By Colette L. Saucier (Guest Blogger)
A lovely review of my novel
Pulse and Prejudice, the paranormal adaptation of Jane
Austen’s classic romance, was recently posted on Amazon under the
heading “Mr.
Darcy makes the perfect vampire hero.”
In an
era where some vampires use sunscreen and sparkle (whilst dealing
with teen angst), “vampire hero” loses some of its oxymoronic
value. Why is it, though, that these beings considered monsters since
antiquity have now gained a starring role in our romantic fantasies?
Vampires were something to
be feared, not desired. Earlier this year, desecrated graves were
discovered in Bulgaria, rods thrust through their chests to prevent
them from rising from the dead. In his Dictionnaire Philosophique,
Voltaire described the common belief of the time:
These vampires were corpses, who went out of their graves at night to
suck the blood of the living, either at their throats or stomachs,
after which they returned to their cemeteries. The persons so sucked
waned, grew pale, and fell into consumption; while the sucking
corpses grew fat, got rosy, and enjoyed an excellent appetite.
The situation became so
serious that the Empress of Austria finally sent people out to
investigate and declare that vampires did not exist just to allow the
dead to rest in peace.
Once (generally) accepted
that vampires were not real, the legends still fed the imagination.
In 1813, Lord Byron wrote about them in The Giaour:
But first, on earth as Vampire sent,
Thy corse shall from its tomb be rent:
Then ghastly haunt thy native place,
And suck the blood of all thy race;
There from thy daughter, sister, wife,
At midnight drain the stream of life;
Yet loathe the banquet which perforce
Must feed thy livid living corse:
Thy victims ere they yet expire
Shall know the demon for their sire,
As cursing thee, thou cursing them,
Thy flowers are withered on the stem.
Hardly the image of the dark, handsome,
brooding, conflicted vampire we think of today! That image came from
John Polidori, Lord Byron’s personal physician. Ironically, he
based The Vampyre on Lord Byron himself. Although still a
murderer, Polidori’s Lord Ruthven – a debonair British nobleman –
had all the appearances of a gentleman, thus changing the face of
vampires forever.
In Dracula, Bram Stoker created
a vampire that was both monster and romantic figure. Dracula creates
a bond with Mina through blood, and she is powerless to resist.
Indeed, many have speculated that, by relieving women of the
responsibility of their sexuality, they were also absolved of any
guilt associated with their desires. (Le Fanu’s Carmilla
explores the relationship between two women – a verboten topic in
the Victorian age!) Vampire romances were the ultimate bodice-ripper,
with a hero unable to control his desire for the heroine, and the
heroine helpless to resist. Swoon!
Being an adaptation of the Jane Austen
novel, Pulse and Prejudice does not venture into the
bodice-ripping territory (but wait until the sequel!). Although the
vampire Darcy has the power to seduce Elizabeth Bennet, would he be
too much of a gentleman to use it? Indeed, that is the theme of the
novel: Darcy’s struggle to overcome his desire for Elizabeth. He
faced such a challenge in Pride and Prejudice as well, but now
the stakes are far higher than differences in social sphere.
About Pulse and Prejudice
In this thrilling and sensual
adaptation of the classic love story, Elizabeth Bennet and the
citizens of Hertfordshire know Fitzwilliam Darcy to be a proud,
unpleasant sort of man, but they never suspect the dark secret of his
true nature. He is not a man at all – but a vampire.
When the haughty and wealthy Mr. Darcy
arrives in the rural county, he finds he cannot control his
attraction to Elizabeth Bennet – a horrifying thought because, as
she is too far below his social standing to ignite his heart, he
fears she must appeal to the dark impulses he struggles to suppress.
Set against the vivid backdrop of historical Regency England, this
adaptation of the classic love story follows the cursed Mr. Darcy as
he endeavours to overcome both his love and his bloodlust for Miss
Elizabeth Bennet.
Excerpt
Darcy leaned in with
his hands on either side of the doorframe and let his forehead fall
against the door. He closed his eyes and imagined Elizabeth lying on
the bed, her hair splayed out on the pillow, the eyes that had
challenged him so brightly just that evening now closed in repose.
What little effort, how few steps it would take, for him to be upon
her, taking what he needed, sating his thirst.
He pushed himself
away from the door and leaned back against the wall beside, despair
filling him. He had stood watch over Elizabeth and her sister for two
nights and had come back to do so again, to protect them from the
very thing he now ached to do himself. The irony sickened him but did
not staunch his desire.
Gathering all the resolve he knew it would
require to return to his room, he stepped away from the wall. Darcy turned just as
the door opened and Elizabeth appeared. They cried out in surprise
simultaneously.
“Mr. Darcy!”
“Eliz-a-Miss
Bennet!”
She was dressed in
her night-rail and wrapper; and, though more modest than even her day
dresses, the sight set his nerves on edge. Her hair hung down as he
had imagined. She held one hand to her heart as the other gripped a
candlestick.
“Mr. Darcy, you
frightened me! What do you mean by all this skulking about in the
dark? How can you even see where you are going?”
He steadied himself
before speaking. “I seem to have mislaid my book. I was unable to
sleep and thought to read.”
“The Lord Nelson?
I believe I saw it in the library on the sideboard.”
He nodded. “That
would be a good place for it.”
She
smiled. “Indeed. Although if you are looking for the second volume,
you may have to wrest it away from Miss Bingley,” she said with a
glint in her eye. He smiled at that; but then they both became
sensible to the impropriety of their current circumstance and their
close proximity. “I was on my way to check on Jane.”
He knew he should
step aside, but he did not. He knew he should look away, but he did
not. He held her eyes in his stare, his resistance faltering. Another
moment and he might have moved towards her, reached his hand to hold
the nape of her neck, pierced her flesh with his aching teeth,
pressed his mouth upon her lips; but the light from her candle
illuminated his face, and he saw his wan reflection in her eyes. As
with all those with his curse, he could not bear the sight of his own
reflection, a vision of death itself. Her candle flickered out in an
instant, and she gasped and broke her gaze.
“There...must be a
draught,” she said. They were in darkness, save the moonlight from
the window behind her, as soft as her voice. Something made her step
back from him; then she turned away. “Let me find the tinderbox.”
When she looked back, he was gone.
About the Author
Colette Saucier has
been writing poems, short stories, and novellas since grade school.
She devoted fifteen months traveling to Britain and researching
Regency England, as well as vampire lore and literature, to complete
her first full-length novel Pulse and
Prejudice.
Colette is also the
author of All My Tomorrows,
a modern tale of pride and prejudice for the twenty-first century.
Her current projects include a sequel to
Pulse and Prejudice entitled Dearest
Bloodiest Elizabeth, set in Antebellum
New Orleans. She lives in South Louisiana with her historian husband
and their two dogs.
6 comments:
Greetings, Colette!
Welcome to Beyond Romance! Pulse and Prejudice sounds absolutely delicious. The excerpt has a very Austen-like sound to it.
Thanks for being my guest, and good luck with your books.
Thanks so much for inviting me, Lisabet!
I wrote Pulse & Prejudice using only Regency language and adhered to 19th century style. I wanted it to be as if Jane Austen had conceived Mr. Darcy as a vampire all along!
I hope your followers will enjoy it!
Colette
Wonderful excerpt, Colette. This just goes to show that touch isn't always neened to form a pleasureable rise. I could feel the tension between them so clearly, it was so alluring and definitely left me wanting more. Love it, well done! :)
~Jen
Very delicious, Colette. I'm not an Austen fan and only seem to be able to connect to her stories through remixes. :) Yours definitely intrigues me.
Thanks, Jen! I hope you will read the rest of it! ;)
Thank you! I do hope that means you will check it out!
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