Chapter Twenty-Six #3
Unfortunately, that modest find has given rise to a frenzy of speculation.
The common and adjoining lands have been combed by every class of person, from laborers with spades to ladies walking with sticks pressed into unlikely service.
Gossip has outpaced reason, and reason has retreated accordingly.
The true matter, however, lies elsewhere.
Upon private land—not the common—there was uncovered a substantial hoard of Roman antiquities, consisting of gold and silver objects of remarkable preservation and workmanship.
I have examined them myself. Even a conservative estimate places their value at not less than thirty thousand pounds, and possibly more, should scholars confirm their rarity and completeness.
More than their monetary worth, they are of undeniable historical importance.
The gentleman upon whose land the hoard was discovered delayed reporting it, not from malice, but out of fear—fear for his family’s future, of attracting attention in a countryside already unbalanced by rumor, and that the law, once invoked, would leave him exposed and unprotected.
That fear was not unfounded. Just last night, his library was forcibly entered and ransacked.
Though the treasure itself was secured and not taken, the intent was unmistakable.
Someone believed it to be there, despite the efforts put forth to hide it.
This act has resolved his indecision. He is now prepared to notify the proper authorities and to surrender the hoard in accordance with the law governing gold and silver antiquities belonging to the Crown.
Yet the manner in which this is done may determine whether justice is accompanied by fairness—or by ruinous exposure.
It is here that I entreat your assistance.
You possess both the influence and the discernment to ensure that this discovery is brought to the attention of the correct people: those within the appropriate offices who understand antiquities, who value order over spectacle, and who may manage the matter with discretion.
If there is to be a finder’s fee—and by precedent there ought to be—I wish to see it handled honorably and without unnecessary delay.
More importantly, I wish to shield an innocent family from the worst excesses of public curiosity and predatory interest.
The neighborhood is already unsettled. One gentleman of my acquaintance, distressed by his own financial difficulties, has behaved with increasing desperation, and I fear what such a temperament might attempt if he believes fortune is within reach.
The longer this matter lingers in uncertainty, the greater the risk to all involved.
If you are willing, I would ask that you advise me as to whom I should write next, or whether you might yourself make discreet inquiries on our behalf. Your guidance would carry a weight that my own letters cannot.
I remain, as ever, grateful for your counsel and your kindness. Pray give my respects to my aunt, and believe me,
Your affectionate nephew,
F. Darcy
It was done. Or rather, it had begun.
He leaned back slightly in his chair, though no ease accompanied the motion.
The act of writing had imposed order upon the matter—given it shape, sequence, and reason—but the reality it described refused such neat arrangement.
What had been contained within the walls of Longbourn would soon extend far beyond them, carried by ink and seal into circles where curiosity was not easily restrained.
He found himself wondering—not for the first time—whether he had misjudged the moment at which silence ceased to be protection and became instead a form of risk. The distinction, once so clear, had grown increasingly difficult to discern.
For a moment, he allowed himself to consider whether he had acted too quickly.
Then he dismissed it.
Delay had already proven dangerous.
Darcy sanded the missive carefully, folded it with precision, and pressed his seal into the warm wax with a steadiness that did not entirely reflect his thoughts.
Only then did he allow himself a measured breath.
The act of writing—of doing something concrete—had steadied him, but the weight of what lay upon the desk still pressed heavily upon his thoughts.
Once dispatched, the matter would no longer belong solely to them.
It would pass into hands far more powerful—and far less personal.
He returned to the table and stood beside Elizabeth, his gaze once more drawn to the gleam of ancient gold. Now that the first shock had passed, his mind worked relentlessly, assembling consequences as readily as facts.
“This is not merely wealth,” he said at last, more to the room than to any one person. “It is history. Once the authorities are involved, there will be scholars, surveyors, perhaps even further excavations. The common, the fields bordering it—nothing will remain untouched.”
Mr. Bennet gave a wry smile. “Longbourn has survived gossip, entailment, and my wife’s nerves. I suppose it may survive antiquarians as well.”
Elizabeth huffed a soft laugh, though her eyes remained troubled. “I do not relish the thought of strangers tramping over our land, but I would rather endure that than live in fear of thieves—or worse.”
Darcy’s expression darkened. “Fear is precisely what concerns me. Whoever broke in last night was not acting on idle curiosity. He believed something of value was here.”
Richard pushed away from the shelf and crossed the room, his military bearing lending him an air of quiet authority.
“Until this letter reaches its destination, you must assume the danger has not passed. Extra vigilance would be prudent. Locks, lamps kept burning through the night, perhaps even a discreet watch.”
Mr. Bennet nodded slowly. “I shall speak to my steward. And to Hill. She has long commanded this house better than I ever have.”
Darcy glanced toward the door, then back to Elizabeth. He lowered his voice. “I do not wish to alarm you, but you must be cautious. If you walk, do not go alone. If anything seems amiss—anything at all—you must send word to me immediately.”
Elizabeth met his gaze without flinching. “I will. And Darcy—thank you. For—for everything.”
There was so much he wished to say in reply—about trust, admiration, and the fierce protectiveness that had taken root in him long before he understood its depth—but Mr. Bennet cleared his throat, and the moment shifted.
“I believe,” the older man said, “that we have done all that can be done for the present. The safe will remain closed, the house guarded, and the letter dispatched. What comes next lies beyond my control.”
Darcy inclined his head. “Not entirely beyond. Once a reply arrives, I will return at once.”
Richard moved toward the door. “And I shall remain nearby. Purvis Lodge may be modest, but it is close enough to be useful.”
Mr. Bennet allowed himself a small, genuine smile. “Then I am grateful indeed that my daughter’s courtship has brought me such formidable allies.”
Elizabeth felt her cheeks warm, but she did not look away from Darcy. The word courtship—spoken aloud in this room, beside this treasure, under such circumstances—felt like an anchor thrown into uncertainty.
As they prepared to leave, Darcy paused once more at the desk and carefully rewrapped the artifacts, returning them to the safe with reverence. When the false floor was restored and the rug smoothed into place, the library looked once again as it always had—quiet, scholarly, unremarkable.
Only they knew what lay beneath.
At the door, Darcy turned back. “Mr. Bennet,” he said gravely, “you are not weak for having hesitated. You are human. What matters is that you have chosen rightly now.”
Mr. Bennet held his gaze. “Let us hope history agrees with you.”
Outside, the autumn air felt sharper, cleaner, as though the house itself had exhaled.
Darcy walked beside Elizabeth to the front hall, unwilling to leave without one last reassurance.
Though the immediate danger had been contained, the unease it left behind did not so easily dissipate.
What had once been rumor now bore the weight of proof, and proof—once glimpsed—was not easily forgotten.
It would not be fear alone that lingered, but something sharper.
Expectation. And expectation, once awakened, was far more difficult to contain.
“It will be all right,” he said softly.
Elizabeth nodded, though her eyes shone with unshed tears. “With you here—I believe it will.”
Darcy took her hand briefly, a touch full of promise rather than possession, and then released it before propriety demanded more restraint.
As he and Richard mounted their horses and turned back toward Purvis Lodge, Darcy knew that the days ahead would bring upheaval—scrutiny, confrontation, perhaps even scandal.
Yet beneath it all ran a steadier truth: Elizabeth had trusted him with her greatest fear. That was more precious than any gold.