later, she arrives at Netherfield, eager to meet her future sister-in-law.
“You have trapped yourself in the most English scandal imaginable,” Richard said. “Entirely internal. No scandal, no impropriety, just a man haunted by his own unspoken feelings and a letter never meant to be read.”
It’s a quiet kind of upheaval, the kind that begins in private, but ends in complete transformation.
Set in the days leading to the Netherfield Ball, Letter to Georgiana is a tender, character-driven variation of Pride and Prejudice, a sweet Regency novella that reimagines Austen’s beloved pair with warmth, wit, and grace.
For those who treasure character over courtship and quiet revelations over grand declarations