Chapter 25
Chapter Twenty-Five
Netherfield was already alive when they arrived.
The carriage scarcely halted before the door was opened, voices spilling out to meet them—laughter, music tuning itself into order, the bright clatter of shoes upon glowing marble floors.
Mama surged forward, issuing greetings before anyone had quite finished alighting, Lydia and Kitty close behind her, darting glances toward the lights and uniforms beyond the threshold.
Elizabeth followed more slowly… hesitantly.
Inside, the entry had been transformed. Candles burned in ranks along the walls; greenery framed the doors; the air carried warmth, perfume, and the promise of too many people gathered into too little space.
A receiving line had formed near the foot of the stairs, guests pausing to offer their bows and compliments before being absorbed into the crowd.
Mr Bingley stood at its centre, radiant with pleasure and wholly unequal to the task of regulating the flow. Miss Bingley flanked him, attentive and vigilant, her smile brimming with eagerness to impress. A pace behind them—deliberately behind—stood Mr Darcy.
Elizabeth did not look at him directly, but she could feel his gaze, nonetheless.
She moved with her family through the line, offering her curtsey, accepting Mr Bingley’s welcome with genuine warmth, submitting briefly to Miss Bingley’s cool appraisal. Darcy inclined his head. Their eyes met only for a moment—long enough to acknowledge one another, no more.
She passed on.
The room beyond was already a riot of sound.
Musicians struck into their first set; officers gathered in bright knots near the edges of the floor; gowns brushed past one another in constant motion.
Charlotte Lucas was barely visible near the far wall, deep in conversation with Maria and Lady Lucas.
Elizabeth caught her eye and smiled. Charlotte smiled back, a flicker of relief crossing her face, as though she had been waiting.
Mr Collins was less eager to lose her company.
He had entered with them, of course—attached to her mother’s elbow one moment, then loosed upon the room the next—his voice rising above the first swell of conversation as though the evening required instruction before it could proceed.
Elizabeth felt the onset at once: not pain, but the first unmistakable warning, the sense of pressure gathering before it declared itself.
While her mother paused to greet an acquaintance and Lydia darted ahead in search of uniforms, Elizabeth lengthened her stride, letting the movement of the crowd carry her forward and away. Each step put more bodies between her and that voice. The warning receded to something manageable.
She took in the room as she moved: the pattern of traffic between doors, the way the music drew people forward and released them again, the press of bodies near the floor, and the pockets of relative calm beyond it.
She noted where conversation gathered and where it thinned.
Where sound collided. Where it slipped past.
Netherfield offered much tonight. Noise. Movement. Witnesses everywhere.
And freedom, if one used it carefully.
Elizabeth paused near the wall and let the current of guests pass her by, her head finally clear enough to think.
Mr Wickham had not yet appeared, but surely he would.
Officers did not miss such free meals and entertainment, nor did men who enjoyed being observed.
She would speak with him when the moment allowed.
She noticed Darcy again only when he crossed her path, when a turn of the set or the angle of the room placed him briefly in view. There was nothing remarkable in that. He was near enough to be noticed by anyone, and tonight he lacked even the excuse of his dog.
Elizabeth adjusted her gloves and stepped aside to allow a passing couple through. The last time she was in this house, it had erected invisible walls and dictated her movements. Hopefully, nothing… odd… would yank the rug from under her feet tonight.
Darcy had not meant to speak to her that evening.
He had already erred in watching her as closely as he had. To approach her now—before the supper interval, when the room was still lively with expectation—would invite notice. He knew the patterns of such evenings too well. A request made at the wrong moment acquired weight. It gathered inference.
Still…
Elizabeth Bennet stood near the edge of the room, her posture composed but alert, as though her attention were divided between the figures of the dance and something gathering just behind her. Darcy was passing when Mrs Bennet’s voice rose—bright, eager, and entirely unrestrained by discretion.
“Oh, it will all come right,” she was saying to a small knot of ladies clustered near the refreshment table.
“Mr Collins has been most patient, and I have told him as much. Elizabeth is merely—well—she likes to be persuaded. But of course, she will dance the supper set with him this evening! One cannot refuse such an offer indefinitely, not when it has been so properly proposed. Goodness, where is that girl? I have hardly seen her all evening. Perhaps Mr Collins is asking her even now.”
There was a murmur of approval. Someone laughed. Another voice chimed in with a remark about propriety and gratitude.
Darcy slowed.
“…and really,” Mrs Bennet continued, “it will be quite a relief to have it settled. These things must be arranged, after all. Elizabeth will see the sense of it soon enough. Why, I am sure Mr Collins is only waiting to catch her between partners.”
Elizabeth did not turn, did not look.
But something in her changed. Not a movement—she remained perfectly still—but a tension drew through her shoulders, fine as a thread pulled too tight.
Her hand, which had been resting lightly at her side, curled once, then stilled again.
For an instant, her head dipped, as though she were bracing herself against a sound she could not escape.
Darcy halted altogether.
He had seen embarrassment before. Mortification, even. This was neither. It was quieter, more grotesque—a look that passed too quickly to be claimed as reaction, but not quickly enough to be missed.
Mrs Bennet’s voice sounded again. “Mr Collins understands these matters exceedingly well. He is quite certain it will all be resolved as it ought.”
Elizabeth’s chest rose, enough that Darcy saw the flicker of it from several feet away. She shifted her weight, just barely, as though seeking to draw herself apart without drawing attention. He saw her eyes flickering to the hall, as if she might escape out that way.
Darcy did not think of intervention at once.
He thought of impropriety. Of notice. Of the strange personal consequences of placing himself where expectation already strained the air.
Then he thought of her face—composed, silent, absorbing some sort of discomfort or terror that was not of her making.
The sensible course would have been to continue on. To let the evening arrange itself as it would. He disliked interference. He disliked gossip even more.
He found himself speaking all the same.
“Miss Elizabeth.”
She turned, surprise flashing across her face before settling into polite attention. “Mr Darcy.”
He inclined his head. “Might I speak with you a moment?”
She hesitated—only a breath—then stepped aside with him, just far enough that conversation might pass without performance.
“I had wondered,” he said, choosing his words with care, “whether you were already engaged for the supper set.”
Her expression changed at once—not into gratitude, not quite, but into something like relief held in check.
“I… perhaps.” She clenched her jaw, then winced and sniffed. Then, after a pause, “At least—that is, I am meant to be.”
Darcy waited.
She drew a breath, quivering slightly. “My mother has been kind enough to announce it for me,” she added lightly. “With a generosity that leaves little room for correction.”
“I see,” he said. “Well, if you are already engaged—”
She looked up at him then, more directly. “If you would be willing,” she said, “I should like to beg a small indulgence.”
That word—beg—sat ill with him at once.
“I would… appreciate it if… a belief could be made to circulate,” she went on, carefully, “that you asked me for the supper set several days ago. Just after the ball was announced.”
Darcy stiffened. “I did no such thing.”
“I know.” She offered a quick, apologetic smile. “That is the difficulty.”
He drew back a fraction. “Miss Elizabeth, I cannot—”
“I would not ask it,” she said, more urgently now, “if it were not for certain extenuating circumstances.”
Darcy swallowed. He was acutely aware of how such a story would sound—how readily it would be repeated, embroidered, examined. He had spent the evening resisting exactly this: the impression of intention, of preference.
And pretence, above all, offended him.
“I do not care to encourage invention,” he said. “Nor to supply it with evidence.”
Her gaze did not waver. “Nor do I,” she replied. “But I care even less to be cornered by it.”
Something in her voice—controlled, but not light—gave him pause.
“You have found Mr Collins… oppressive,” he said, before he had quite decided to.
Her mouth curved, briefly. “That is a charitable description.”
Darcy considered her then—not as she moved among the company, but as she stood now, deliberately composed, asking him for something he did not wish to give, and yet she clearly needed.
The lie troubled him.
So did the look in her eyes.
“Very well,” he said. “If the arrangement can be easily assumed, I will not contradict it.”
Her shoulders eased—only fractionally, but enough that he noticed. “I am obliged to you,” she said. “I promise not to entertain fancies beyond the inescapable.”
“I should hope not. Very well, Miss Elizabeth. I shall come to claim your hand after two dances for the supper set.”