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Just Jane

Page 3

by Nancy Moser


  “Miss Jane?”

  I blink and bring Master Chard back into focus. I look at my hands. I’ve stopped playing without volition. It’s obvious my thoughts of Darcy and Lizzy have momentarily taken precedence over sharps and flats.

  “You digress?” Master Chard says.

  “Forgive me. My mind wandered.”

  “I do not travel all this way for you to—”

  I nod. “May I begin again?”

  “I think it best.”

  I turn back to the beginning of the song. I don’t remember having turned the page . . . . I take a fresh breath and start again.

  I have not played but three measures when I hear the sound of a horse outside. There is a knock and the maid answers. She is given a letter. Although my curiosity begs me to stop the piece, I must not test Master Chard’s patience twice in so swift a succession.

  Nanny takes the letter back to my father’s study, and I resign myself to learning the news later rather than sooner. Yet it must be news of import. A courier does not stop by the rectory every day. Whether it be good news or bad weighs on me, and I hear my left hand turn ponderous once again. With two of my brothers at sea . . . and the war with France still raging . . .

  I manage a prayer amid the Bs and Cs, but once again the mental distraction proves too much for my musical ability and I falter.

  Master Chard sighs. “Again, Miss Jane, your execution and ability to concentrate leave much to be desired.”

  I keep glancing toward Father’s study, wanting—no, needing—to hear the news. I accept my shortcomings and stand. “I’m sorry, Master Chard, but the horseman . . . I have two brothers at sea . . . the war . . .”

  He offers a second sigh, more weighty than the first.

  I close the music, then move toward the front door, hoping he will follow. “I promise I will practice with extra diligence before our next lesson.”

  He gathers his hat. “Only sincere diligence will create art from mere trifles. You do have talent, Miss Jane. But you must—”

  I open the door. “And I will, Master Chard. I will.”

  With a sharp bow, he dons his hat and exits. I feel bad, but not bad enough to delay or dally from the task at hand: I must hear the news.

  I make haste to Father’s study and find him not alone. Mother and Cassandra are seated before his desk, and when I appear at the doorway, Father beckons me in. “Come, Jane. Come hear the good news.”

  “’Tis not just good news; ’tis wonderful news,” says Mother.

  I accept my parents’ enthusiasm but look to Cassandra, knowing her assessment is the most important. It is she who has the letter in her lap. But she is neither effusive like Mother nor beaming like Father. Her head is down, her hands crossed atop her heart, her posture suggesting the letter is not something she wishes to touch.

  My mind swims as to what news could so delight my parents while bringing such pain to my sister.

  Mother snatches the letter from Cassandra’s lap and brings it to me. “If Cassandra will not share the news, I will. She has been left a thousand pounds by dear Tom. A thousand pounds!”

  It’s too great a sum to fathom.

  Before I can read the letter for myself, Mother takes it back from me. “Apparently Tom was prudent and made a will before he left on his ill-fated journey to the ends of the earth. He left to earn his fortune, and to secure a position when he returned, yet who could have imagined that he had already accumulated so great a sum?” She put a hand on Cassandra’s shoulder. “Marriage or no, it’s rightfully yours, Cassandra. Your widow’s portion.”

  I see Cassandra shiver ever so slightly. I know she would give away ten thousand if only to be with her Tom.

  Father stands. “It is well and good,” he says, “but best discussed another day.”

  “But when will she gain access?” asks Mother. “She will be much more appealing to future suitors with one thousand—”

  Father raises a hand, silencing her words. Not now, my dear. Not now.

  Cassandra stands. “If you will excuse me, I have work to do.”

  I step aside to let her pass.

  “She should be happy,” whispers Mother.

  “I’m sure she is,” Father says.

  Mother throws her hands in the air. “Who would know? She neither cries nor pouts, argues nor demands attention. She merely goes on as if nothing has happened.”

  I don’t argue with Mother, for what she says is true, and yet, I know she is not truly disparaging Cassandra’s lack of outward emotion. My family is known for its pragmatic, prudent reactions to life’s inequities and tragedies. Birth, death, sickness, strife . . . we have been taught by fine example to accept them as life’s due. No one is immune, and to rant and carry on is an indulgence reserved for those who have a lesser grasp of actuality and truth.

  Lofty pragmatism aside . . . I do worry about my sister. She seems to have withdrawn, taken a step back from life. This is, of course, an understatement. The love of her life is dead. Her plans to marry him dashed. And yet there is hope for her to find someone else to love—someone else to love her. My brothers have done so many times. Is my sister any less capable and deserving?

  I leave my father’s study thinking of my own Tom. I have waited nearly two years. I still hold fast to the hope we will someday marry.

  But what if we don’t?

  I have stopped in the hall, causing Tilly to look at me questioningly as she stokes the fire in the dining room.

  I move along to avoid her scrutiny, even as I’m unable to avoid my thoughts. What if I were to receive news that Tom Lefroy is dead? Or nearly worse, what if I found myself spurned by him, after all these days spent hoping and planning for a life . . . .

  I must find Cassandra.

  For my own sake, as well as hers.

  *****

  Cassandra is in the garden. She pinches wilted blossoms from the heads of the chrysanthemums and places them in a tin bucket. She does not look up as I approach, and I join her chore without preamble.

  I don’t know how to begin, but it’s not a worry. With anyone else in the world I would venture into small chat about the rain we received last evening or comment on the breadth and depth of the flower beds as they have prospered under the recent near-perfect combination of wet and light. But I know my sister. Where I often offer too many words, she offers only those in need of the moment. I know that when the time is right, she will speak what needs to be—

  “I want no money.”

  I nod.

  She offers a bitter laugh. “I want no suitors.”

  I must interject. “You’re still young. You’re beautiful. You have much to offer.”

  She finally offers me a glance. “One thousand pounds.”

  “Much more than that.”

  She shakes her head. “I am finished.”

  I stop her pinching of the blossoms and squeeze her hand. “No, you are not!”

  Her smile has lost its bitter edge and is tinged with calm assurance. “You will marry your Tom, and I will live in an attic room and take care of your children so you can write your grand stories.”

  Her fantasy reignites my fear. “I’ve not heard from him.”

  “A wise man must create the foundation of his fortune before he can gain a wife. Your Tom is doing just that. He will come. You are engaged.”

  “We are not—officially. Though in my heart . . .”

  “You are engaged.”

  I don’t argue. How she has turned my attempt to comfort into being the comforted is a talent I’ve often witnessed and still find disconcerting.

  She goes back to the flowers. “Go now, Jane. As a woman of means I have the right to spend my time as I chuse.”

  The indication that she will accept Tom’s offeri
ng allows me to walk away. Although our mother lacks the tact to pronounce it well, it is my sister’s due.

  Four

  To own silence . . .

  How odd that one does not appreciate something, nor even realize its absence, until it is presented as an unexpected gift.

  The absence of my brothers and the exit of my father’s pupils allowed me to enter a new phase of my life: that of a writer.

  I have always written. My first attempts at novel writing—Catherine, Lesley Castle, and Lady Susan—are evidence of that. But none is quite right. The latter two works are a bit scandalous, with adultery, abandonment of children, and permissiveness beyond the ken of polite society. Years ago, when I read them aloud to the family, Father’s eyebrows rose. Yet he didn’t chastise me or tell me to stop. I thank him for being patient with me, for what good is a rector who cannot see the joke in sins and sinners?

  I’ve also attempted a series of letters called Elinor and Marianne. I enjoy the differences between the two sisters. Perhaps I have shown that a disparity in character does not indicate a lack of character . . . .

  We have always been a family of readers—my father’s library has over five hundred volumes, and I have access to them all. And though it’s not always considered delicate to admit it, we adore novels. Those of Fanny Burney, Samuel Richardson, Henry Fielding—to name three. And though I hold Fielding’s Tom Jones dear—for the fact that book inspired the dialogue between my Tom and me—my favourite is Richardson’s masterpiece, Sir Charles Grandison. It’s a massive book, populated by friends. If only I could discuss their failings and follies directly with the characters themselves.

  If a book is well written, I always find it too short. The boldness in the craft that these authors possess inspires me to try my hand at it. Not that my busyness will ever amount to much.

  I remember sitting in my father’s study once, reading while the boys played outside. I heard Henry in the hallway talking with Father, wanting me to come join them in a roll down the green hill behind the rectory. But Father stopped him, saying, “Leave your sister alone, she is enmeshed; she is gone from us.”

  Henry (being Henry) said, “No, she is not; she is right there in your study. I saw her through the window.” Thankfully, Father held fast, protecting my privacy. His words held more than a kernel of truth. When I read a novel I’m not here. I’m transported to far-off places, my eyes unseeing of the words on the page, busy with a scene being played out in my mind’s eye, with my ears engaged, hearing the voices carry from the pen to the present. What a lovely place to be—not here.

  So, without the boys’ chaotic, despotic, and often idiotic presence, the air at the rectory has eased as if a spring breeze has swept away a tumultuous storm, as well as all pressure to constantly do. I especially see the change in Mother. Without the need to arrange meals for a bevy of boys, without their beds to make, their clothes to wash, their dirt to sweep . . . her temperament has changed from snappish and sharp to amiable and quite nearly accommodating. ’Tis like a fresh breath is to be had by all.

  I enjoy working in the sitting room I share with Cassandra (the blue paper on the walls here is such a balm), and she respects my time here, though, in truth, I don’t mind her presence. By her own volition she never intrudes. It’s I who occasionally request her participation. I relish her comments when I read to her a line or two out of doubt. She is very wise, and, seeing beyond what I’ve said, she has an ear for what I mean. I often read aloud to Mother and Father after evening tea and also accept their comments, though I admit, with less alacrity. ’Tis a distinction I fear implies too much. Mother usually asks for more description of place and costume: “But what colour is her dress, Jane?” And though I have attempted to write more of these details, it is a forced addition that intrudes upon the words that beg to be released. Her request reminds me of a child pulling on a mother’s gown, wanting attention. Sometimes attention to the child’s needs is required, but at other times it’s best ignored.

  And so, I ignore Mother’s wishes and do what I must do, and write how I must write. If a bubbling stream forces itself to become a torrent, surely disaster will follow. I am what I am, and though I am still learning this measure and meter of words, I must be true to my nature, and yea, even my gift.

  For it is a gift—from God, if I may be so bold. I say this not to imply great talent, but to indicate my awareness that I have received something beyond my own choosing. Although in essence I realize I can refuse this offering, I also sense that the prudent act, the one that begs to be tinged with sincere gratitude, requires me to do what I can with this gift and offer it back into the void from whence it came. Whether it will prosper and move along or disappear like morning fog, I don’t know. I should not care. For the gift is not truly mine to hold, but mine to use and return. To someone’s benefit. I hope.

  My musings have delayed my task for the day. I must acknowledge that I have finished that which I started nine months ago. I stack the pages and align the edges. So many hours. So many thoughts—some used and many discarded. But here it sits. First Impressions, the story of the Bennet family, which was inspired by my dear Tom’s own familial condition. The two oldest Bennet sisters: Jane and Elizabeth, their names taken from my own name and Cassandra’s middle name. If someone asks if I used us as the inspiration for our namesakes, I will have to tell them no. If anything, Cassandra gives the most to Jane’s character, and I to Lizzy’s. But even then, they are not us. Not completely. And never purely. But they are two sisters, dear to each other and different from each other. In that we share a connection.

  I’m reluctant to be done, for I’ve long lived with Lizzy and her sisters, with Mr. Darcy, and even the duplicitous Wickham. I’ve invested and divested in them as much as I have in my own Austen family. I am wont to say adieu to them, as I would to those with whom I share blood ties.

  I set my hand upon the pages and let a breath go in and out. It’s hard to let go, yet it is a necessity in the birth of any child. I tie a string around the pages, adjusting its bow. A pretty package all in all.

  There is a knock on the door. “Come in.”

  Father opens the door, a letter in hand. “’Tis a letter from Henry, addressed to you.”

  I nod and reach for it.

  Father sees the pages. “You have finished?”

  “I have.”

  “Will you read the end to us tonight?”

  “If you would like.”

  He gives me a chastising look. “Of course we would like. It’s a good work, Jane. A fine accomplishment.”

  “I’m happy the family is pleased with it.”

  He strokes his chin, his eyes on the neat pile of pages. “Actually, I know of a man in the publishing business and I was thinking—”

  My words don’t align with my thoughts. “No, Father. It’s not good enough for that.”

  “Nonsense. Nothing ventured, nothing gained.” He turns toward the door. “Tomorrow I will write a proper letter of introduction. Then I will send it to this man, Thomas Cadell.”

  “He will not publish it.”

  Father points a finger, then flicks it toward the end of my nose. “We shall see.”

  Once again I place a hand upon the pages that are mine, all mine. Until now? Until someone beyond the family reads the words? I shiver at the thought with dread—

  And yes, excitement.

  *****

  I hold on to hope. And a letter.

  The letter Father wrote to the publishers in London—Cadell and Davies—is quite . . . direct. He allowed me to copy it before it was sent:

  Sirs

  I have in my possession a Manuscript Novel, comprised in three Vols. About the length of Miss Burney’s Evelina. As I am well aware of what consequence it is that a work of this sort should make its first appearance under a respectable name I apply to you.
Shall be much obliged therefore if you will inform me whether you chuse to be concerned in it; what will be the expense of publishing at the Author’s risk; & what you will advance for the Property of it, if on perusal it is approved of?

  Should your answer give me encouragement I will send you the work.

  I am, Sirs, Yr. obt. hble Servt:

  Geo Austen

  In many ways it’s an awkward letter, and if I would have had the chance to edit it . . .

  I shove away such presumption. He is my father. He deals with businessmen every day. What do I know regarding the form of such correspondence?

  I know that I care deeply about its outcome.

  Although I’m careful not to make anyone else aware, I pore over the letter daily—actually, many times a day. I pull it out of my writing desk and imagine Mr. Cadell reading it and being intrigued, pulling a fresh piece of paper close. He dips quill to ink and writes, Sir. We would be happy to peruse such a manuscript. Please send post-haste. We have been searching for just such a novel and will surely publish it—at our expense.

  I laugh at the presumption. Yet what good are dreams if they are grounded in logic and probability?

  The letter also brings me great pride, for to know that Father thinks well of the story, enough to bother his day by writing a letter and by offering to have it published “at the Author’s risk” . . . I am very blessed.

  I hear Mother talking to Cook below. I have been alone in my daydreams long enough. There is work to do. Life does go on. With or without a published book by Jane Austen.

  *****

  Tilly brings in the post, along with a gust of the November chill. I meet her near the door, eager to retrieve it. There is a letter from Aunt Leigh-Perrot in Bath, a letter from Edward, and . . .

 

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