Chapter Twenty-Seven
Darcy received his uncle’s reply three days later.
He broke the seal at once, though he did not read it immediately. Instead, he stood by the window, looking out over the grounds of Purvis Lodge as though the answer might already be written there.
Only when he turned back did he unfold the letter.
My Lord,
I beg leave to trouble you with a matter that properly falls within your sphere of responsibility, and to do so with a degree of discretion proportionate to the circumstances.
I enclose herein a letter from my nephew, Mr. Fitzwilliam Darcy of Pemberley, whose judgment and probity you may trust without reservation.
He writes to inform me of the discovery of a substantial collection of Roman antiquities unearthed upon private land in Hertfordshire.
Having reviewed his account and spoken further with him by post, I am persuaded that the matter is both genuine and urgent.
The objects in question include gold and silver articles of considerable age and preservation, alongside other pieces of lesser material. Their collective value is estimated to be significant, and their historical interest beyond dispute.
More pressing still is the condition of the neighborhood in which the discovery occurred.
A smaller and lawful find upon a nearby common has already incited widespread speculation and disorder, drawing attention from all quarters and provoking behavior that borders upon the reckless.
There has even been a recent burglary, evidently motivated by the belief that valuables were being concealed.
The gentleman upon whose land the hoard was discovered is prepared to act in full accordance with the law governing treasure trove and wishes to place the matter at the disposal of the Crown without delay.
He is, however, understandably anxious that the process be conducted with care, both to protect the integrity of the artifacts and to preserve the peace and safety of his household.
It is for this reason that I appeal to you.
Your connection to His Royal Highness’s household, and your experience in matters of antiquities and Crown claims, render you uniquely suited to advise on the proper course.
I would ask that you consider whether the matter might be brought quietly before the appropriate office—be it the Treasury, the Board of Works, or such scholarly authorities as are customarily consulted—so that the hoard may be examined, secured, and claimed without unnecessary publicity.
Should precedent allow, I would further hope that the finder’s interests might be fairly considered.
While the law is clear regarding ownership of gold and silver antiquities, it has long been the practice of the Crown to reward honesty and cooperation, particularly where a discovery is surrendered promptly and in good faith.
A generous and timely resolution would do much to discourage further unrest in the area.
Mr. Darcy stands ready to provide any additional particulars that may be required and to act as intermediary until official representatives can be appointed. I have advised him to proceed with caution and to await guidance before making any public declaration.
I should be grateful for your counsel as to the next steps, and for any assistance you are willing to render in ensuring that this matter is handled with propriety, dignity, and dispatch. I need hardly add that I rely upon your discretion in all that concerns it.
I remain, my Lord,
Your obedient and faithful servant,
Matlock
My Lord,
I have had the honor of laying before His Royal Highness the Prince Regent the substance of your Lordship’s communication…
…it is not unreasonable to anticipate that such compensation may exceed the sum of ten thousand pounds…
Darcy read that line twice. Ten thousand pounds.
The sum was enough to alter the Bennet family’s future entirely—to secure what had long been uncertain, to quiet anxieties that had shadowed their circumstances for years.
It ought to have brought him satisfaction.
Satisfaction, when it came, was tempered by something less easily defined.
He had secured what he believed to be justice—had ensured that the Bennets would not suffer for their honesty—but in doing so, he had also ensured that the matter could no longer be contained within modest boundaries.
Wealth, when it arrived so suddenly, did not pass unnoticed. It altered how others looked upon it. It invited scrutiny where none had existed before, and expectation where none had been warranted. He had seen such transformations in society often enough to recognize their early signs.
And here, in a countryside already unsettled, he could not help but question what form that transformation might take. Fortune of that magnitude did not move quietly through the world. It drew attention.
Sir,
I have the honor to address you by direction of His Majesty’s Treasury…
Darcy exhaled slowly as he set that letter aside.
Excitement. The word appeared again—mild in form, almost courteous in tone. Yet he could not mistake what lay beneath it. The countryside was not merely interested. It was unsettled. And unsettled minds did not always act with restraint.
Sir,
I acknowledge your letter from the Treasury Chambers…
Darcy folded the final letter with deliberate care, though his thoughts were anything but orderly.
He sat for a moment longer at the small escritoire at Purvis Lodge, fingers resting upon the polished wood, the weight of what had been set in motion pressing upon him with unmistakable gravity.
The Prince Regent’s interest. A Treasury Commissioner.
An assessment that might alter the course of several lives.
He had sought to do what was right—and yet he could not deny that the consequences would be far-reaching.
Nor could he entirely dismiss the uneasy sense that once set in motion, such matters seldom proceeded as neatly as they were first proposed.
He moved about the room with measured purpose, setting aside the materials of his correspondence, ensuring each paper was secured and each seal properly cooled.
The ordinary motions, so familiar in their repetition, might have lent him steadiness on another day.
Now, they served only to delay the moment when thought must give way to action.
Outside, the grounds of Purvis Lodge lay still beneath the pale light of early autumn. Nothing in the placid order of the landscape betrayed the disturbance gathering beyond its bounds.
When at last he rose, it was with resolve rather than certainty.
Longbourn lay quiet beneath a pale autumn sky when he arrived. The house wore its usual air of domestic comfort, but Darcy perceived the subtle tension beneath it—the sense of watchfulness that had settled over the household since the invasion of their home.
The door was closed. The curtains were drawn.
Even before a word was spoken, the room carried the unmistakable weight of anticipation. It was not panic—but a readiness, as though each occupant understood that whatever was to be said next would determine far more than the course of a single conversation.
Elizabeth rose at once when he entered. Her relief was evident, though she mastered it quickly. Mr. Bennet remained seated, his expression wry but alert.
“I have news,” Darcy said.
Darcy had every reason to expect a positive outcome.
They were no longer isolated. The matter had been placed into hands powerful enough to control its consequences.
Lord Matlock’s influence, the Treasury’s involvement, and the Prince Regent’s interest formed a shield that no provincial malcontent could pierce.
What had begun as curiosity had, in a matter of days, taken on a different character.
Conversations lingered longer than they ought, speculation sharpened into certainty, and even those who had once dismissed the matter now spoke of it with a degree of interest that bordered on investment.
It was no longer merely a story—it was something to be claimed.
There had been a time when Darcy would have dismissed such concerns as improbable—when reason and propriety had seemed sufficient safeguards against excess. Experience had since taught him otherwise. Men did not always act in accordance with reason when pressed by circumstance.
And here, in Hertfordshire, pressure was mounting.