Chapter 36
Chapter Thirty-Six
The ceremony of Elizabeth’s presentation passed with a smoothness that felt almost unreal while it was unfolding.
She performed every motion as she had been taught by her Aunt Caroline—each step measured, each inclination exact, her countenance composed into the expression of respectful ease expected of a young lady making her formal entrance into society.
The court glittered, as it always did: silks whispering, jewels catching the light, rank and precedence arranged with unyielding precision.
Elizabeth registered it all distantly, as though through a pane of glass.
As she approached the queen, Elizabeth wished her dear aunt had been allowed to attend.
She made her curtsey with care, neither timid nor bold, her eyes lowered at precisely the correct moment.
When she rose, she met the gaze before her with calm assurance.
There were no stumbles, no whispered corrections, no sharp intakes of breath from those who watched for errors.
If there were judgments made, they were not spoken aloud.
The moment came and passed, sealed by ceremony and silence alike.
When it was over—truly over, and not merely completed in form—Elizabeth felt a wave of relief so profound that it left her light-headed.
She endured the remaining formalities with practiced grace, accepted the murmured congratulations and approving nods, and allowed herself to be guided from the room without betraying the exhaustion beneath her composure.
Only once she was seated in the carriage, the doors shut and the wheels turning, did she permit herself a long, steady breath.
“Thank heaven for that,” she murmured, scarcely above a whisper.
Lady Hertford glanced at her with faint amusement. “You acquitted yourself very well. I do not believe there is a single soul present who could find fault with your performance.”
Elizabeth inclined her head. “I am grateful it is finished. I should not like to repeat it.”
Lady Hertford smiled thinly. “Few do.”
Elizabeth leaned back against the cushions, her gloved hands folded neatly in her lap.
So much scrutiny for so brief a moment, she thought.
And yet that moment will be remembered far longer than I wish.
Still, the worst of it was done. Whatever consequences followed would unfold in their own time, but the ordeal itself was complete.
In the days that followed, the pace of life resumed its relentless rhythm.
Calls were made and received, invitations accepted and declined with careful discrimination.
Elizabeth found that the tone of society toward her had shifted in subtle but unmistakable ways.
She was no longer merely observed; she was assessed.
Compliments grew more deliberate, attentions more pointed.
She bore it as she bore everything else—with outward composure and inward vigilance.
It was during one such afternoon at Hertford House that Elizabeth came upon the moment she had not expected yet somehow recognized as inevitable.
She had been in the adjoining drawing room, occupied with a volume she scarcely read, when voices carried to her through the partially open door.
At first, she paid them no mind; the house was rarely silent during receiving hours.
But then she heard her cousin’s voice—Jane’s gentle cadence unmistakable—and another she recognized just as quickly.
Viscount Bramley.
Elizabeth gravitated to the adjoining door as if in a trance. She did not generally listen at doors, yet she could not help but hear.
“Miss Bennet,” Bramley was saying, his tone earnest and unembellished, “I hope you will forgive my directness. I should prefer honesty to pretense, particularly on a matter of such importance.”
Jane replied at once, though her voice was softer. “You have never lacked honesty, sir.”
There was a brief pause, filled with the rustle of fabric and the faint crackle of the fire.
“I wish to ask you to marry me.”
Elizabeth’s breath caught, though she remained perfectly still.
Jane did not answer immediately. When she spoke, her voice was steady, but there was an undercurrent of emotion that made Elizabeth’s chest ache.
“I am honored by your regard,” Jane said. “And deeply moved. But I must ask you for more time.”
“Of course,” Bramley replied without hesitation.
Jane drew a breath. “I cannot accept such an offer lightly. My affections were once engaged elsewhere, and though I do not regret having felt them, the end of that attachment was…painful. I will not enter into a new understanding merely as a consolation, nor before I am certain of my own heart.”
Elizabeth closed her eyes briefly. Jane, she thought, brave Jane.
Bramley answered with a frankness that surprised even Elizabeth.
“You are entirely right to speak so. Any man worth the title of gentleman would expect no less.” There was a trace of heat in his voice as he continued.
“As for the cad who broke your heart, his conduct was foolish and ill-considered. You deserved better than uncertainty and retreat. Any woman would.”
Jane made a small sound of protest, but Bramley pressed on gently. “I do not require haste. Only honesty. If you tell me now that you feel nothing for me, I will accept it. But if there is regard—however quiet, however cautious—I am content to wait.”
Jane was silent for a moment. When she spoke again, Elizabeth heard the relief in her voice. “There is regard,” she said simply. “I cannot deny that.”
“Then that is enough,” Bramley replied. “I will wait as long as you require.”
Jane exhaled softly. “Thank you.”
Elizabeth withdrew then, unwilling to intrude upon a moment so private and so important.
Her heart felt full and unsteady as she returned to her seat, the book forgotten in her lap.
How much courage it takes to speak so plainly, she reflected.
And how rare it is to be met with patience instead of pressure.
Later that evening when they had returned to Carlton House and the household had settled into its usual calm, Elizabeth sought Jane out. She found her cousin seated by the window, her embroidery abandoned, her expression thoughtful rather than distressed.
“You look as though you have been considering something very carefully,” Elizabeth said lightly as she took the chair opposite her.
Jane smiled a little shyly. “Perhaps I have.”
Elizabeth did not feign ignorance. “Bramley spoke with you today.”
Jane nodded. “He did.”
“And?”
Jane met her gaze directly. “He asked me to marry him.”
Elizabeth felt the warmth spread through her chest at Jane’s steady tone. “And you asked for time.”
“Yes.”
Elizabeth hesitated only a moment before asking the question she knew must be answered honestly. “Do you like him, Jane? Or are you merely grateful for his kindness?”
Jane’s reply was immediate. “I like him.”
Elizabeth searched her cousin’s face, finding no trace of uncertainty there. “Truly?”
“Truly,” Jane said. “I am very pleased with him. There is no doubt that in marrying the viscount, I shall experience real felicity.”
Elizabeth smiled then, the last of her lingering concern easing. “That is no small thing.”
Jane’s expression softened. “It is not. I do not yet love him, but I believe I could. And I think he understands that affection grows best when it is not forced.”
Elizabeth reached across the small table and took Jane’s hand. “If it feels right to you, then you should accept his proposal. Not because it is sensible, nor because it is expected, but because it offers you peace.”
Jane squeezed her hand in return. “I believe it does. I believe I am resolved to accept him.”
Elizabeth felt a surge of happiness so keen it nearly brought tears to her eyes. “I am very glad,” she said softly. “You deserve someone who will meet your constancy with his own.”
Jane smiled, a true, unguarded smile that Elizabeth had not seen in some time. “I think I may be fortunate at last.” They sat in companionable silence for a few moments, the fire casting gentle shadows across the room.
As Elizabeth retired that evening, her thoughts returned again and again to the quiet declarations she had witnessed—Jane’s courage, Bramley’s patience, the promise of something steady and earned rather than seized.
How strange, she thought, that certainty should arrive so quietly, while uncertainty makes such a clamor.
She did not know what her own future would demand of her, nor how much choice she would be permitted to exercise in it.
But as she lay awake in the dark, listening to the distant sounds of the house settling around her, Elizabeth found comfort in one simple truth: at least one heart she loved had found its way toward something worthy.
The following morning brought with it one of those clear, pale days that seemed designed to invite reflection.
Spring had not yet committed itself fully, but there was promise in the air.
The earliest signs were there—leaf buds struggling to unfurl, a softness to the light, a gentleness to the breeze that suggested renewal was possible, if one were brave enough to accept it.
Lady Hertford’s drawing room was already arranged for callers when Viscount Bramley arrived, punctual and composed, with Fitzwilliam Darcy at his side.
Elizabeth observed them from her place near the window, her awareness sharpening at once.
Darcy’s presence had that effect upon her now, unwelcome or not.
She had grown accustomed to the quiet shift within herself when he entered a room—the faint tightening in her chest, the instinctive attention she could not quite suppress.
Lady Hertford greeted the gentlemen with her usual gracious efficiency. After the necessary civilities, Bramley turned immediately to Jane.
“Miss Bennet,” he said, offering his arm without flourish, “the morning is too fine to be wasted indoors. Will you honor me with a walk?”