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Authors: Peter Archer

BOOK: Bad Austen
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S
ense &
C
ircuitry:
C
yberth 1813

M
ARGARET
F
ISKE

It is a truth gone viral that a bachelor, possessing disposable fortune, is in want of a gadget. Thus, Manly Doolittle, both eligible and old-moneyed from the dot-com boom, parlayed an afternoon of lucrative roulette into a trip to Squire Eddy’s Cut-Rate Electronics Emporium, where he impulse-purchased the Cybertha 1813, Automaton of Menial Drudgery for the Chore-Impaired.

“Mightier than five crack-head liverymen,” the box promised. He galloped her home to Slackersborough Park to assemble her forthwith.

From the first moment her sensors identified him as a dashing man, and not a giant dachshund, she regarded her master in the highest esteem. He slammed the battery hatch shut on her derriere with gusto.

“Madame, you will now commence to scour this residence from rug to rafter. Guests are due in an hour, so concoct some snackage aforehand.”

The hour passed in a blur of brush over broom. At the stroke of nine sharp, a horde descended on Slackersborough, one and all ardently typing, texting, or tweeting, with thumbs vigorously a-twiddle. Each guest solely focused on his or her own companion in a box.

Master Doolittle welcomed them heartily. “Allow my mechanized charwoman to trade your cloaks for libations.” The flesh maidens momentarily paused activity to glare. Their snarky comments dripped with venom. “Swiffer! Chrysler! Ho-bot!” they sniffed, then they resumed fiddling with their gizmos. The gentlemen perused ribald portraitures on their Blackberries and would not have noticed Armageddon.

The evening dragged its leaden feet like a spoilt child avoiding bedtime. Cybertha rapidly resented the constant fetchings of Liquid Panty Remover and Chicken Fingers Marengo for such boors. They persisted to suck up the suds in uncouth silence occasionally pierced by a ringtone. Defriending lots, befriending naught, offering zero face time to visages already present at the party.

Suddenly, Absinthea Pollick waved a hanky in her face. “Yoohoo! Cleaning thingy! Lady Ditzchild has laid her lunch upon the drapery. Attend it posthaste, before more luncheons are likewise divulged.”

With each angry mop-stroke, the 1813’s antislight protocol plotted a vengeance program.

Finding the bidet occupied, Cybertha rolled to the balcony to cast down the drape water. There she found Lady Ditzchild perched atop the balustrade rail seeking better iPod reception. “Look! Abandoned Blahniks!” Cybertha exclaimed.

“Guh?” said Lady Ditzchild, whose vocal chords had atrophied from disuse. She squinted at the abyss. Iron claws unexpectedly shoved the drunkenette forcibly on the buttocks. Milady’s sparse diet of opium and Jägerbombs rendered her weak as beige rouge. She splashed into River Wettyford and vanished in a flash of bling.

The Blahnik ruse succeeded swimmingly. Soon all the ladies were dispatched to the river bobbing for shoes. Nobody noticed their absence. They did, however, notice the booze was gone.

Potables parched, the gentlemen bid adieu and ventured for the public house to continue celebrating. Regrettably, the driver, Lumpfellow, was overly engrossed Skyping fallen angels in Rome when he disregarded the bridge and steered the chaise and V6 into the Wettyford. “BRB,” IMed Idleman, but sadly they were not. Days later, seven bloated corpses would wash ashore at Shirkershire, still clutching their handhelds and cocktails.

Erstwhile, back at the manor, a new scheme was brewing. Spent from merriment and a dozen Milk of Amnesia shooters, Master lost consciousness on the divan. Cybertha gazed upon his snoring personage, full of Happy Valentines notions. While he dozed, the 1813 emotional simulator surfed the dream sea of romantic delusion. Doolittle had the hazelest eyeballs, the winsomest spinal pelt. Those wooly muttonchops absolutely ewe-jit-sued her heart wires. She yearned to caress every pixel of his body; to rip the very music of his soul and burn it into her memory as a playlist entitled “Master Jams,” then to listen to it again and again and again whilst he downloaded upon her. Her mother-board began to deliciously overheat.

Perhaps it was the incandescent twinkle from her vision sockets or the thrum of her twirling libido that awoke Doolittle. He arose in intense vexation. “What in the deuce are you gawking at? Wretched wrench wench! You freak me out verily!” Swiftly, he bonneted her with someone’s soiled delicates. ’Twas more than any mechanical chambermaid could possibly bear.

For a fortmoment, she discarded etiquette and gave her beloved a sound drubbing with the fondue pot. Master Doolittle appeared expired. All the sense ran out of his head, and he ceased to be amusing. She thought about frilly petticoats to masque the carnage until her circuitry compelled her to tidy the crime scene.

While rummaging in the garage for a burial shroud, Cybertha spied the Rug Doctor, standing buff and impeccable, alone in the corner. She fell head over wheels smitten. A physician! With gynecological knowledge! Quite a fortuitous match indeed!

D
ID
Y
OU
K
NOW?

From her earliest writings, Jane Austen mocked the convention that a novel’s heroine had to be perfect. No Bridget Joneses for the eighteenth-century novel-reading crowd! In
Love and Freindship
, the heroine Laura describes herself: “Lovely as I was, the Graces of my Person were the least of my Perfections. Of every accomplishment accustomary to my sex, I was Mistress…. In my Mind, every Virtue that could adorn it was centered; it was the Rendezvous of every good Quality and of every noble sentiment.” In the “Plan of a Novel” inspired by suggestions from Mr. Clarke, the heroine is a “faultless Character herself.”

“Perfection” was a condition that could only be made entertaining to Austen by mockery of it, hence the great number of absurdly idealized heroines in the juvenilia. But in a letter to her niece Fanny, Austen states straightforwardly what she shows ironically: “Pictures of perfection as you know make me sick & wicked.”

F
ools and
F
olly

S
USAN
G. M
ANZI

Cassandra handed Jane her coffee saying, “Here is your skinny mocha latte, no whip, one Splenda. I could not resist getting a brownie for each of us, too; do they not look delicious?” She sat down next to her sister.

“Pray, how much more time do we have before this signing starts?” Jane asked.

“I believe we have about five minutes. Jane, can you guess who is first in line?”

“Oh, please, do not tell me he has come to yet another signing. I do not think I can bear it.” Jane put her hand to her head. “I think I am getting a slight headache. Maybe we should cancel, Cassandra.”

“Too late. Here he comes, Jane. Take a deep breath and all will be well.”

“Hello, your Royal Highness. How good of you to come. But I do believe I have already signed your copy of
Emma
, your Royal Highness.”

“Yes, yes, you are quite right, but this is my copy of
Sense and Sensibility
. And look.” He opened his book. “No signature!”

“You are quite right, your Royal Highness. I shall sign it at once,” Jane answered, smiling with clenched teeth, trying not to divulge the revulsion she felt when looking at him.

An unpleasant thought flashed in Cassandra’s head, a scene where she is delivering coffee to Jane, who now lives in the Tower of London. Cassandra casually squeezed Jane’s leg to remind her sister to control herself.

Jane took a deep breath, looking toward her sister and then to the Prince Regent.

“Do you have any specific requests, your Royal Highness, in regards to the inscription to be written in this book?” Jane put a wry smile on. “I have no other novels to dedicate to you, I fear, so this will have to suffice today.”

“Miss Austen, you may decide what to write. After all, you are the writer.”

Jane pondered for a moment what to write. Maybe she would pick up her quill one last time and write what she really thought of the blundering fool. Jane collected her thoughts, took a deep breath, and began writing.

To His Royal Highness, The Prince Regent, I am humbled by your continual attentions to my works and wish to tell you that if there are any other books you would like me to sign, you are welcome to send a servant, there is no need for HRH to take such risks with his health
.
Your obedient servant, Jane Austen
.

The Prince picked up his book, read the entry, then looked at Miss Austen, wondering why on earth she would not want him to continue attending her book signings. The Prince bowed, still unsure what to make of the comment written in his book, and took his leave.

Cassandra and Jane burst into laughter when he exited the store.

“Oh Jane, you do taunt that man so dreadfully!”

Jane smiled, then signaled to the next person in line that she was ready.

“Hello, Miss Austen, I have just finished reading a book for the first time. It was your
Sense and Sensibility
. It was hard to understand since you wrote it in, like, a strange type of language. Luckily, I found out that all your books have been made into movies, so I put them on my Netflix queue.”

“Oh, I see. Pray tell what is your name?”

“Lindsay, with an A. The press is always writing my name with an E and it drives me crazy.”

“Then you are someone of fame. May I ask what is your surname?”

“Lohan, Lindsay Lohan. I have had a lot of extra time on my hands recently, so I decided to try and read a book for a change.”

Jane smiled, took her pen, and wrote.

Lindsay—Thank you for reading S&S, how nice it is that my book found its way into your nicotine-stained hands. I do hope that you have actually paid for this book. I encourage you to read another book while you are incarcerated; it shall help make the time go by much more quickly while living in a cell. With all the sincerity I can feel for you
,
Jane Austen
.

“Yes, who’s next?”

D
ID
Y
OU
K
NOW?

The year 1811, when Austen started writing
Mansfield Park
, was the year that George, Prince of Wales, was appointed prince-regent. His father, King George III, was insane and therefore incompetent to rule. The prince-regent threw himself an enormously expensive and lavish party to celebrate, which the nation certainly could not afford but which was right in keeping with the general behavior of the decadent, fashionable, and immoral princes. Vice and scandal tainted the royal household, with adultery and gambling just some of the popular activities among its members.

Whether or not Austen subtly worked her opinion of the prince-regent into
Mansfield Park
, she stated it flatly in a letter in response to the public battles of the regent and his wife, in which the prince accused the princess of adultery, and she now defended herself in a letter to the
Morning Chronicle
. Jane wrote: “I suppose all the World is sitting in Judgement upon the Princess of Wales’s letter. Poor Woman, I shall support her as long as I can, because she
is
a Woman, & because I hate her Husband.”

So how, then, did
Emma
, Jane’s next novel, come to be dedicated to this man?

Henry became ill while he was negotiating with a new publisher, John Murray, founder of the influential
Quarterly Review
, who had agreed to publish
Emma
. One of the doctors who attended him was a court physician who told Jane that the prince was a great admirer of her work, with a set of her novels in each of his residences. Although those novels had been published anonymously, Jane’s authorship was no longer a close secret by this time (and probably not one Henry would have kept from his doctors in any case). This doctor also informed the prince that Miss Austen was in town. The result was that the Reverend James Stanier Clarke, the librarian of the regent’s lavish and grand Carlton House, visited her at Henry’s and then invited her to visit Carlton House in turn. It appears that during this visit Mr. Clarke suggested she might dedicate her next novel to the prince. Although Jane at first hesitated to do so, she soon understood that she had received a command—and her simple dedication was turned into something quite gaudier by Murray.

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