Chapter Nine #3

The evening was not done, but it would never again be what it had been when she entered it.

The Bennets’ connection with the Fitzwilliams did not end after that night.

Viscount Bramley began courting Jane almost immediately following his mother’s ball.

Lord and Lady Matlock welcomed both Bennet sisters into their home.

The countess, pleased to have her son and the heir to the earldom finally showing interest in matrimony, did everything she could to push Viscount Bramley in Miss Bennet’s direction.

They were also pleased with Elizabeth’s correspondence with their niece.

It was the only news they had of her that could be trusted.

They learned some from investigations. Mr. Wickham, it seemed, had fired the staff at Pemberley and replaced them all with servants who were loyal to him.

Only two of the original staff remained: Mrs. Reynolds, the estate’s housekeeper of many years, and Brisby, Mr. Darcy’s former valet.

It had been Brisby who raised the alarm when he had arrived in Mr. Darcy’s carriage, only to learn his master never appeared.

“I had word from Mrs. Reynolds before she was forbidden to contact us,” the colonel told Elizabeth one afternoon in March while they took tea at Matlock House.

“Wickham told her that was the condition of her remaining in his employ. It seems my cousin insisted she stay and help her manage the household. And Brisby? He has ever been loyal to Darcy. I imagine he agreed to be Wickham’s valet so he could keep watch over Georgiana.

Mrs. Reynolds said something of the kind. ”

“I can try to get more information from Mrs. Wickham,” Elizabeth ventured. “Though if her husband is reading her letters, I imagine it will not be easy.”

“Anything you can tell us is appreciated. Besides, I suspect we shall be family soon.” He looked across the room at Bramley and Jane. Their heads were bent together, and their faces wreathed in smiles. “My brother is completely smitten. I have never seen him so…entranced.”

“Jane’s beauty is not just superficial. She is wholly good, inside and out.”

“She will make a fine countess, then.” Colonel Fitzwilliam smiled. His expression sobered. “I have something for you.” He shifted uneasily. “I likely overstep, but I could not help myself.”

He extended a cloth bundle, and Elizabeth accepted it, puzzled. She unwrapped it and gasped, tears springing to her eyes. It was a miniature. The gilt frame fit in the palm of her hand and staring back at her was the image of Mr. Darcy.

“I cannot accept this. Surely, it belongs to your family. I have no claim.” She tried to hand it back.

“I paid for a copy to be made.” The colonel shook his head. “You have more claim than most, for he gave you his heart.”

Elizabeth struggled to suppress a sob. “Thank you. I shall treasure it. I tried to sketch his face from memory…I am a poor artist.”

The topic turned again to Jane and the viscount’s courtship. “I imagine he will propose before the end of the season. My mother wants to invite half the ton to see her eldest son marry.”

“My father is determined to stay until all is settled. My mother writes from Hertfordshire every week, wishing to know if your brother has yet proposed.”

“It will not be long now.” The colonel smiled.

“Bramley has shown little interest in women until now. I always knew he would move quickly when he met the right lady.” He paused.

“And what of you, Miss Elizabeth? Has a gentleman turned your head this season?” The jest in his voice was weak, but Elizabeth chuckled regardless.

“I will not marry, sir. Like your cousin, I knew when I met the right man, my heart would be irrevocably gone. No one can replace your cousin.”

“I thought not.” Colonel Fitzwilliam’s smile was sad. “Though it is not the way you and Darcy intended, we shall be family. Pray, count on me to always act as your brother.”

The months that followed passed with a swiftness that seemed, at times, at odds with the pressure of all that had come before.

Society moved forward as it always did—indifferent to private sorrow, eager for celebration, and wholly engaged in its own rhythms of expectation and fulfillment.

Within that world, Jane Bennet’s gentle beauty and unaffected sweetness did not go unnoticed, and Viscount Bramley’s admiration, once awakened, proved both constant and sincere.

His attentions were marked by a perseverance rather than grand display.

He sought her company whenever propriety allowed, listened when she spoke with an attentiveness that bespoke genuine regard, and showed, in a hundred small ways, that his interest was neither fleeting nor superficial.

Jane, for her part, received his addresses with her customary grace, her affection growing in tandem with his own, until the understanding between them was no longer in doubt.

By May, it was settled.

The wedding, though elegant, was not excessive, Lady Matlock’s desire for splendor tempered by a certain respect for the season’s earlier mourning.

Still, it was a gathering of consequence, attended by those who mattered most, and conducted with a dignity befitting both families.

Elizabeth stood beside her sister as she took her vows, her heart full in a manner she had not thought possible again—not with romantic hope, but with an enduring happiness for Jane, whose future promised all that was gentle and good.

Viscount Bramley proved as thoughtful in marriage as he had in courtship. Within days of the ceremony, he extended an invitation to Elizabeth to accompany them on their wedding trip and, upon their return, to make her home with them for as long as she wished.

“You will never be without a place with us,” Jane clasped her hands warmly around Elizabeth’s. “I cannot bear the thought of being parted from you entirely.”

Elizabeth accepted. Bruno came with her, of course.

There was, for her, no other inclination.

Longbourn would always be home, but something within her had shifted irrevocably, and the life that awaited her there no longer held the same shape it once had.

In Jane’s household, she found both purpose and companionship—something steady, something kind—and she allowed herself to settle into it with an acceptance that asked no more than what was freely given.

The years that followed unfolded with a quiet regularity.

One by one, her sisters married and established households of their own.

Mary found a husband who valued her intellect, Kitty flourished away from Lydia's influence and married well, and even Lydia at last secured a respectable settlement.

Elizabeth rejoiced in each of their successes and helped where she could, content to see those she loved happy.

She assisted where she could, advised when it was welcome, and observed always with that same composure that had come to define her.

There was no envy in her, no sense of loss that compared her sisters’ happiness to her own circumstances.

What she had known could not be compared against what others found, nor could it be replaced. She did not seek it.

Within Jane’s home, her place became fixed and certain.

As children came—first one, then another—Elizabeth’s presence grew ever more essential, her affection for her nieces and nephews deep and unwavering.

She delighted in their laughter, guided their earliest lessons, and offered that same warmth and attentiveness that had once been so naturally her own.

In their company, she found a measure of joy that was neither fleeting nor false.

Even there, in the midst of life’s continuance, there remained a part of her untouched by time.

Her heart, once given, had never returned to her.

She did not speak of it often. There was no need.

Those who knew her best understood without words, and those who did not saw only a woman content in her circumstances, neither restless nor dissatisfied.

But she knew. And she remained true.

The shell necklace she wore never left her. It rested always at her throat, never absent, never forgotten. The miniature Colonel Fitzwilliam had given her held a place of equal care, kept among her most private possessions, brought forth only when she was alone.

And there were letters. Miss Darcy—now Mrs. Wickham—continued to write, though her correspondence remained as carefully composed as ever, revealing little while providing enough to sustain connection.

Elizabeth answered each one, her responses restrained, her inquiries gentle, her concern ever present though never expressed in terms that might invite interference.

Through those letters, she became the family's only reliable link to Pemberley.

It was not a role she had sought, but one she accepted with a seriousness born of both affection and necessity.

She read each line with care, noting what was said and what was omitted, assembling what understanding she could from the fragments.

When opportunity allowed, she shared what she learned with Colonel Fitzwilliam, whose gratitude, though often unspoken, was deeply felt.

Thus the past remained more than a memory. A fragile, enduring connection bound her to all that had been lost.

Years passed. Seasons changed. Children grew. Society continued in its endless cycle of introductions and farewells, marriages and mourning, hopes fulfilled and hopes disappointed. Life moved steadily onward, carrying all of them with it.

And Elizabeth Bennet remained unwed, unchanged in the one matter that had shaped her life beyond all others.

She moved through her days with grace, her duties fulfilled, her affections freely given where they might do good, her heart held always in reserve—unchanged, unyielding, and beyond the reach of any who might have sought it.

It had been given once. It would not be given again.

If ads affect your reading experience, click here to remove ads on this page.