when, instead of being again surprised by Mr Darcy, she looked
up and saw that Colonel Fitzwilliam was coming to meet her.
They walked together towards the Parsonage.
'Is it settled that you leave Kent on Saturday?' she asked.
'Yes - if Darcy does not put it off again. But he arranges our
business just as he pleases. I share with him the responsibility of
looking after Miss Darcy.'
'Do you really? And does she give you much trouble? Young
ladies of her age are sometimes difficult to manage.'
As she spoke, she saw him looking at her very seriously, and
his manner made her believe that she had somehow or other got
fairly near the truth. She replied immediately:
'You need not be frightened. I have never heard any harm of
her. She is a great favourite of some ladies of my acquaintance,
Mrs Hurst and Miss Bingley. I think that you know them.'
'I know them a little. Their brother is a great friend of
Darcy's.'
'Oh, yes,' said Elizabeth sharply, 'Mr Darcy is uncommonly
kind to Mr Bingley, and takes great care of him.'
'Care of him! Yes, I really believe Darcy
does take care of him.
From something that he told me, I have reason to think that
Bingley must have cause to be very grateful to him.'
'What do you mean?'
'It is a matter which Darcy, of course, could not wish to be
generally known, because if it were to reach the lady's family it
would be an unpleasant thing.'
'You may depend on my not mentioning it.'
'What he told me was this: that he congratulated himself on
having saved a friend from the inconveniences of a most unwise
marriage, but without mentioning names or any other details.'
'Did Mr Darcy give you his reasons for his involvement?'
'I understood that there were some very strong objections to
the lady.'
54
Elizabeth walked on, her heart swelling with anger. She could
not trust herself further with the subject, and therefore, quickly
changing the conversation, talked about different matters until
they reached the Parsonage. There, shut in her own room as soon
as their visitor had left them, she could think without
interruption of all that she had heard. She had never doubted that
Mr Darcy had been involved in the action taken to separate Mr
Bingley and Jane, but she had always blamed Miss Bingley as the
chief person responsible. But now she knew.
He was the cause -
his pride was the cause - of all that Jane had suffered. He had
ruined every hope of happiness for the most loving, most
generous heart in the world.
'There were some very strong objections to the lady,' were
Colonel Fitzwilliam's words, and these strong objections probably
included her having one uncle who was a country lawyer and
another who was in business in London.
'To Jane herself,' she whispered, 'there could be no possible
objection - she is all beauty and goodness! Her understanding is
excellent, her mind improved, and her manners excellent.
Neither could my father be to blame, since he has abilities that
Mr Darcy himself could not fail to respect.' But when she
thought of her mother her confidence
did weaken a little.
The excitement and tears which the subject caused brought
on a headache, and it became so much worse towards the
evening that, added to her unwillingness to see Mr Darcy, it made
her decide not to go with her cousins to Rosings, where they
were invited to take tea. Mrs Collins, seeing that she was really
unwell, did not urge her to go, and prevented her husband as
much as possible from urging her, but Mr Collins could not hide
his fear that Lady Catherine might be rather displeased by her
staying at home.
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