When Mr. Darcy, Mrs. Darcy, and Mr. Bingley
entered upon the scene, having been belatedly alerted to Mrs. Norton’s ailment,
the drawing room was yet a scene of chaos. Their appearance had the helpful
effect of silencing the many children clamoring around the sofa upon which she lay,
her head in Mrs. Bingley’s lap. They parted before their elders like the Red
Sea.
“What is wrong? What has happened?” Mrs. Darcy
cried, kneeling down beside her sister and feeling for her pulse.
“She ran into the house screaming she had been
shot!” Mrs. Bingley said in a shaky voice. “Yet there is no blood.”
Mrs. Darcy began inspecting her sister’s form
for injury and Mr. Darcy ordered, “Miss Lee! Miss Jones! Please remove your
charges from the room!” The children, suddenly compliant, were quickly ushered
out the door, while Edmund approached his father and pulled him aside.
Tom signaled to Mark and George to follow the
others, and the three had almost escaped when Mr. Darcy, still beside Edmund,
pointed an accusing finger their way and said, “Not you three!"
The boys turned
reluctantly around and slowly walked back across the room.
“Edmund believes you may know something of
what has befallen your aunt,” he said sternly, looking to his eldest. “I am
waiting for you to enlighten me, Tom.”
“We were just in the woods by the lawn,” he
smoothly replied. “We came in when we heard Aunt Norton hollering, like
everyone else. I don’t know why Edmund should think we have any more
information than any of the others.”
Mr. Darcy looked at both Mark and George,
neither of whom could hide their guilt as well as Tom, and sighed miserably. He
knew not when his son had become such an accomplished liar, but the realization
that he was tore at his heart. “Mark? George? What have you to say for
yourselves.” Neither boy replied, both staring downward in shame. Mr. Darcy
looked again to his son, who confidently met his eye. “Are you lying to me,
Tom?”
Tom dropped his
gaze and assumed an attitude of repentance. “I am sorry, Father.”
“Tell me what
happened.”
“George did not
mean any harm,” he quickly said, “I am sure he did not.”
“Me?” George
exclaimed in alarm.
“George is not to blame,” Mark spoke up. “It
was our idea. He warned us it was a poor one, but we really did not mean to do
Aunt Norton any harm.”
“Mark!” Tom
exclaimed, his voice a warning.
“What did you
do?” Mr. Darcy asked, the words seeming to come from someone else.
Mark swallowed hard, looked pleadingly at Tom,
then back at Mr. Darcy. “Tom fired his slingshot across Aunt Norton’s path. He
did not hit her. I swear it.”
His nephew’s admission was like a knife in Mr.
Darcy’s side, slowly twisting as the full magnitude of what he was hearing sunk
in. His son had played a dangerous prank, which was bad enough, but then he
lied about it and tried to blame another. He must have thought his father would
believe him over this new nephew, the son of his old nemesis. Never had Mr.
Darcy felt more a failure, not even when Wickham nearly absconded with his
sister, all those many years ago.
Mrs. Norton was beginning to rouse and moan.
Mr. Darcy Looked to where his wife sat busily administering to her sister and
was grateful she had been spared the burden of her son’s sins, at least
temporarily. “Go to my study and wait for me there,” he ordered the three boys.
“You too Edmund. I will be in to speak with you shortly.”
§§§
“You betrayed me, Mark!” Tom said as soon as
they were in the privacy of Mr. Darcy’s study. “And you too, Edmund. How dare
you!”
“How dare I?” Edmund, never one to raise his
voice, nearly shouted. “How dare you! Where do you find the audacity, Tom? Have
you no thought at all for the lives you endangered? Yes, lives! For you placed
George’s life in threat today just as much as you did Aunt Norton’s. I am
ashamed to call you brother.”
“You had best not speak so to me,” Tom
growled. “I should be sorry to see another prospective rector of Kympton lose
his livelihood.”
“It is not in your power to deprive me of my
birthright, but it is within Father’s. Yours as well. If nothing else inspires
you to contrition, I am certain losing your inheritance would.”
Tom had no reply
to this, and for the first time seemed truly chastened.
“What did you
mean by ‘another prospective rector of Kympton?’” Mark suddenly asked.
“My father was meant to have the living,”
George explained. “Tom implies Uncle Darcy denied it to him, but it is not
true. He accepted a cash settlement for the value of the living.”
“I don’t know how you know that,” Mr. Darcy’s
voice interrupted the boys, who had not heard the door open. Mr. Bingley
followed him into the room. “I am sure your father never told you.”
George blushed but faced his uncle and said,
“No, my father spoke rather bitterly of the loss of the living, but long before
I came here and met you I realized his version of events did not add up.”
“George has been
snooping through old estate ledgers, Father,” Tom said.
“At your
insistence,” Edmund appnded, earning him a violent glare from his brother.
Mr. Darcy sighed heavily and dropped into his
chair. “Your aunt will recover, though she has suffered a severe shock. I hope
all of you understand the seriousness of your actions. Had your thoughtless
prank resulted in her death, you might have been held responsible before the
law.” He paused to allow this notion to seep into their minds.
“I am very disappointed in you, Mark, to pull
such a cruel trick,” Mr. Bingley said. “I must discuss with your mother how
best to punish you, but I assure you it will be severe.”
“Yes, Papa,” Mark said. His face spoke his
understanding, both showing fear of what might come and acknowledgement that
whatever it was, he had earned it.
“Come along, your Uncle Darcy wishes to speak
to the others alone.” Mark followed his father out of the room, looking back miserably
at his cousins before shutting the door behind him.
“I do not even know where to begin.” Tom
opened his mouth to offer a suggestion but an upheld hand stopped his tongue.
“Much has been revealed in the past few moments, the severity of which is
difficult to digest. Foolish pranks and invasions of privacy aside, we have
disharmony between brothers, abuse of power, and deception with which to
contend. In the end, the fault must be mine. Somehow, I have failed to instill
a proper morality, and Elizabeth and I will have to do something to account for
this neglect, but Tom: you must understand the severity of your actions! You
are to be the Master of Pemberley someday! Countless people will be dependent
on your good sense and honor. Today I fear you have revealed a character unfit
for such a task.”
“I am sorry, Father,” he said. “For
everything. It was stupid to lead the others in the stunt. I take full
responsibility.”
Mr. Darcy’s eyes spoke his pain. “Now you say
what you ought to have the moment I inquired. How do I know you do not speak
only to appease me? Your first instinct was to evade responsibility for your
actions.”
“I am sorry,
Father,” Tom said again. “It was very wrong to blame George.”
“Yes, it was. Far worse than it would have
been to have tried to put the blame on Mark, who is not in any way beholden to
you. Have you apologized to George?”
Tom promptly
turned to his cousin and extended his hand. “I am sorry, George. Have I your
forgiveness?”
“Yes,” George relented for the second time
that day and shook the proffered hand, though he could see no sincerity in
Tom’s eyes.
“You will both make a full confession and
apology to your Aunt Norris. I imagine she may be in need of a few days of rest
to recover herself. You will offer to assist her while she convalesces with
anything she requires.”
“Yes, sir,” Tom
and George chorused in reply.
“I blush for you, Tom,” he said severely. “Based
upon your recent actions, I feel it incumbent to remind you that you shall
enact no vengeance upon either Edmund, Mark, and most certainly not George for
what has occurred here today.”
“No, sir”.
“We will discuss your punishment further.
Edmund, George, before you leave us, I want to clarify a few matters, that they
need not be further pursued,” he paused thoughtfully. “Nearly twenty years ago,
George’s father did indeed receive a payment from me for the value of the
living at Kympton. He professed the intention of studying the law, which the
funds provided should have easily covered. As you know, he ended up in a
different career, and upon marriage received from me the purchase of an
ensigncy in the Regulars, as a means of supporting his wife and future family.
These dealings have no bearing on the fissure between myself and him, the
reasons for which I trust cannot be found in any ledger. If you have any
further questions on the matter, I invite you to ask them now.”
Edmund and George both shook their head in
reply, while Tom managed to look as if he had never a care for the subject at
all.
“Very good. I trust the topic may now be
permanently closed for discussion. Let me just say your father’s past is not
your own, George. Despite your part in today’s outrage, your subsequent conduct
reflects well on your character. You aunt and I are very happy to have you with
us here at Pemberley.”
“Thank you, Uncle
Darcy.”
“Now go. Tom and
I have much to discuss.”
The boys left the
young heir to his fate, closing the study door behind them.
§§§
Let other pens dwell on guilt and misery! I quit such odious subjects as soon as I can, impatient to restore everybody, not greatly in fault themselves, to tolerable comfort, and to have done with all the rest.
Ten years following these events, Thomas Darcy
attempted to jump an ominous hedge and broke his neck.
Darcy and Elizabeth, though heartbroken by his
death, found solace in the knowledge that he did not suffer and even came to see
the good of it in time. Their other children were constant sources of pride and
their love for them and each other only grew in intensity throughout the years.
Mr. Norton proceeded Tom to the grave before
Edmund was old enough to succeed him. Mrs.
Norton left the rectory and took up possession of the far grander Dower House,
where she discovered ailments of her own to fill the void the loss of her
husband’s gout left in her conversation.
Mr. Carson and Miss Lee, once their services
were no longer required by the Darcys, made a future for themselves together
and had three very well-educated children to show for it.
The Bingleys lived a charmed existence, rarely
touched by loss or grief. Mark studied engineering and invested heavily in the
railroad, his private fortune one day outstripping that of all his other
relations.
Edmund never did take orders but proved a
superior landlord, ensuring the prosperity of Pemberley and all attached to it
for generations to come. He spent his later years developing his love of
painting and joined the Royal Academy, his works regularly featured in the
Summer Exhibition.
The boys never did learn the extent of the
elder Wickham’s betrayal of the Darcy family, though the younger George Wickham
forever called Pemberley home, his bond with the Darcys solidified and the
injuries of the past fully forgotten by the time he was old enough to wed
Maria.
THE END
_________________________
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