George awoke the next morning after a night of
dreamless repose, a gift to the exhausted, but though refreshed and energetic,
he did not immediately arise. Lying on his back, enveloped in the most
comfortable bed in which he had ever slept, he gazed around at the fineroom
which would now be considered his own. Very little in his life had ever been
entirely his own, at least not since his infancy, and he luxuriated in the
privacy. Once his studies began, he would be able to read and work
uninterrupted. He grinned at the thought. He missed his brothers and sisters,
certainly, but he knew this to be a remarkable opportunity to forge a better
life for them all, and his determination to do so was far more powerful than
any yearning for home. The biggest obstacle in his path, as he had come to
understand over the course of the previous day, was Mr. Darcy himself. The hand
that had been extended to George was reluctant and might be pulled back at any
time.
George had counted the privilege of calling
Mr. Darcy “Uncle” a triumph, and had retired confident that he would win his
benefactor over in time, but both Edmund’s words on the matter and the stark morning
light undermined his assurance. He now considered how awkward it would be for
him to continue calling the gentleman “Mr. Darcy” when all the world knew he
was his nephew. The concession might have more to do with this appearance than
any softening of the man’s heart.
He climbed out of bed and dressed himself. Carefully
guiding his way through the stately halls,
using tables and paintings as landmarks, he found Edmund’s door and knocked.
He was called into a much grander room than
his own bearing all the appearance of being well-lived in and rendering his own
Spartan in comparison. Edmund was sitting at a writing desk, working. George
crossed the room and looked over his cousin’s shoulder to behold a detailed
drawing of a finch.
“You are an
artist, Edmund!” he exclaimed.
“No,” his cousin
blushed. “Not really. I just enjoy sketching.”
“That is awfully
detailed for a mere sketch. You have talent. Did Mr. Carson teach you?”
“No, my Aunt
Georgiana.”
“You should take
lessons,” George insisted.
“I don’t think so,” Edmund replied, reordering
the papers on his desk to hide the finch. “Tom already teases me for my
interest.”
“You should not
let that stop you.”
“Do you still
want to see the library?” he asked.
“More than anything!” George replied
enthusiastically. Edmund put on his jacket and led the way downstairs.
The library was an impressive, two-storied
room. Large windows along one wall provided ample light while masses of books
lined the shelves everywhere else. George stood in the center and turned,
taking it all in. “It is the most wonderful room I have ever seen,” he
proclaimed in reverent tones.
Edmund smiled. “It is my favorite in the
house. My father and mother’s, too. Though it has always served as the library,
my grandfather had it enlarged and the room remains as he designed it, other
than the addition of newer works to the collection.”
“Another memorial to the elder Mr. Darcy. I
begin to understand what Tom said of making his mark on the house. This is an
extraordinary legacy! I do not know where to begin,” George admitted, now
running his hand along the shelves, stopping to smile at familiar titles.
“I thought you might find these interesting,”
he guided his cousin to a low shelf filled with oversized books. “These are the
estate ledgers going back well over one hundred years. Look, here are the records
from when your grandfather was steward.” He pulled one of the shelf, laid it on
a nearby table, and opened to a random page. “I think that is probably his
handwriting. The other hand is my grandfather’s. I know if from old letters and
documents my father keeps.”
George ran his eyes down the page upon which a
variety of items were listed along with their associated costs and purposes. It
made for mundane reading, but Edmund could not help but wonder if the
information might prove useful. “Thank you for showing me this, Edmund. I think
I might learn a lot from such records. One immediately perceives how very
complex and detailed the running of such a large estate must be.”
“It is a daunting
task, but do not fear. You will be prepared for it when the time comes.”
“I do hope so.”
“There you are,” Tom’s voice interrupted the
two boys in their perusal. Both looked up to perceive him standing in the
doorway. “I thought we were to ride this morning, not bury ourselves in books.”
“George wanted to
see the library,” Edmund explained.
“And so he shall this afternoon, when Mama
plans to conduct the Grand Tour. Now is the time to get some exercise. Come to
breakfast that we may be off.” Without waiting for the others he exited the
room, certain they would follow his command.
Edmund closed the
ledger and returned it to the shelf. “We had better go.”
“Tom seems
already the Master of Pemberley. He is a natural leader,” George commented,
admiringly.
“Oh yes, he is as in command as he can be for
a boy of thirteen, and he is not one to let anyone else forget that he will one
day be in complete control of all our lives.”
“A little bluster
is to be expected from someone so fortunately placed as himself.”
“Tom has more
than a little bluster.”
§§§
The girls were in the breakfast parlor with
Miss Lee, who smiled kindly at George and invited him to sit beside her and
talk of himself. She was a cheerful woman who had been with the Darcys for
nearly a decade. Maria shyly asked her cousin if he really had seven siblings
at home and a new baby expected on the way. He laughed and confirmed her information,
and when pressed as to which he would prefer, another sister or brother, his
ready affirmation in favor of the former won him a firm little friend. The bond
was further solidified when she asked if she could join the boys on their ride,
a request which Tom was quick to deny, but George seemed very sorry to lose her
company. Three hungry boys will only linger so long over their food, and soon
Tom was itching to be off. An invitation was extended to take tea with the
girls later that day, which George accepted with a formality that delighted his
youngest cousins.
“Come along,
George,” Tom said impatiently. “You can dangle after my sisters later.”
George blushed but smiled. “Maria reminds me
of our little Lydie at home. I suppose she will have grown into quiet a young
lady by the time I next see her,” he sighed.
Tom laughed.
“Sisters are plaguy things. I do not know why you should wish for more.”
“It has been my experience, having a great
variety of both sisters and brothers, that the former are a deal less trouble,
especially in infancy. A girl will be easier for Mama to manage.”
“If they are less
trouble at first, I imagine they make up for it at last,” Tom replied,
knowingly.
George laughed. “You may very well be right,
Cousin. Hopefully, Mama will be fortunate in her next marriage before being put
to such a test.”
“Do you expect that she will marry again?”
Edmund asked, breathing somewhat heavily as he struggled to keep pace with the
others.
“I have no doubt
she will.”
“A mother of nine
children is unlikely to find the suitors banging down her door,” Tom commented
slyly.
“Oh, Mama is remarkably well preserved and has
a wide social circle. She will have her choice of husbands. I just hope she
chooses wisely.”
Mr. Wilcox had their horses saddled and ready.
George approached Midnight slowly, holding out an apple he had brought along to
help win her affection. Mr. Wilcox watched as he mounted, adjusted his saddle,
and corrected his posture before saying with a grimace. “Aye. I suppose ye’ll
do.” With that the boys were off, George not as at home as his companions but
making a creditable display. His cousins took him to some of their favorite
parts of the estate. They rode by the old house, dating back to the reign of
Elizabeth, and having since served as the Dower House, unneeded for three
generations. It occasionally was tenanted by some select family visiting the
area but was otherwise unused. Then there was the Hermitage, said to be even
older than the old house, and left to ruin centuries ago. The last stop on
their tour was the outlook from which one could see all of the vast estate, the
town of Lambton beyond to the west, and the smaller hamlet of Kympton to the
south. Tom pointed out landmarks with pride of ownership, knowing one day all
before him would be his. Edmund, destined for the living at Kympton, pointed
out some of the notable features of its church.
George was overawed by the magnitude of Pemberley.
He felt the weight of the responsibility he had been given: to care for this
land, its people, and to someday advise the boy beside him in the governance of
it all. At the same time, he was
forcefully struck by the notion that his own father had probably stood on the
same spot, perhaps beside a former heir to all below, thinking his life was
tied to this land and people. Both his father and mother had long claimed that
the elder Mr. Darcy had intended the living at Kympton for Wickham, and because
of some lack of specificity in his will, the current Mr. Darcy had denied it, forcing
him to seek a career in the military instead. At one time, George had felt an
anger towards this unknown uncle, certain he had deprived the entire family of
a better life, but he later reconsidered his position after realizing how
ill-suited his father would be for such a role. Mr. Wilkinson knew Mr. Darcy by
reputation to be an honorable man, and though reluctant to say anything that
might disparage his young friend’s father, when presented with the circumstances
he said confidently that the matter was sure to have been handled equitably.
George was never close enough with his father to inquire directly into the
matter, but he learned to take the man’s grievances with a grain of salt. Wondering
if his cousins knew anything of the matter, he cautiously said, “My father
always maintained that your grandfather educated him for the Church. He felt
the living at Kympton ought rightfully to have been his.”
Both of his cousins looked surprised by this
news. “I certainly never heard anything of it,” Tom said dismissively.
Edmund, in keeping with his nature, took the
matter more seriously. “Do you imply that Captain Wickham was deprived a
promised living?”
“No, though he certainly saw it that way, I
believe his perspective was limited. He would have made a terrible clergyman,”
he confessed. “No conscientious landlord would place him in such a position. I
feel certain your father behaved honorably towards mine, perhaps assisting him
in another career.”
Edmund looked relieved by this admission and
was ready to speak of other subjects, but Tom now found interest in the matter.
“I wonder if that is not the reason they fell out? If
Father objected to Mr. Wickham as a rector and
so cut him out?”
“I cannot
conceive of Father doing such a thing,” Edmund said, now truly scandalized.
“I am sure there
is a logical explanation for it all,” George quickly asserted.
“Yes, surely there is, but no one will share
it with us,” Tom complained in frustration. “If only there was some way in which
we could learn the truth.”
“You know, I was thinking there might be some
clues in those ledgers you showed me earlier, Edmund,” George said. “The
rupture must have taken place between the time of your grandfather’s death and
the marriage of my parents. If we searched the entries during those years, we
might learn something valuable.”
Tom’s face lit up
while Edmund frowned. “That is an excellent idea, George!”
“What you propose requires a great deal of
time. One would have to scan six, maybe seven years of entries. The task would
take hours and probably avail you little.”
“The time can be of no matter,” Tom said. “I
understand you to be a bookish fellow, George. I suspect you would enjoy the
task, would you not?”
George looked skeptical. “I do not know that I
shall have much leisure for such a pursuit. I begin studying with Mr. Carson
tomorrow.”
“Carson is not such a task master. I dare say
you will find yourself with ever so much more leisure than you have been accustomed
to,” Tom countered.
George thought of the mystery behind his
father’s disgrace and softened. “I should like to know anything that might
shine light on the reason for our fathers’ falling out. It would help me know
how best to proceed with Uncle Darcy.”
“Then that settles it. Mama will want us back
for the Grand Tour now, so we had best get going. If there is time when she
finishes, you can begin your research then,” he commanded.
“You forget I am
promised to your sisters for tea.”
Tom grimaced.
“Next time you will know better than to so beholden yourself.”
“I look forward
to getting to know all my cousins better.”
“Yes, well, I suppose there is no hope for it
now. You can begin tomorrow when we have our ride, instead.”
“That is unfair, Tom.
George only just arrived!” Edmund protested.
“And the sooner we solve this mystery about
his father, the sooner he can make headway with Father,” Tom countered. His
expression softening, he said, “I only want ensure our cousin’s comfort.”
“I am
unaccustomed to the luxury of a daily ride. Missing one will do me no harm,”
George conceded.
“I knew you were right one,” said Tom,
slapping George approvingly on the back. “And you can continue in the
afternoon, once your lessons are complete.” With that he turned his horse and
began leading the way back to the house, not bothering to see the look of hurt
on his normally smiling cousin’s face.
“You need not do
what he says,” Edmund said in an undertone, so as not to be overheard.
“No, he is right. Learning more about my
father may very well be the key to my own future here. It ought to be my
priority.” George spurred his horse into a trot to catch up with Tom, leaving
Edmund shaking his head behind him.
_________________________
Come back tomorrow to read Part Six!
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Thanks for the update. It's too bad that Edmund wasn't born first as I worry about Tom being heir. I noticed a typo in the following sentence, "I know if from old letters and documents my father keeps."
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