The Jane Austen Book Club
by Karen Joy Fowler
Chapter One
in which we gather
at Jocelyn's
to discuss Emma
We sat in a circle on Jocelyn's screened porch at dusk, drinking cold sun
tea, surrounded by the smell of her twelve acres of fresh-mowed California
grass. There was a very pretty view. The sunset had been a spectacular dash
of purple, and now the Berryessa mountains were shadowed in the west. Due south
in the springtime, but not the summer, was a stream.
"Just listen to the frogs," Jocelyn
said. We listened. Apparently, somewhere beneath the clamor of her kennel
of barking dogs was a chorus of
frogs.
She introduced us all to Grigg. He had brought the Gramercy edition of the
complete novels, which suggested that Austen was merely a recent whim. We really
could not approve of someone who showed up with an obviously new book, of someone
who had the complete novels on his lap when only Emma was under discussion.
Whenever he first spoke, whatever he said, one of us would have to put him
in his place.
This person would not be Bernadette.
Though she'd been the one to request girls only, she had the best heart in
the world; we weren't surprised that
she was making Grigg welcome. "It's so lovely to see a man taking an interest
in Miss Austen," she told him. "Delightful to get the male perspective.
We're so pleased that you're here." Bernadette never said anything once
if it could be said three times. Sometimes this was annoying, but mostly it
was restful. When she'd arrived, she seemed to have a large bat hanging over
her ear. It was just a leaf, and Jocelyn removed it as they hugged.
Jocelyn had two portable heaters going, and the porch hummed cozily. There
were Indian rugs and Spanish-tile floors of a red that might hide dog hair,
depending on the breed. There were porcelain lamps in the shape of ginger jars,
round and Oriental, and with none of the usual dust on the bulbs, because it
was Jocelyn's house. The lamps were on timers. When it was sufficiently dark
out, at the perfect moment, they would snap on all at once like a choir. This
hadn't happened yet, but we were looking forward to it. Maybe someone would
be saying something brilliant.
The only wall held a row of photographs--Jocelyn's dynasty of Ridgebacks,
surrounded by their ribbons and pedigrees. Ridgebacks are a matriarchal breed;
it's one of their many attractive features. Put Jocelyn in the alpha position
and you have the makings of an advanced civilization.
Queenie of the Serengeti looked down on us, doe eyes and troubled, intelligent
brow. It's hard to capture a dog's personality in a photograph; dogs suffer
more from the flattening than people do, or cats even. Birds photograph well
because their spirits are so guarded, and anyway, often the real subject is
the tree. But this was a flattering likeness, and Jocelyn had taken it herself.
Beneath Queenie's picture, her daughter, Sunrise on the Sahara, lay, in the
flesh, at our feet. She had only just settled, having spent the first half-hour
moving from one of us to the next, puffing hot stagnant-pond smells into our
faces, leaving hairs on our pants. She was Jocelyn's favorite, the only dog
allowed inside, although she was not valuable, since she suffered from hyperthyroidism
and had had to be spayed. It was a shame she wouldn't have puppies, Jocelyn
said, for she had the sweetest disposition.
Jocelyn had recently spent more than two thousand dollars on vet bills for
Sahara. We were glad to hear this; dog breeding, we'd heard, could make a person
cruel and calculating. Jocelyn hoped to continue competing her, though the
kennel would derive no benefit; it was just that Sahara missed it so. If her
gait could be smoothed out-for Ridgebacks it was all about the gait--she could
still show, even if she never won. (But Sahara knew when she'd lost; she became
subdued and reflective. Sometimes someone was sleeping with the judge and there
was nothing to be done about it.) Sahara's competitive category was Sexually
Altered Bitch.
The barking outside ascended into hysteria. Sahara rose and walked stiffly
to the screen door, her ridge bristling like a toothbrush.
"Why isn't Knightley more appealing?" Jocelyn began. "He
has so many good qualities. Why don't I warm to him?"
We could hardly hear her; she had to repeat herself. The conditions were such,
really, that we should have been discussing Jack London. . . .
Most of what we knew about Jocelyn came from Sylvia. Little Jocelyn Morgan
and little Sylvia Sanchez had met at a Girl Scout camp when they were eleven
years old, and they were fifty-something now. They'd both been in the Chippewa
cabin, working on their wood-lore badges. They had to make campfires from teepees
of kindling, and then cook over them, and then eat what they'd cooked; the
requirement wasn't satisfied unless the Scout cleaned her plate. They had to
identify leaves and birds and poisonous mushrooms. As if any one of them would
ever eat a mushroom, poisonous or not.
For their final requirement they'd been taken in teams of four to a clearing
ten minutes off and left to find their own way back. It wasn't hard, they'd
been given a compass and a hint: The dining hall was southwest of them.
Camp lasted four weeks, and every
Sunday Jocelyn's parents drove up from the city-three and a half hours-to
bring her the Sunday funnies. "Everyone
liked her anyway," Sylvia said. This was hard to believe, even for us,
and we all liked Jocelyn a ton. "She was attractively ill informed."
Jocelyn's parents adored her so, they couldn't bear to see her unhappy. She'd
never been told a story with a sad ending. She knew nothing about DDT or Nazis.
She'd been kept out of school during the Cuban missile crisis because her parents
didn't want her learning we had enemies.
"It fell to us Chippewas to tell her about communists," said Sylvia. "And
child molesters. The Holocaust. Serial killers. Menstruation. Escaped lunatics
with hooks for hands. The Bomb. What had happened to the real Chippewas.
"Of course, we didn't have
any of it right. What a mash of misinformation we fed her. Still, it was
realer than what she got at home. And she was very
game, you had to admire her.
"It all came crashing down
on the day we had to find our way back to camp. She had this paranoid fantasy
that while we were hiking and checking
our compass, they were packing up and moving out. That we would come upon the
cabin and the dining hall and the latrines, but all the people would be gone.
Even more, that there would be dust and spiderwebs and crumbling floorboards.
It would be as if the camp had been abandoned for a hundred years. We might
have told her too many Twilight Zone plots.
"But here's the weird part.
On the last day, her parents came to pick her up, and on the drive back,
they told her that they'd gotten divorced over
the summer. In fact, she'd been sent off just for this purpose. All those Sunday
drives together bringing the funnies, and they couldn't actually stand each
other. Her dad was living in a hotel in San Francisco and had been the whole
month she was gone. 'I eat all my meals in the hotel restaurant,' he told her.
'I just come down for breakfast and order whatever catches my fancy.' Jocelyn
said he made it sound as though that were the only reason he'd moved out, because
restaurant eating would be so swell. She felt she'd been traded for shirred
eggs."
One day several years later he called her to say he had a touch of the flu.
Nothing for her to worry her darling head about. They had tickets to a baseball
game, but he didn't think he could make it, he'd have to take a rain check.
Go, Giants! It turned out the flu was a heart attack. He didn't get to the
hospital until he was already dead.
"No wonder she grew up a bit of a control freak," Sylvia
said. With love. Jocelyn and Sylvia had been best friends for more than forty
years. .
. .
There's no heat with Mr. Knightley," Allegra said. She had a very expressive
face, like Lillian Gish in a silent movie. She frowned when she was making
a point, had done this since she was a tiny girl. "Frank Churchill and
Jane Fairfax meet in secret and quarrel with each other and make it up and
lie to everyone they know. You believe they're in love because they behave
so badly. You can imagine sex. You never feel that with Mr. Knightley." Allegra
had a lullaby voice, low, yet penetrating. She was often impatient with us,
but her tones were so soothing we usually realized it only afterward.
"That's true," Bernadette agreed. Behind the lenses of her tiny
glasses her eyes were round as pebbles. "Emma is always saying how reserved
Jane is, even Mr. Knightley says so, and he's so perceptive about everyone.
But she's the only one in the whole book"-the lights came on, which made
Bernadette jump, but she didn't miss a word for it-"who ever seems desperately
in love. Austen says that Emma and Mr. Knightley make an unexceptional marriage." She
paused reflectively. "Clearly she approves. I expect the word 'unexceptional'
meant something different in Austen's day. Like, nothing to be ashamed of.
Nothing to set tongues wagging. Neither reaching too high nor stooping too
low."
Light poured like milk over the porch. Several large winged insects hurled
themselves against the screens, frantic to find it, follow it to the source.
This resulted in a series of thumps, some of them loud enough to make Sahara
growl.
"No animal passion," said
Allegra.
Sahara turned. Animal passion. She had seen things in the kennels. Things
that would make your hair stand on end.
"No passion at all." Prudie
repeated the word, but pronouncing it as if it were French. Pah-see-ohn.
Because she taught French, this wasn't as
thoroughly obnoxious as it might have been.
Not that we liked it. The month
before, Prudie's beautician had removed most of her eyebrows; it gave her
a look of steady surprise. We couldn't wait for
this to go away. "Sans passion, amour n'est rien," Prudie said.
"Apres moi, le deluge," Bernadette
answered, just so Prudie's words wouldn't fall into a silence that might
be mistaken for chilly. Bernadette
was really too kind sometimes.
Nothing smelly outside. Sahara came away from the screen door. She leaned
into Jocelyn, sighing. Then she circled three times, sank, and rested her chin
on the gamy toe of Jocelyn's shoe. She was relaxed but alert. Nothing would
get to Jocelyn that didn't go through Sahara first.
"If I may." Grigg cleared his throat, held up his hand. "One
thing I notice about Emma is that there's a sense of menace." He counted
off on his fingers. He wore no ring. "The violent Gypsies. The unexplained
pilferings. Jane Fairfax's boat accident. All Mr. Woodhouse's worries. There's
a sense of threat hovering on the edges. Casting its shadow."
Prudie spoke quickly and decisively. "But
Austen's whole point is that none of those things is real. There is no real
threat."
"I'm afraid you've missed the whole point," said
Allegra.
Grigg said nothing further. His eyelashes dropped to his cheeks, making his
expression hard to read. It fell to Jocelyn as hostess to change the subject.
"I read once that the Emma
plot, the humbling of a pretty, self-satisfied girl, is the most popular
plot of all time. I think it was Robertson Davies
who said so. That this was the one story everyone was bound to enjoy."
. . .
When Jocelyn was fifteen, she met two boys while playing tennis at the country
club. One of them was named Mike, the other Steven. They were, at first glance,
average boys. Mike was taller and thinner, with a prominent Adam's apple and
glasses that turned to headlights in the sun. Steven had better shoulders and
a nice smile but a fat ass.
Mike's cousin Pauline was visiting from New York, and they introduced themselves
to Jocelyn because they needed a fourth for doubles. Jocelyn had been working
on her serve with the club pro. She wore her hair in a high ponytail that summer,
with bangs like Sandra Dee in Take Her, She's Mine. She had breasts, pointy
at first, but now rounding. Her mother had bought her a two-piece bathing suit
with egg-cup shaping, in which Jocelyn was exquisitely self-conscious. But
her best feature, she always believed, had been her serve. Her toss that day
was perfect, taking her to full stretch, and she spun the ball into the service
court. It seemed she couldn't miss. Her spirits, as a consequence, were high
and wild.
Neither Mike nor Steven spoiled things by being particularly competitive.
They split games sometimes, and sometimes they didn't; no one really kept score
but Jocelyn, and she did so only privately. They traded partners. Pauline was
such a little snot, accusing people of foot faults in a friendly game, that
Jocelyn looked better and better by comparison. Mike said she was a good sport,
and Steven said she wasn't a bit stuck-up, not like most girls.
They continued to meet and play after Pauline went back home, even though
three was such an awkward number. Sometimes when they rallied, Mike or Steven
would try to run from one side of the net to the other to play on both teams
at once. It never worked and they never stopped trying. Eventually some adult
would accuse them of not being serious and throw them off the court.
After tennis, they'd change into their swimsuits and meet at the pool. Everything
about Jocelyn changed with her clothes. When she came out of the women's locker
room, her movements were cramped and tight. She'd wrap a towel around her waist
and remove it only to slip into the water.
Still, she liked when they stared; she felt the pleasure of it all over her
skin. They came in after her, touching her under the water, where no one could
see. One or the other would swim down to put his head between her legs and
surface with her knees hooked around his shoulders, the water from her ponytail
streaming into the cup over her breast. One day one of them, she never knew
which, pulled the knot of her top loose. She caught it just as it began to
drop. She could have stopped this with a word, but she didn't. She felt dangerous,
brazen. She felt all lit up.
She had no desire for anything further. She didn't actually like Mike or Steven
that much, and certainly not in that way. When she lay in her bed or the bath,
touching herself more intimately and successfully than they did, the boy she
pictured was Mike's older brother, Bryan. Bryan went to college and worked
summers as a lifeguard at the pool. He looked the way a lifeguard looks. Mike
and Steven called him the boss, he called them the squirts. He had never spoken
to Jocelyn, possibly didn't even know her name. He had a girlfriend who rarely
got wet, but lay on a beach chair reading Russian novels and drinking Coca-Cola.
You could tell how many she'd drunk from the maraschino cherries lined up along
her napkin.
In late July there was a dance, and it was girl-ask-boy. Jocelyn asked Mike
and Steven both. She thought they knew this, assumed they would talk about
it. They were best friends. She thought it would hurt someone's feelings if
she asked one and not the other, and she didn't want to hurt anyone. She had
a strapless sundress to wear; she and her mother went out and bought a strapless
bra.
Mike showed up at her house first,
in a white shirt and a sports jacket. He was nervous; they were both nervous;
they needed Steven to arrive. But when
he did, Mike was shocked. Hurt. Furious. "You two have a great time," he
said. "I got other things to do."
Jocelyn's mother drove Jocelyn and Steven to the club and wouldn't be picking
them up again until eleven o'clock. Three whole hours had to pass somehow.
Glass torches lit the pathway to the clubhouse, and the landscape flickered.
There were rose wreaths and pots of ivy animals. The air cool and soft, the
moon sliding down the sky. Jocelyn didn't want to be with Steven. It felt like
a date now, and she didn't want to date him. She was rude and miserable, wouldn't
dance, hardly talked, wouldn't take off her cardigan. She was afraid he might
get the wrong idea, so she was trying to clarify things. Eventually he asked
some other girl to dance.
Jocelyn went out by the pool and sat in one of the lounge chairs. She knew
that she'd been unforgivably mean to Steven, wished she'd never met him. She
wasn't wearing stockings and her legs were cold. She could smell her own Wind
Song perfume mixing with the chlorine.
Music floated over the pool. "Duke of Earl." "I Want to Hold
Your Hand." "There is a house in New Orleans." Bryan sat down
on the end of her chair, making her blood skip. Probably she was in love with
him.
"Aren't you the thing?" he said. The only light around them came
from under the water and was blue. He was turned away, so she didn't see his
face, but his voice was full of contempt. "There's a word for girls like
you."
Jocelyn hadn't known this, hadn't even known there were girls like her. Whatever
the word was, he didn't say it.
"You had those boys in such
a fever. Did you like that? I bet you liked it. Did you know they used to
be best friends? They hate each other now."
She was so ashamed. She'd known all summer there was something wrong with
the way she was behaving, but she hadn't known what it was. She had liked it.
Now she understood that the liking it was the wrong part.
Bryan gripped one of her ankles
hard enough so that the next morning she had a bruise where his thumb had
been. He slid the other hand up her leg. "You
asked for this," he said. "You know you did." His fingers grabbed
at her panties, pushed them aside. She felt the slick surface of his nails.
She didn't tell him not to. She was too ashamed to move. His finger found its
way inside her. He shifted his weight until he lay over her. He was wearing
the same bay aftershave her father had worn.
"Bryan?" His girlfriend's voice, over by the clubhouse. "True
Love Ways" playing on the turntable-Jocelyn would never like Buddy Holly
again, even though he was dead, poor guy-the girlfriend calling. "Bryan?
Bryan!" Bryan slid his finger out, let go of her. He stood up, shaking
his jacket into place and smoothing his hair. He put his finger into his mouth
while she watched, took it out. "We'll catch up later," he told her.
Jocelyn walked down the watery path through the torches and out to the road.
The country club was in the country, up a long hill. It took twenty minutes
to drive there. The roads twisted and had no sidewalks and were surrounded
by trees. Jocelyn started home.
She was wearing sandals with one-inch heels. She'd painted her toenails, and
in the moonlight, her toes looked as if they'd been dipped in blood. Already
there was a raw spot on the back of one heel. She was very frightened, because
ever since camp she'd lived in a world with communists and rapists and serial
killers. Whenever she heard a car coming, she stepped away from the road and
crouched until it passed. The headlights were like searchlights. She pretended
she was someone innocent, someone who hadn't asked for anything. She pretended
she was a deer. She pretended she was a Chippewa. She pretended she was on
the Trail of Tears, an event Sylvia had recounted in vivid if erroneous detail.
She thought she'd be home before her mother left to pick them up. All she
had to do was go downhill. But in the beam of a passing car, suddenly she didn't
recognize anything. At the bottom of the hill was a crossroads she never came
to, and now she was going up, which she shouldn't be doing, even for a short
time. There were no street signs, no houses. She kept going forward only because
she was too ashamed to go back. Hours passed. Finally she found a small gas
station, which was closed, and a pay phone, which was working. As she dialed
she was sure her mother wouldn't answer. Her mother might be out, frantically
looking for her. She might have packed all her clothes into the car while Jocelyn
was at the dance, and moved away.
It was midnight. Her mother made a horrible to-do about it, but Jocelyn convinced
her that she'd only wanted some fresh air, some exercise, the stars.
From The Jane Austen Book Club by
Karen Joy Fowler, copyright © 2004
Karen Joy Fowler, published by G. P. Putnam's Sons, a member of Penguin Group
(USA) Inc., all rights reserved, reprinted with permission from the publisher.
|