Read The Jane Austen Book Club Online
Authors: Karen Joy Fowler
Bernadette supported her case with quotes. “Â âYou, who have not a mother's feelings.' âEverybody is always supposing that I am not a good walker!'Â ” and so on and so on. She read several paragraphs aloud. No one was arguing; we were in complete agreement, listening drowsily in the sweet, cool evening. Allegra might have said something sourâshe so often didâbut she hadn't come back from her phone call, so not a person there did
not love Mary. Mary was an exceptional creation. Mary deserved a toast. Sylvia and Jocelyn were sent to the kitchen for a second round of margaritas.
They passed Allegra, who was gesturing while she talked, as if she could be seen. “ . . . tore out the toilets and threw them out the windows,” she was saying. What a waste of her pretty expressions, her silent-film-star gestures. She had a face made for the videophone. She covered the receiver. “Dr. Yep says hello,” she told Sylvia.
Dr. Yep? Jocelyn waited until Sylvia had finished with the blender to lean in and whisper. “So! What mother doesn't want her daughter dating a nice doctor?”
Such a thing to say! Obviously Jocelyn had never seen a single episode of
Young Dr. Malone.
Sylvia knew how these things worked. Any minute now someone would fall into a coma. There'd be an accident in the kitchen with the blender. A suspicious death followed by a trial for murder. Hysterical pregnancies followed by unnecessary abortions. The many, many braided chains of disaster.
“I'm very happy for her,” Sylvia said. She poured the largest margarita for herself. She deserved it. “Dr. Yep seemed like a really lovely woman,” she added insincerely, although, in fact, Dr. Yep had.
Bernadette was still talking when they returned. She'd shifted from Mary to the older sister, Elizabeth. Equally well drawn, but far less funny. Not intended to be, of course. And then the conniving Mrs. Clay. But how was she worse than Charlotte in
Pride and Prejudice
, and hadn't they all agreed they loved Charlotte?
Sylvia started to argue on behalf of her adored Charlotte. She was interrupted by the doorbell. She went to answer it and there was Daniel. He had a gray, nervous look, which Sylvia liked better than the lobbyist's smile he tried immediately to paste over it.
“I can't talk to you now,” Sylvia said. “I got your letter, but I can't talk. My book club is here.”
“I know. Allegra told me.” Daniel held out his hand, and in it was a book with a woman on the cover, standing in front of a leafy tree. Allegra's copy of
Persuasion
. “I looked it over in the hospital. Anyway, I read the afterword. Apparently it's all about second chances. That's the book for me, I thought.”
He stopped smiling and the nervous look came back. The book in his hand was shaking. It softened Sylvia. “Allegra thought you were feeling forgiving,” Daniel said. “I took a chance she was right.”
Sylvia had no recollection of having said anything that would give Allegra this impression. She couldn't remember talking about Daniel much at all. But she stood aside and let him in, let him follow her back to the deck. “Daniel wants to join us,” Sylvia said.
“He's not in the club.” Jocelyn's voice was stern. Rules were rules, and no exceptions were made for philanderers and abandoners.
“
Persuasion
's my favorite Austen,” Daniel told her.
“Have you read it? Have you read any of them?”
“I'm fully prepared to,” said Daniel. “Every single one. Whatever it takes.”
He had a rosebud, short-stemmed, in the top pocket of his jeans. He pulled it out. “I know you won't believe this, but I found it lying on the sidewalk in front. Honest to God. I hoped you'd think it was a message.” He gave it to Sylvia, along with a couple of petals that had come loose.
“Te hecho de menos,”
he said.
“Chula.”
“Â âLes fleurs sont si contradictoires,'Â ”
Prudie answered coldly, to remind him we didn't all speak Spanish. Grigg had wanted only a single margarita, so she had taken his second and made
it her third. You could hear this on the
“sont si.”
She gave Daniel the courtesy of a translation, which was more than he had done for her. “From
Le Petit Prince.
âYou should never listen to flowers.'Â ”
No one was more of a romantic than Prudie, you could ask anyone that! But the rose was a cheap move, and Prudie thought less of Daniel for making it. Added to this was the guilt of knowing the rose was hers. Dean had picked it for her, and the last time she'd looked it had been pinned to her blouse.
She wasn't sure that
Persuasion
wasn't a cheap move, too, but who would put Jane to an evil purpose?
“Ask Austen,” Bernadette suggested.
“Shake it up,” Grigg said. “Shake hard.” Clearly he was rooting for Daniel. So predictable. So tediously Y to Y.
Sylvia set the rose down. It was already limp on its stem; the heavy head rolled from side to side. If it was an omen, it was an unclear one. She cupped the globe and shook. The answer began to settle:
My good opinion once lost is lost for ever
; but Sylvia didn't want that. She tipped secretly past it and got:
When I am in the country, I never wish to leave it; and when I am in town it is pretty much the same.
“So what does that mean?” Jocelyn asked Sylvia. “Your call.”
“It means he can stay,” Sylvia said, and saw, on Jocelyn's face, for just one moment, a flash of relief.
Allegra came back outside.
“Hola, papá,”
she said. “You've got my book. You've got my margarita. You're in my chair.” Her voice was suspiciously light. She had the face of an angel, the eyes of a collaborator. Daniel moved to make room for her.
Sylvia watched them settle together, Allegra leaning against her father, her cheek on his shoulder. Sylvia found herself suddenly, desperately missing the boys. Not the grown-up boys who had jobs and wives and children or, at least, girlfriends and cell
phones, but the little boys who'd played soccer and sat on her lap while she read
The Hobbit
to them. She remembered how Diego had decided over dinner that he could ride a two-wheeler, and made them take the training wheels off his bike that very night, how he sailed off without a single wobble. She remembered how Andy used to wake up from dreams laughing, and could never tell them why.
She remembered a ski trip they'd all taken the year of the big floods. 'Eighty-six? They'd rented a cabin in Yosemite and barely gotten home after. Interstate 5 had closed while they were on it, but they'd been able to shift to 99. Highway 99 flooded an hour after they'd driven over it.
While they were in the mountains, it snowed and snowed. This would have been lovely if they'd been sitting in some expensive ski lodge with their feet propped next to a fire. Instead they were standing in the Badger Pass parking lot with hundreds of other families, waiting for the bus to take them down.
It was a long, cold wait, and everyone was unhappy to be doing it. An announcement told them one of the buses had stalled and wouldn't arrive at all. This worsened the collective mood. The boys were hungry. Allegra was starving. The boys were cold. Allegra was freezing. They hated skiing, they all said, and why had they been made to come?
When a bus did arrive, almost thirty minutes later, a man and a woman pushed their way into line in front of Sylvia. There was little point to this. None of them was close enough to the front to have a shot at this first bus. But Sylvia had been shoved aside and, in her efforts not to step on Diego, had fallen onto the icy pavement. “Hey,” Daniel had said. “That's my wife you just pushed over.”
“Fuck you,” the man answered.
“What did you say?”
“Fuck your wife,” the woman added.
The kids had scarves wound around their necks, covering their mouths. Over these, their eyes were shiny with excitement. There was going to be a fight! Their father was going to start it! The people nearest gave way so that there was empty space around Daniel and the other man.
“Daniel, don't,” said Sylvia. One thing she'd always loved about Daniel was his lack of machismo. The boys she'd grown up with were such
caballeros.
Such cowboys. She'd never found it attractive. Daniel was like her father, self-confident enough to take an insult if one was offered. (On the other hand, she had been pushed and cursed, entirely without provocation. That wasn't right.)
“I'll deal with this,” Daniel told her. He was wearing ski pants, soft après-ski boots, and an enormous parka. That was the top layer, but there were many strata beneath. He looked as if he were about to be shot from a cannon. The other man was equally padded, the Michelin man in Patagonia blue. They squared off. Daniel was as angry as Sylvia had ever seen him.
He took a swing, but the ice was so bad he almost went down from his own momentum. He missed the other man's chest by many inches. The other man rushed him and Daniel side-stepped, so the man slid past and crashed into a pile of skis and poles.
Both regained their balance, turned around. “You'll be sorry for that,” the man said. He walked toward Daniel, setting each foot onto the ice with care. Daniel took another swing and a miss. His boots slid out from under him; he went down hard. The other man stepped in to hold him there, pin him with a knee, but in his haste slid past again. His wife caught him and propped him upright. Daniel got to his feet, lumbered forward. He took a third swing; it spun him halfway around to face Sylvia.
He was smiling. Fat as a Santa in his big dark parka, there he was, fighting for her honor, but never managing to land a single punch. Windmilling, slipping, falling. Laughing.
I
s Anne Elliot really the best heroine Austen ever created?” Daniel asked. “That's what it says here in the afterword.”
“She's a little too innately good for my taste,” said Allegra. “I prefer Elizabeth Bennet.”
“I love them all,” Bernadette answered.
“Bernadette,” Prudie said. She'd reached that pensive, sentimental state of drunkenness that everyone watching so enjoys. “You've done so many things and read so many books. Do you still believe in happy endings?”
“Oh my Lord, yes.” Bernadette's hands were pressed against each other like a book, like a prayer. “I guess I would. I've had about a hundred of them.”
On the deck behind her was a glass door, and behind the door a dark room. Sylvia was not a happy-ending sort of person herself. In books, yes, they were lovely. But in life everyone has the same ending, and the only question is who will get to it first. She took a drink of peach margarita and looked at Daniel, who was looking back, and didn't look away.
What if you had a happy ending and didn't notice? Sylvia made a mental note. Don't miss the happy ending.
Above Daniel's head, one leaf, and only one leaf, ticked about on the walnut tree. How exacting, how precise the breeze! It smelled of the river, a green smell in a brown month. She took a deep breath.
“Sometimes a white cat is just a white cat,” Bernadette said.
T
he Jane Austen book club did meet one more time. In November we gathered at the Crêpe Bistro to have lunch and take turns looking at the pictures from Bernadette's Costa Rican trip on her laptop. It was too bad she'd done no editing. Every time she saw something breathtaking, she took two or three identical shots. There were also two photos of headless people, and one in which you saw nothing but two red spots, which Bernadette said were jaguar eyes, and we couldn't prove they weren't. They were very far apart, though.
She told us how one day the tour bus had broken down in front of a plantation named The Scarlet Macaw. The owner of the plantation, the courtly Señor Obando, had insisted the group all stay there until a new bus could arrive. In the fourteen hours that took, they hiked around the plantation. Bernadette saw a
bare-necked umbrella bird, a torrent tyrannulet, a rufous motmot, a harpy eagle (a cause for considerable celebration), a stripe-breasted this, and a red-footed that.
Señor Obando was a great enthusiast, had enormous energy for a man his age. He was determined to get his plantation on the ecotour circuit, and not for himself, but for the birders. It was his dream, he said. Surely there was no plantation anywhere with better birds or better trails. They could see for themselves how good the accommodations were, how varied the feathered denizens.
He and Bernadette sat on the veranda, drank something minty, and talked about everything under the sun. His relatives in San Joséâsadly infirm. They wrote often, but he rarely saw them. Booksâ“I'm afraid we don't have the same taste in novels,” Bernadette saidâand music. The relative merits of Lerner and Loewe versus Rodgers and Hammerstein. Señor Obando knew the songs from a dozen Broadway musicals. They sang “How Are Things in Gloccamora?” and “I Loved You Once in Silence,” and “A Cockeyed Optimist.” He encouraged Bernadette to talk more; he said listening to her would improve his English. A week later Bernadette had added Señor Obando to her Life List.
She was married again. She showed us a ring set with a large aquamarine. “I really think this is the one,” she said. “I love a man with a vision.”
She'd come back to see the kids, the grandkids, the great-grandkids, and to pack up her apartment. She was grabbing her coat and getting her hat. Just forward her mail to The Scarlet Macaw.
We were happy for her, of course, and lucky Señor Obando, but we were a little sad, too. Costa Rica is far away.
Grigg said that he, in particular, missed our meetings. Grigg
and Jocelyn were just back from the World Fantasy Convention in Minneapolis. It was a serious convention, Jocelyn said. For serious readers. She'd liked everyone she'd met, and seen nothing of which to disapprove. Grigg said that she hadn't been looking too closely.
In fact, he'd thought her awkward and uncomfortable, surrounded by so many people she didn't know. It didn't worry us. Give her time to relax, give her time to see what was needed, and Jocelyn would have the whole community in order. The matchmaking alone could occupy her for years.
“We could read someone else,” Grigg suggested. “Patrick O'Brian? Some of his books are very Austenish. More than you'd expect.”
“I'm a big fan of boats,” Prudie told Grigg. “Ask anyone.” Her tone was polite, at best.
Grigg never had quite gotten it. If we'd started with Patrick O'Brian, we could have then gone on to Austen. We couldn't possibly go the other direction.
We'd let Austen into our lives, and now we were all either married or dating. Could O'Brian have done this? How? When we needed to cook aboard ship, play a musical instrument, traverse Spain dressed like a bear, Patrick O'Brian would be our man. Till then, we'd just wait. In three or four years it would be time to read Austen again.
Sylvia and Daniel had stayed at Jocelyn's to watch the kennel while Jocelyn was at World Fantasy. Afterward, Daniel moved back home. Sylvia told us she picked up some useful marital tips from Sahara and the matriarchal Ridgebacks. She says that she's happy, but she's still Sylvia. Who can really tell?
We see a lot less of Allegra these days. She moved back to San Francisco and back with Corinne. None of us expects this to last. Daniel told Sylvia the things Corinne had done, and Sylvia told
Jocelyn, and now we all sort of know. It's hard to like Corinne much now; it's hard to have a good feeling about the relationship. You have to believe in fundamental reform. You have to trust Allegra. You remind yourself that no one can push Allegra around.
There's a whole story involving Samantha Yep, but Allegra says she's never telling it, not to us, not to Corinne. It's a good story, that's why. She has no intention of finding it in
The New Yorker
some day.
We all ordered a glass of Crêpe Bistro's excellent hard cider and toasted Bernadette's marriage. Sylvia brought out the Ask Austen, not to ask a question, just to give the last word to the right person.
Â
South or north, I know a black cloud when I see it.
Except that Austen wouldn't want us to end things that way.
Â
A single woman, of good fortune, is always respectable.
Better. A good sentiment. Not so true, though, as other things she said. We're sure you can think of exceptions.
Â
The mere habit of learning to love is the thing.
There.
Â
In honor of Bernadette, with best wishes for her future health and happiness, Austen repeats herself:
The mere habit of learning to love is the thing.
Â
â
JANE AUSTEN
, 1775â1817