Chapter 46

Chapter 442,998 wordsCompleted

Elizabeth receives two frantic letters from Jane while staying at Lambton. The first, written five days earlier, reports that Lydia has fled with Mr. Wickham, supposedly bound for Scotland, and describes the hurried express from Colonel Forster that announced the elopement. The second letter, a day later, corrects the earlier report: Colonel Forster’s pursuit has traced the couple only as far as Clapham, after which they vanished from the road to London, and the letters convey the family’s growing distress. After reading both letters, Elizabeth is overcome with anxiety and immediately seeks Mr. Gardiner, demanding his assistance. As she hurries to the door, Mr. Darcy enters the room. She implores him to send a servant to fetch Mr. and Mrs. Gardiner, explaining that the matter cannot be delayed. Darcy, startled by her agitation, offers a glass of wine and tries to comfort her, but she refuses, insisting she is merely “ill” from distress. Elizabeth then recounts the details of Lydia’s departure— the midnight express, Colonel Forster’s chase, the couple’s disappearance after Clapham, and the uncertainty about whether they ever reached Scotland. Darcy asks probing questions to confirm the facts, expressing shock at the possibility that Wickham has not gone to Gretna Green and that the couple may be lost. He declares his willingness to help and suggests that the Gardiners’ immediate presence is essential. Elizabeth, still trembling, urges him to summon them at once. The scene ends with Elizabeth’s desperate appeal, Darcy’s promise to send for the Gardiners, and the anticipation of their arrival to coordinate a search for Lydia and to manage the family’s crisis.