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Jane Austen's Pride & Prejudice Sequel Bundle: 3 Reader Favorites

Page 80

by Linda Berdoll


  He might laugh, but he will thank me for my care when he is well settled.

  ‘When do you mean to take possession?’ I asked him.

  ‘As soon as possible. Before Michaelmas, certainly.’

  ‘You should send some of your servants down before you, then they can make sure that the house is ready for your arrival.’

  ‘You think of everything! I will have them here by the end of next week.’

  I was glad he had taken my advice. If not, he would have arrived at the same time as his servants, and then wondered why there was no dinner waiting for him.

  Tuesday 24th September

  ‘Darcy, welcome to my estate!’ said Bingley when I joined him at Netherfield Park this afternoon. His sisters, Caroline and Louisa, were with him, as was Louisa’s husband, Mr Hurst. ‘The house, the neighbourhood, everything is exactly as I would wish it to be.’

  ‘The estate is well enough, but the neighbourhood is small, with very few families,’ I pointed out. ‘I warned you of it at the time.’

  ‘There are plenty of families,’ he said. ‘Enough for us to dine with, and what more do we want?’

  ‘Superior company?’ asked Caroline satirically. ‘Entertaining conversation?’

  ‘I am sure we will find plenty of it,’ said Bingley.

  ‘You should have let me help you choose the house,’ said Caroline.

  ‘I did not need your help, I had Darcy’s,’ said Bingley.

  ‘And a good thing, too. I was only saying to Louisa this morning that you could not have found a better one,’ said Caroline, smiling at me.

  ‘Upon my honour, I can think of no finer country than Hertfordshire,’ said Bingley.

  He is delighted with the neighbourhood at the moment, but I think he will find it dull if he settles here for any length of time. It is unlikely, however. He is so capricious he will probably be off again in a month. I said as much to Caroline after dinner.

  ‘Very likely,’ she said. ‘Until then, we must be thankful we have each other’s company.’

  Wednesday 25th September

  This has been our first full day at Netherfield Park. Caroline has managed things well, and she was particularly pleased when I commented that no one would guess it was a rented house. She has had some trouble with the servants hired from the surrounding neighbourhood, but it is to her credit that the household is running smoothly.

  Thursday 26th September

  The neighbourhood visits have begun. It is a bore, but it was only to be expected. Sir William and Lady Lucas called this morning. Bingley thought them very civil, on account of Sir William bowing every two minutes and mentioning that he had been presented at St James’s. Caroline suspected that their haste in calling marked them out as the parents of an elderly, unattractive spinster whom they wished to see married, and she told Bingley so as soon as they had departed.

  ‘Depend upon it, they have a daughter nearing thirty and intend to pass her off as one-and-twenty!’ she warned him.

  Bingley laughed.

  ‘I am sure they do not have a daughter at all, and if they do, I am sure she is positively charming!’

  ‘Caroline is right,’ said Louisa. ‘One of the housemaids told me the Lucases have a daughter named Charlotte. Charlotte is unmarried, and is seven-and-twenty.’

  ‘That does not stop her being charming. I am sure she is a delightful young lady,’ protested Bingley.

  ‘And I am sure she is a homely body who is always helping her mother about the pies,’ said Caroline in a droll voice.

  ‘Well, I think it was very good of the Lucases to call, and even better of them to invite us to the Meryton assembly,’ said Bingley stoutly.

  ‘The Meryton assembly! God save me from country assemblies!’ I remarked.

  ‘You have been spoilt by superior company,’ said Caroline.

  ‘I have indeed. The London assemblies are full of the most elegant people in the country.’

  For some reason she did not smile at this remark. I cannot think why. She smiles at everything else I say, and she must surely have been thinking of my London acquaintance, for whom else could she have meant?

  Sir William and Lady Lucas were not our only callers today. They were followed by a Mr Bennet. He seems to be a gentlemanlike man.

  ‘He has five daughters,’said Caroline, when he had gone.

  ‘Pretty girls,’ said Mr Hurst, rousing himself from his stupor. ‘Saw ’em in Meryton. Handsome, the lot of ’em.’

  ‘There you are!’ said Bingley. ‘I knew I had chosen well in settling at Netherfield. There will be plenty of pretty girls to dance with.’

  ‘I know what you are thinking,’ Caroline remarked, on seeing my expression. ‘You are thinking it would be a bore to be forced to stand up with a country wench. But you need not do so. Charles will make a spectacle of himself, no doubt, but you need not. No one will expect you to dance.’

  ‘I hope not,’ I said. ‘The idea of standing up with people I do not know is insupportable to me.’

  Bingley laughed.

  ‘Come now, Darcy, this is not like you. You are not usually so stiff-necked. It is the weather. Only let the rain stop and you will be as eager to dance as I am.’

  Bingley is an optimist.

  Monday 30th September

  Bingley and I rode round part of the estate this morning. It has been kept in good order, and if he means to buy it, I think it might be suitable. But I will wait to see if he settles. He is just as likely to decide he wants to buy an estate in Kent, or Cheshire, or Suffolk next week.

  He soon suggested we turn back.

  ‘I thought I might pay the Bennets a visit,’ he said nonchalantly, as we trotted back to the house.

  ‘Eager to see the Misses Bennet?’ I asked him.

  He took it in good part.

  ‘I know you think I fall in and out of love every few weeks, but it is simply that I feel it would be polite to return Mr Bennet’s call.’

  We parted company, he to ride to Longbourn, and I to return to Netherfield. He was not gone long.

  ‘Well, did you see the five beautiful daughters you have heard so much about?’ I asked when he returned.

  ‘No,’ he said gloomily. ‘I sat in Mr Bennet’s library for about ten minutes but never had a glimpse of the girls.’

  Tuesday 1st October

  Bingley’s spirits were restored by an invitation from Mrs Bennet, asking him to join the family for dinner.

  ‘But I cannot go!’ he said, crestfallen. ‘They ask me for tomorrow, and I have to be in town.’

  ‘My dear Bingley, both they and you will survive. Besides, you will see them at the Meryton assembly.’

  He brightened at this. ‘Yes, I will.’

  Wednesday 2nd October

  Bingley went to town today. It is as I thought. He will never settle in the country. Already he is growing restless. I will not be surprised if he quits Netherfield before Christmas.

  Saturday 12th October

  We have been to the Meryton assembly, and it was even worse than I had expected. We had not been there five minutes before I heard one woman – I hesitate to call her a lady – whispering to another that I had ten thousand a year. It is of all things the one I hate the most, to be courted for my wealth. The whisper ran round the room, and I found myself being looked at as though I was a pot of gold. It did nothing to improve my enjoyment of the evening. Luckily, I did not need to mix with the local people. Though we were a small party, Caroline, Mr and Mrs Hurst and I endeavoured to entertain each other.

  Bingley threw himself into the affair as he always does. He, of course, was well liked. He always is. He has an ease of manner which recommends him everywhere he goes. I heard a number of comments on his fine person and his handsome face. I, too, was described as a handsome man, until I snubbed Mrs Carlisle. She made a presumptuous remark and I was irritated into giving her a set-down: not two minutes before, she had been whispering to her neighbour that she meant to get my ten tho
usand a year for her daughter, and then, when she introduced her daughter, she had the audacity to say to my face that she thought wealth was immaterial in marriage, and that what mattered was mutual affection.

  Bingley danced every dance, much to Caroline’s amusement.

  ‘He will be in love again before the evening is out,’ she said.

  I agreed. I have never known a man fall in and out of love so easily. Let him see a pretty face and pretty manners, and he looks no further.

  I danced once with Mrs Hurst, but the musicians were so poor that once was enough. I declined to be introduced to any other young ladies and contented myself with walking around the room until Bingley should have danced himself to a standstill. Not that it was easy to avoid partners. There were several young ladies sitting around the sides of the room. One of them was a sister of the lady who had taken Bingley’s fancy, and Bingley decided he wanted to see me dance with her.

  ‘Come, Darcy,’ said he,‘I must have you dance. I hate to see you standing about by yourself in this stupid manner. You had much better dance.’

  ‘I certainly shall not. Your sisters are engaged, and there is not another woman in the room, whom it would not be a punishment to me to stand up with,’ I said, not in a mood to be pleased with anything.

  ‘I would not be as fastidious as you are for a kingdom! Upon my honour, I never met with so many pretty girls in my life.’

  ‘You are dancing with the only handsome girl in the room,’ I reminded him, looking at the eldest Miss Bennet.

  ‘Oh! she is the most beautiful creature I ever beheld! But there is one of her sisters sitting down just behind you, who is very pretty, and I dare say, very agreeable. Do let me ask my partner to introduce you.’

  ‘Which do you mean?’ I asked him, looking round. I noticed Miss Elizabeth Bennet, then, catching her eye, I was forced to look away. ‘She is tolerable,’ I admitted,‘but not handsome enough to tempt me, and I am in no humour at present to give consequence to young ladies who are slighted by other men.’

  Caroline understood my feelings very well.

  ‘These people!’ she said to me. ‘They have no style and no fashion, and yet they are all so pleased with themselves! Do you know I was forced to smile politely whilst Mary Bennet was described to me as the most accomplished girl in the neighbourhood? If she was half, nay one tenth, as accomplished as Georgiana I should be very surprised.’

  ‘But then that would be difficult,’ I said. ‘Georgiana is unusually gifted.’

  ‘Indeed she is. I dote on her,’ said Caroline. ‘I declare, she is quite like a sister to me.’

  Perhaps in time she will really be a sister to Caroline. Not that I said anything of this to her, but Bingley is a good-natured man with an adequate fortune, and will make a good husband. I had not thought to arrange a marriage for Georgiana before she was one-and-twenty, but after the affair with George Wickham, I have begun to think that it would not be a bad thing to marry her sooner. Once wed to Bingley, she would be safe from scoundrels of Wickham’s stamp. I am not sure that Meryton would suit her, though. If Bingley shows any inclination to leave, I will encourage it. I would like to have her closer to me, in Derbyshire, or in Cheshire, perhaps. Then she could visit me in a few hours if she had a mind to.

  We returned home at last.

  ‘I have never met with pleasanter people or prettier girls in my life,’ said Bingley, as we retired to the drawing-room. ‘Everyone was most kind and attentive. There was no formality, no stiffness. I soon felt myself acquainted with everyone in the room. As to Miss Bennet, I cannot conceive of an angel more beautiful.’

  Caroline cast me a satirical glance. In Brighton, Bingley had told us that Miss Hart was the most entrancing creature he had ever seen. In London it had been Miss Pargeter. It seems that in Meryton, Miss Bennet is to be his choice.

  ‘She is a very sweet girl,’ Caroline allowed.

  ‘She is pretty,’ I said. It is always better to humour Bingley in these moods. ‘But she smiles too much.’

  ‘To be sure, she does smile too much,’ agreed Louisa, ‘but she is still a sweet girl. I believe we may make a friend of her whilst we are here, Caroline?’

  ‘By all means,’ said Caroline, adding, ‘We must have someone to help us while away the tedious hours, and to amuse us whilst the gentlemen are out.’

  The only thing that lingers in my mind as I write is the look I caught in Miss Elizabeth Bennet’s eye when I remarked that she was not handsome enough to tempt me to dance. If I did not know better, I would think it had been satirical. I am not quite easy that she should have overheard me, but it was not my intention that the words should reach her ears. Besides, it would be foolish to worry about her feelings. Her temperament is not delicate, and if she takes after her mother she will suffer no hurt. That abominable woman roundly condemned me for my chance remark, describing me to anyone who would listen as the most proud, disagreeable man in the world, and saying she hoped I would never come there again.

  I never thought I would agree with a woman of her stamp, but on this occasion I find that our minds are as one.

  Tuesday 15th October

  Bingley and I examined the woods today. Whilst we were out, the Misses Bennet waited on Caroline and Louisa.

  Friday 18th October

  Whilst Bingley and I were out riding, Caroline and Louisa took the carriage to Longbourn and called on the Bennets. I believe they mean to make friends of the two eldest girls. God knows, there is little enough company for them here.

  Saturday 19th October

  A wet day. After being confined within doors it was almost a relief to go out to a dinner-party this evening. It was no better than the assembly, the people no more elegant and the conversation no more stimulating, but it had the advantage of providing novelty.

  Bingley once again sat with Miss Jane Bennet. He has made her his flirt, and as her manners are as easy-going as his own, they make a good pair. She is not likely to be wounded by his attention, taking it in good part and seeing it as the agreeable diversion it is.

  ‘It is a shame the other Bennet girls do not have their eldest sister’s face or manner,’ remarked Caroline after dinner.

  ‘It is,’ I agreed.

  ‘I am not surprised you could not support the idea of standing up with Miss Elizabeth Bennet. She has none of her sister’s beauty.’

  ‘She has hardly a good feature in her face,’ I replied, turning my eyes on her and studying her closely.

  ‘No, indeed,’ said Caroline.

  ‘Oh, come now, Darcy,’ said Bingley, who had joined us as he had relinquished Miss Bennet to one of her sisters. ‘She is a very pretty girl.’

  ‘She is unremarkable in every way,’ I replied.

  ‘Very well, have it your own way. She has not one tolerable thing about her.’

  He laughed, and returned to Jane Bennet.

  Caroline continued to criticize our neighbours. As she did so, my eyes were drawn again to Miss Elizabeth Bennet, and I began to feel that I had not done her justice. Though she had not one good feature in her face, it was rendered uncommonly intelligent by the beautiful expression of her dark eyes. They gave her an animation which I thought very agreeable. I found myself watching her, and as she stood up to leave the table I further discovered that her figure was light and pleasing.

  She is still not handsome enough to tempt a man of my worth, but she has more beauty than I at first thought.

  Monday 4th November

  Another party. It was unavoidable, but I find I am not as ill-disposed to outings as I was. They provide a change from our usual intimate circle. Tonight’s party was at Sir William Lucas’s house, Lucas Lodge.

  ‘Be prepared to be bowed to every ten minutes,’ said Caroline, as we went into the house.

  ‘Every five minutes,’ said Louisa.

  ‘Sir William is a very agreeable person,’ said Bingley.

  ‘Dear Charles, you would think anyone agreeable if they allowed you to flirt
with Miss Bennet at one of their gatherings,’ I said.

  ‘She is an angel,’ said Bingley, not in the least discomposed.

  He soon found Miss Bennet. Mr Hurst danced with Caroline, and Louisa fell into conversation with Lady Lucas.

  I noticed that Miss Elizabeth Bennet was there, talking to Colonel Forster. Without knowing what I was doing I drew close, and I could not help overhearing her conversation. There was that in her manner which rendered it playful, and when she is being playful there is a certain lustre to her eyes. I remarked it, as I remarked the flush of animation that added beauty to her cheek. Her complexion is a healthy one, and her skin is lightly bronzed. It is perhaps not as fashionable as Caroline’s pallor, but it is pleasing all the same.

  She soon left Colonel Forster’s side and sought out Miss Lucas. The two of them appeared to be friends. I was about to speak to her, feeling an urge to see the sparkle in her eye once again, when the lady herself challenged me.

  ‘Did you not think, Mr Darcy, that I expressed myself uncommonly well just now, when I was teasing Colonel Forster to give us a ball at Meryton?’

  ‘With great energy,’ I replied, surprised, but not displeased, to be spoken to. ‘But it is a subject which always makes a lady energetic,’ I added.

  ‘You are severe on us.’

  This was said with such a saucy look that I was compelled to smile. Her manners would not do in London, but there is something to be said for being in the country. One needs variety, after all.

  ‘It will be her turn soon to be teased,’ said Miss Lucas, turning to me. ‘I am going to open the instrument, Eliza, and you know what follows.’

  She refused at first, saying that she did not want to play in front of those who must be used to hearing the very best musicians, but Miss Lucas teased her until she gave way.

  Her performance was surprisingly good. Not by way of notes; I believe a great many of them were wrong. But there was a sweetness to the tone that sounded well to my ears.

 

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