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Jack Caldwell
The Three Colonels
Jane Austen's Fighting Men

   To Barbara,
   who believed in me from the first.

Author’s Note 

   The Three Colonels is a sequel to the Jane Austen novels Pride and Prejudice and Sense and Sensibility. I use Austen’s characters from these and her other novels in the body of this story.
   Austen aficionados differ in opinion as to exactly when during the Georgian/Regency period the novels take place. For matters of continuity, I chose to date the action in the original novels based on the year of publication, rather than the years Austen originally wrote them (1795–1796). I feel justified in this, since Austen substantially edited both Pride and Prejudice and Sense and Sensibility in the years prior to publication.
   Therefore, I have dated Pride and Prejudice (published 1813) between 1811 and 1812, while Sense and Sensibility (1811) is set in 1810.
   By making this choice, I believe I have opened the wonderful Jane Austen universe to great possibilities. I hope you enjoy the results.
   —Jack Caldwell
   Faribault, Minnesota, July 2011

Dramatis Personae

   [*]—Historical Character
 
   Delaford Manor, Dorsetshire
   Colonel Christopher Brandon, British Army (inactive)—Owner of Delaford Manor, magistrate of Delaford. A veteran of the wars of the French Revolution and the early Napoleonic conflicts, he holds an honorary position in the Life Guards. Close friend to both Colonels Fitzwilliam and Buford and a confidant of Wellington.
   Marianne Dashwood Brandon—Wife of Colonel Brandon (1813), mother of Joy Brandon, and friend to Elizabeth Darcy and Jane Bingley
   Joy Brandon—Daughter of Christopher and Marianne Brandon (1814)
   The Rev. Edward Ferrars—Rector of Delaford Parish
   Elinor Dashwood Ferrars—Wife of Edward Ferrars, sister to Marianne Brandon
   Mr. McIntosh—Steward of Delaford Manor
 
   Mayfield, Nottinghamshire
   Charles Bingley—Head of the Bingley family, who until recently was in trade. Former lessee of Netherfield in Hertfordshire, which he quits in 1814 for an estate of his own in Nottinghamshire, thirty miles from Pemberley. The particular friend of Mr. Darcy.
   Jane Bennet Bingley—Wife of Charles Bingley (1812), mother of Susan Frances Bingley
   Susan Frances Bingley—Daughter of Charles and Jane Bingley (1813)
   Caroline Bingley—Sister to Charles Bingley, friend to Annabella Adams
   Louisa Bingley Hurst—Wife of Geoffrey Hurst, sister to Charles and Caroline Bingley
 
   Longbourn, Meryton, Hertfordshire
   Thomas Bennet—Owner of Longbourn, head of the Bennet family
   Frances Gardiner Bennet—Wife of Thomas Bennet, mother of Jane Bingley, Elizabeth Darcy, Lydia Wickham, Mary Bennet, and Catherine Bennet
   Mary Bennet—Daughter of Thomas Bennet
   Kitty Bennet—Daughter of Thomas Bennet
   Thomas Tucker, Esq—Clerk in Mr. Phillips’s law firm
 
   Pemberley, Lambton, Derbyshire
   Fitzwilliam Darcy—Owner of Pemberley, head of the Darcy family, nephew to the Earl of Matlock and Lady Catherine de Bourgh, cousin to Colonel Fitzwilliam, friend to Colonel Brandon
   Elizabeth Bennet Darcy—Wife of Fitzwilliam Darcy (1812), mother of Bennet Darcy, friend to the Dashwood sisters
   Bennet Edward George Darcy—Son and heir of Fitzwilliam and Elizabeth Darcy (1814)
   Georgiana Darcy—Only sister to Fitzwilliam Darcy
   The Rev. Franklin Southerland—Rector of Kympton Parish
 
   Matlock Manor, Matlock, Derbyshire
   Lord Hugh Fitzwilliam, 5th Earl of Matlock—Head of the Fitzwilliam family, brother to Lady Catherine de Bourgh
   Lady Alexandria Fitzwilliam, Countess Matlock—Wife of Lord Matlock
   Andrew, Viscount Fitzwilliam of Matlock—Eldest son and heir of Lord and Lady Matlock
   Colonel the Hon. Richard Fitzwilliam, ——rd Lt. Dragoons, British Army—Second son of Lord and Lady Matlock, veteran of the Peninsular War, comrade of Colonel Buford
 
   Buford Manor, Wales
   Mrs. Albertine Buford—Matriarch of the Buford family. Of French stock, her family fled the Revolution.
   Philip Buford—Eldest son of Albertine Buford, owner of Buford Manor
   Rebecca Buford—Wife of Philip Buford
   Colonel Sir John Buford, CB, ——nd Lt. Dragoons, British Army—Second son of Albertine Buford, he earned the Order of the Bath due to his service during the Peninsular War. Confidant of Wellington.
   Lady Suzanne Buford Douglas—Daughter of Albertine Buford, wife of Lord Douglas of Scotland
 
   Rosings Park, Hunsford, Kent
   Lady Catherine Fitzwilliam de Bourgh—Widow of Sir Lewis de Bourgh, Bart., owner of Rosings, sister to Lord Matlock
   Anne de Bourgh—Daughter of Lady Catherine
   Mrs. Jenkinson—Companion to Anne de Bourgh
   The Rev. William Collins—Rector of Hunsford Parish, cousin to Thomas Bennet, heir to Longbourn
   Charlotte Lucas Collins—Wife of William Collins, friend to Anne de Bourgh
 
   Newcastle, Northumberland
   Captain George Wickham, ——th Regiment of Foot, British Army—Husband of Lydia Bennet
   Lydia Bennet Wickham—Wife of George Wickham (1812)
   Major Archibald Denny, British Army—Attached to the General Staff
 
   London
   Edward Gardiner—Uncle to the Bennet sisters, brother to Frances Bennet
   Madeline Gardiner—Wife of Edward Gardiner
   Annabella Adams Norris—Wife of Randolph Norris, schoolmate of Caroline Bingley and Louisa Hurst
   Lady Victoria Uppercross—Acquaintance of Sir John
 
   Vienna, Austria
   Field Marshall Sir Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington, GCB—Hero of the Peninsular War, head of His Majesty’s delegation to the Congress of Vienna (1815), commander of all British forces on the Continent [*]
   Lady Beatrice Wellesley—Cousin to Wellington
   Countess Roxanne de Pontchartrain—Wife of the Count de Pontchartrain (member of the Royal French delegation), acquaintance of Sir John Buford
   Baron Wolfgang von Odbar—Member of the Prussian delegation
   Charles Maurice de Talleyrand-Périgord—Prince of Benevento, French foreign minister, and delegate to the Congress of Vienna [*]
 
   Belgium—Waterloo, Brussels, and surrounding areas
   Captain Hewitt, British Army
   Prince Willem of Orange—Dutch Crown Prince, Wellington’s second in command, commander of I Corps [*]
   Lieutenant General Sir Henry William Paget, 2nd Earl of Uxbridge, GCB—Commander of British Horse at Waterloo [*]
   Lieutenant General Sir Thomas Picton, GCB—Commander of the British 5th Division of Foot [*]
   Major General Sir William Ponsonby, KCB—Commander of the Union Cavalry Brigade [*]
   Major General Sir John Vandeleur—Commander of the 4th Cavalry Brigade [*]
   Major General Sir Hussey Vivian, KCB—Commander of the 6th Cavalry Brigade [*]
   Napoleon Bonaparte—Emperor of the French [*]

Prologue 

   1814. Peace had come to England.
 
   Since 1740, George III’s Great Britain had been in recurrent conflict with its ancient enemy France and all its various governments. She fought Louis XV’s Kingdom of France again and again over their colonies in the New World and India. She prevented the expansion of Robespierre’s homicidal French Republic and its Revolution. She had spent irreplaceable men and treasure to overthrow the menace of Napoleon Bonaparte as he tried to build an empire out of Europe.
   After seventy-four years of recurring warfare, her work was done. The cost in blood and gold had been high, but the country was safe. The self-proclaimed Emperor Napoleon abdicated and was exiled to Elba, a small island in the Mediterranean Sea. A new French king, one finally friendly to Britain, was established on his throne in Paris. A grand congress of all the allies who had stood against the Tyrant was assembled in Vienna to re-draw the post-war world. Britain was master of the subcontinent. Soldiers and sailors were brought back to sweet England, paid off, and sent home.
   Only the unpopular conflict with their former American colonies remained, and Prime Minister Lord Liverpool was working hard to end it. Even now, diplomats in Ghent were dancing the steps of diplomacy to fashion a peace treaty between the United States and Great Britain. It was hoped it would be signed before Christmas.
   With the fall of Bonaparte and the end of the American War in sight, the people of Regency England dutifully gathered in church, sang their praises to God and king, and then turned their attention to more mundane and heartfelt concerns: the business of living happily ever after.