Rude Awakenings of a Jane Austen Addict (19 page)

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Authors: Laurie Viera Rigler

Tags: #Los Angeles (Calif.), #Contemporary Women, #Biographical, #Single Women, #General, #Romance, #Fantasy, #Historical, #Fiction, #Time Travel

BOOK: Rude Awakenings of a Jane Austen Addict
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I am determined to find out if the movie—with all its having of sex and planning of weddings—is a true portrayal of courtship and marriage in Courtney’s world or merely the writer’s fancy.

First to be perused is Courtney’s journal. I open the orange spangled book and rifle through its lined pages. The first several pages have been ripped from the book; only the jagged edges remain.

After that are some blank sheets, then this one:

Guests: final count 150
Florist: no baby’s breath
Dress: fitting Sat.
Weymouth Cakes: deposit by Monday

Then dozens of blank pages until this one, in the same flowing hand:

What kind of person gets caught with his hands on another woman and the first thing he says is Wes was supposed to tell you I was at a meeting? Were the two of them laughing at how gullible I am? Would Wes have admitted it if Frank hadn’t told me? What a stupid stupid fool I am. How long has Frank been hooking up with this skinny lying cake-baking witch who’d better close up shop or I’m gonna ruin her in this town. How could he do this to me I’m so humiliated I just want to die.

More blank pages, and then:

E was adorable and so young and such great sex but I feel empty again. Definitely won’t call him. Meaningless sex not what I need right now. Keep thinking of Frank packing up his stuff in my apartment and how I wanted him to touch me and hated myself for wanting it. Wes keeps calling and texting. Why doesn’t Frank call? One feeble attempt and he’s done. Why would I even want him to I am so pathetic.

There is nothing more in the journal, but what little there is has shocked me exceedingly. Clearly, she believed Frank and Wes to be cruel as well as dishonest. And not only had she bedded Frank, but also someone named E.

It appears the conduct of the heroine in the movie was more realistic than I had hoped. Are more women like this? Perhaps there is something in Courtney’s bookshelves, a conduct book perhaps, that will have an answer.

An intriguing array of titles catches my eye, including:

 

STOP GETTING DUMPED!

All You Need to Know to Make Men Fall Madly in Love with You and Marry “the One” in 3 Years or Less

 

A title that would sell many dozens of copies amongst my circle.

 

THE MARRIAGE GAME:

How to Win Big

 

So it is a game now, is it? I suppose a game is better than a market.

 

WOMEN WHO LOVE MEN WHO CAN’T COMMIT

 

Commit what, a crime?

I pull the books from their shelves. Something that feels like a soft folio with slick paper is jammed into the space between the bookcase and the wall. I manage to extricate it. Aha—it is a bride magazine like the ones in the movie. I page through the magazine—its existence alone is proof that marriage is of prime importance in this world.

And yet, by the time I close the last book several hours later, eyes burning and brain unable to comprehend even one more printed sentence, I am teetering between giddiness and a queasy sensation, as if I have drunk too much wine. How to make sense of it all?

In my world, Courtney would be ruined. But here, women have sex before marriage, and with as many partners as they please. Those who would wait for marriage are deemed prudish or odd or exceedingly daring or religious, depending on the author’s viewpoint.

“Have sex.” At least that expression is preferable to “hook up,” which brings to mind being lured to one’s death like a fish.

Which seems not to be too extreme a metaphor after all, for despite women’s engaging in marital intimacies without the protection of an actual marriage license, they have an abiding fear of the consequences of taking that momentous step. To wit: a plethora of rules and formulae as to how to assess the man’s “commitment quotient” before having sex, how many “dates” one should have before actually engaging in sex, and how to ensure that sex does not reduce one’s chances of marrying.

Therefore, while women value their so-called sexual freedom, they are fearful of giving away too much too soon, thus obviating a man’s reasons for marrying. Which sounds like freedom for men and not for women, in my humble opinion. And which sounds like being ruined is almost as much a risk in this world as it is in mine.

There is, I must say, one astonishing aspect of the business that does indeed represent a degree of freedom, namely that women may engage in sexual relations without the consequence of pregnancy, both before and after marriage. Therefore, marriage is neither, as the church service proclaims it, for the procreation of children nor a remedy against fornication. Marriage is, I must conclude from the bride magazines and the movie, for the extravagance of the celebration, the richness of the dress, and the impression it makes in the eyes of the world.

Or is it? In truth, is not the finery and the splendor of the celebration as much a lure in my world as it is in this one? Does not the idea of marriage eclipse the truth of it? I may not have attended a grand celebration with 250 guests, such as those described in the wedding magazines, but I cannot count the times I have heard of an old school-fellow who was in raptures over wedding clothes and new carriages and all manner of details that have little to do with real happiness in the married state. Nor can I count the times I have then heard of, or even seen with my own eyes, a quite altered creature in the form of the married woman from what I had seen in the bride to be.

Notwithstanding the importance of external trappings, marriage for love is as important as it ever was. In fact, women of this century even feel they are entitled to love.

My eyes are weary from hours of reading; I really should retire before the sun rises. Though I may no longer have a situation for which to arise in the morning, I shall not ever let it be said that I am without employment.

 

 

 

B
y the time I have awoken and dressed myself, it is a little before eleven, and my stomach clenches at the sound of the expected rap at the door. It is time to broach the dreaded subject, but how, I ask myself for the twentieth time, as I open the door to Wes and force a cheerful smile. Though my cheerfulness is not wholly forced; I am truly happy to see him.

Try as I might to be on my guard, as Paula and Anna desire me to be, there is something so artless in his manner that I cannot sustain any distrust. Nevertheless, I must learn once and for all why he chose to lie for Frank rather than be truthful with Courtney. For if there is work for me to do in Courtney’s life, as the fortune-teller said, then is it not of the utmost importance that I make a study of Wes’s true character?

And so I invited him here. I am duly proud of myself for not only having used the phone to do so, but also for learning how to make coffee with a machine. It seems there is nothing I cannot find out from my oracle, the computer. Wes, however, has come supplied with coffees for both of us, plus flaky pastries stuffed with strawberry preserves. Nevertheless, he kindly tastes some of the coffee I have prepared for him and proclaims it delicious.

“So,” Wes says, wiping his mouth on a paper napkin, “are you going to tell me what this ‘delicate matter’ is that you mentioned on the phone? I keep telling myself you’re not gonna give me the ax if you’re sitting here having breakfast with me, but I imagine that your closest advisors have urged you to do otherwise.”

I feel the blood drain from my face.

“Are you okay?” he says, his own countenance now solemn. “Whatever it is, I can take it.”

I take a deep breath. “I am sensible of the kindness you have shown me. You have watched over me, been solicitous of my comfort, and I am truly grateful.”

Wes puts his hand on mine, and the warmth of it is electrifying. “I’m the one who’s grateful, Courtney. That you let me back into your life is more than I ever dared hope for.” He gazes deeply into my eyes, and for a moment I can hardly breathe.

“You know I’d do anything for you, don’t you?” he says.

“I believe I do . . . which is why it is particularly awkward for me to ask what I must ask.”

“Whatever it is, I’m here for you.”

There is so much gentleness in his eyes, in the turn of his countenance, that I cannot form the words to ask him why he was willing to lie for Frank. I cannot. No. I cannot bear to see the pain in his eyes if I question his honor, he who has been so good to me. And what are Courtney’s words in a journal to my own experience? No, there must have been some misunderstanding, and it will all come to light when the time is right.

But there is something else that I would like to ask him, something delicate indeed yet easier to broach.

“In truth,” I begin, “I am in need of your advice. You see, I do not know how I am to ascertain the extent of my—ah—money matters. There are some bills which I would like to settle without delay, and I do not know; that is—”

“Oh,” he says, and looks almost disappointed. “The shutoff notices.” What, I wonder, did he imagine I would ask him?

And then he gives me an encouraging smile. “I can help you with that. How long do you have?”

“Well, if only I could determine how much money I have.”

“Sorry. Of course. You don’t remember your passwords. Let me see what I can do.” And with that he seats himself before the computer and tap-tap-taps his fingers on the keyboard. “This could take a few minutes,” he calls over his shoulder. “It’s okay, Courtney. Whatever it is, we can handle it.”

We?

Yesterday I might have thought such a turn of phrase impertinent, but today I do not care. In fact, I like it very well indeed.

“In the meantime,” he adds, “why don’t you look through the bills and see what needs to be paid first, okay?”

I am even calmer by the time I decipher the bills and see that I have been granted ten days to pay for electricity and five for phone. Then, Wes gestures to me to join him at the computer; he has found out where my passwords are stored and directs my attention to the screen. But I am so distracted by the citron scent of his skin as he leans in close to me that I must force myself to focus on the numbers on the screen.

“That’s your balance,” he says, indicating a sum that is over three hundred dollars. “Doesn’t look great.”

I do some quick mental calculations. “But that is at least eighty pounds.”

“More like two hundred pounds, but what does that have to do with anything? Pounds, euros, dollars, or rupees—you’ll probably need most, if not all of what you have in the bank to cover your phone and power bills. If it covers them.” He hands me a little rectangular book. “I found your checkbook in the top drawer. You might want to see if there’s anything in it that hasn’t cleared.” He points to the screen. “I don’t mean to talk down to you, but you do grasp that you may not even have all $317.25, right? I don’t see any recent deposits. Did you get your final check from David?”

“No, I—”

“Maybe you should see if Sandra can speed things up a bit?”

“She did actually say something about asking David to throw in, as she phrased it, an extra week or two, but she was not sure.”

“Excellent.”

“And there was something about turning an advance into severance, but I did not fully comprehend . . .”

Wes groans. “If he gave you an advance, he may not owe you anything. Let’s hope she comes through for you. In the meantime, how are you set for cash?”

I go to retrieve my bag, and Wes takes the checkbook back from me. “Here, let me see if I can make sense of this while you get your wallet.” He turns a few pages, looks at the screen again, and frowns. “Long as you wrote everything down, it looks like your balance is about a hundred dollars less than what’s on the screen. If Sandra’s getting you a check, it can’t come too soon.”

I show him the contents of my wallet: It seems the extent of my fortune is the two hundred dollars in the bank and another twenty-seven dollars in my bag.

He reaches into his pocket and pulls out a wad of bank-notes; I put out my hand to stop him as he offers them to me.

“Please, Courtney. Take it. You’ll pay me back. I don’t want you walking around without any money. Or running up your credit cards.” He takes my hand and presses the bank-notes into it.

“I cannot possibly—” I am too overcome by tears welling up in my eyes to say more, but I manage to get the bank-notes back into his hands. “You are very good, but I assure you I am in no trouble whatsoever.”

“What about the shutoffs?” says Wes. “Why don’t you let me write you a check; you’ll pay me back soon as you get on your feet again.”

“I have several days, and it will have all worked itself out by then. Truly.”

“Are you sure?” He points at the shutoff notices, which are strewn on the bed. “Should I have a look?”

“I assure you I’ve not yet reached that level of incompetence, sir.” I smile at him with what I hope is an abundance of self-assurance.

Wes grins back at me. “I like it when you call me ‘sir.’ ” He stands up, stretches. “So . . . you have a plan?”

“Plan?”

“For your next job. What’s in store for the multitalented Courtney Stone?”

“What would you advise?”

“Well, we already know you’re skilled at hand holding, enabling, and ego fluffing. Not to mention supplying a raft of creative ideas you almost never get credit for.”

“Not a very agreeable picture, to be sure.”

He smiles. “I think you should go in a different direction.”

“I would have to agree.”

“So in the meantime, while you’re figuring that out, how about you work for me?”

“What?” I realize I do not even know what Wes’s profession is.

“Just temporarily. And don’t worry; I don’t expect you to help me build websites. I just need someone to help organize my receipts.”

“Certainly not.”

He looks almost hurt. “Why not?”

“Because—” I can feel my face flush. “Do I even have to—because it would be most improper.”

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