Read Pride, Prejudice and Jasmin Field Online
Authors: Melissa Nathan
Tags: #Fiction, #Contemporary Women, #General
thought she was.
And, in fairness, that’s all I thought he was to her. You’ve got to admit, she’s hardly been swooning hopelessly around him, has she?
I suppose you know your sister better than I do so I can only say I’m sorry if I’ve been instrumental in hurting her. But if she’s anything like Jack, she’ll be up and bouncing
again in no time. You know what actors are like. The minute they are cast to fall in love with someone else, they just can’t help themselves. Maybe they just love having a script
to work to. Believe me, I’ve seen it many times before.
So that’s it. I just wanted to set the record straight. I would appreciate it if you delete this message. Some of your less principled colleagues might find some value in what I’ve written.
Oh, I suppose that brings me on to another point. That actors’ values are warped,
etc.
Well, I can only say that reading the front page of any tabloid, the phrase ‘the pot calling the kettle black’ springs to mind. After all, we’re all in the entertainment business, aren’t we? It may seem to someone who is not trained as an actor that we are self-obsessed
and vain but I hope we are not evil, as I think many journalists are. You see, it’s not nice
to be tarnished with the same brush as all your profession, is it?
As it happens, I respect your work immensely, although you’ve got to admit your colleague Gilbert Valentine is a complete dickhead. I believe you trained with him on the same paper under the same man and I can only say that it’s a credit to you that you and he have gone on to have such different attitudes and careers.
Well, I think that’s it. Sorry if it’s been inconvenient for you to get this at work. I just had to get all this off my chest.
I won’t be seeing you at rehearsals for a week or two because I’m busy with work, but until
I see you again,
Take care,
Harry.
Jazz was thunderstruck. She didn’t know what to think. She printed out the missive, put it in her bag for later perusal and deleted it on screen. The first time she read it she was so ready to hate Harry that she kept breaking off with very unpleasant expletives for him. How dare he say such libellous things about Wills? Everyone knew he was lovely. He was famous for playing a priest, for Christ’s sake! And how dare he call what had been going on between her and Wills ‘meaningless flirting’? That really hurt.
But later, when she read his e-mail on the tube, she was surprised to find that its tone seemed less harsh and she was not insensitive to the occasional compliment that came her way. Later still, when she read it in the flat while waiting for the kettle to boil, she found she was beginning to experience very unpleasant twinges of panic at the possibility of it being true about William. She thought back to his lovely open face, his large, warm eyes. Then she remembered how he’d told her that he and Harry had been in a play before and that Harry had hated him after that. That would fit in with Harry’s story. She wracked her brains to remember Harry’s sister. She was dimly aware of a quiet presence who had been going round everyone asking them for their dress sizes. Eventually, she confessed to herself that she had been somewhat biased in Wills’s favour because she had fancied him so much. Was she really that superficial?
Now she came to think of it, Jazz remembered how Wills had professed himself to not give a damn about the ‘likes of Harry Noble the day of the party and yet he’d given it a miss. It also dawned on her that it was a bit unfair of Wills to badmouth Harry to her when Harry had given him this chance to play against type. But then, Wills had received every sign that she would be only too eager to join him in badmouthing his enemy. God, he must have seen her coming. Finally she realised she knew nothing about William Whitby that he hadn’t told her himself and yet she’d believed every single word of it because of his big brown eyes; winning smile and ability to act the part of a kind priest. Her fondness for him was quickly being overtaken by anger.
She was thoroughly ashamed of herself. The more she thought about it, the more obvious it became. Her opinion of William Whitby had been based on her own physical attraction to him, nothing more, nothing less. He was far more like wicked Wickham and far less like Father Simon than Jazz had ever imagined. At first she thought she would take up Harry’s suggestion and ask Matt Jenkins the truth about his past. But by the fourth reading of the letter, she realised there was no way this story could be a lie. And somehow, from the manner in which Matt Jenkins had always talked about Harry, she now realised that he loved him in a way that could only have come from seeing him suffer.
She imagined a drunk William beating up a woman. She felt sick that she had spent so much time with him, had shared jokes with him - had even shared Hobnobs with him. The man was utterly repulsive - more so because he appeared to be so appealing.
And then she became mortified for another reason. Jazz Judges — now to become Josie’s Choice - a popular column in a national magazine, based on how sharply perceptive and discerning its writer was, was actually based on a lie. It was written by someone who thought they could read everyone like a
book, but actually got it wrong. She wished, not for the first time in her life, that she was more like her big sister, more generous of spirit, more forgiving. There was nowhere to run, she’d always been so
ready to trip others up over their foolish mistakes and here she was, well and truly tripped up by her
own. And unlike everyone else, she had always believed herself untrip-upable. She felt bitterly ashamed. Every time she pictured either Harry or William, she had the strangest sensation of a cement-mixer being switched on inside her stomach.
It took longer for her to forgive Harry for his description of George. How dare he call her sister a slut! And how dare he insinuate that George and Jack were a one-minute wonder! It just showed what Harry knew about relationships. But after the sixth reading, when she had finally taken the leap of imagination
to realise that she wasn’t always right about everyone, Jazz remembered a telling conversation she’d had
with Mo. ‘Harder to read than a Thomas Hardy novel’, was how Mo described George. Maybe - just maybe - George was a bit cautious about showing her true feelings. Begrudgingly, she began to see Harry’s point. She admitted that she had had nearly thirty years’ head start when it came to reading George right.
When she re-read the letter in the bath, her feelings towards its writer were totally different from those she had experienced on first reading it. She found herself agreeing with him about some of her work colleagues - and wincing when she remembered how she had self-righteously ridiculed actors in front
of a whole room of them.
Now that her confidence in her own opinion was so utterly shattered — a feeling wholly new to her - she was far more sensitive to the compliments Harry had thrown into the e-mail. And for some reason, she got a not-unpleasant thrill when she re-read his allusion to copying the character of Darcy. Did he see
her, then, as his Lizzy?
She found herself reflecting that these compliments, written by Harry in haste after their ridiculous row, probably wouldn’t trip so lightly off his tongue now, in the light of day. For some reason, that thought didn’t satisfy her like it should have.
As she lay in bed staring up at the ceiling and seeing nothing, she remembered she’d forgotten to make a vital phone call to some B-list actor’s agent for an important interview. Drifting off into a fitful sleep, she realised she hadn’t been able to think of anything all day apart from her e-mail.
Work had become impossible. It had never occurred to Jazz before how important self-belief was. It helped you get up in the morning and helped you do your job well. Without it, the smallest task seemed enormous. Why was this stupid e-mail upsetting her so much? After about a week, Jazz had worked out the answer. It wasn’t just the fact that she had got Harry and William so wrong: it was also the fact that she had behaved as if she was infallible. She had always acted as if no one else’s opinion or perception was ever as sharp and accurate as hers. If Mo disagreed with her about George’s behaviour, that had to mean that Mo was thick - not that George was unreadable. She had detested her fellow cast members for being biased in favour of Harry despite his behaviour, yet she had been prejudiced against him for little more. Yes, she had overheard him say unpleasant things about her … but how often had she said horrid things about people in the past? She dreaded to think what Simon might have thought of her if he had ever overheard her belittle him to George, the way she always had. She had said far worse things about him than Harry had said about her. And who knew? Perhaps Harry had been trying to impress Sara?
Jazz knew she said stupid things when she was with someone who was easy to impress.
What a know-all she’d been! She was just as arrogant as the great Harry Noble, just as guilty in that department. Yet she had no Oscar, no public adoration, no extraordinary beauty to give her any reason
to be so full of herself. Oh God! She had utterly humiliated herself in front of the great Harry Noble,
and that’s what hurt.
It was only at work that Jazz was able to take her mind off the wretched e-mail. It really didn’t help, of course, when her interviewees turned out to have brains made of blancmange. Today she was trying to get a decent article out of a woman who had finally given birth to a baby girl after ten boys. They’d
been on the phone for one and a half hours so far and Jazz’s neck was killing her. She only had three good quotes.
‘How did you feel when you held her in your arms for the first time?’ Jazz asked.
There was a long pause.
‘Nice.’
Jazz started scribbling as she wrote.
‘Gosh, you must have felt wonderful. Ecstatic? Elated? Over the moon? Did you come over all tearful? Were you just relieved? Did you feel special? Like your dream had finally come true?’
There was a longer pause.
‘Very very nice, yes.’
Jazz rubbed her neck and stretched her back in the chair.
‘Who does Tiffany Kylie-Danii take after most?’ she asked, trying to inject the question with as much affection as she possibly could.
There was a big pause.
‘Her father’s a wonderfully gentle man. And so is she.’
Jazz thought she was going to start weeping.
‘And how is she different from all your boys?’
‘Well,’ said the woman, ‘she goes through clothes like they’re going out of fashion.’
Sheer fatigue made Jazz start giggling.
‘I’ll have to go now,’ said the woman. ‘She’ll be wanting another feed. Can you phone me back the same time tomorrow?’
If my brain hasn’t melted by then, thought Jazz. She put the phone down and let out a heartfelt scream and dropped her head onto her desk.
Mark looked up. ‘What do you get if you cross a woman’s magazine and a cat’s arse?’ he asked through his bacon buttie.
Jazz shrugged without moving her head. She was utterly exhausted.
‘Fucking expensive cat litter,’ he grinned.
Jazz looked up and frowned at him. ‘Mark,’ she managed, ‘have you ever thought of becoming an after-dinner speaker?’
He beamed.
The phone went. Jazz hated answering the phone at work.
‘Hello, Hoorah!’ she said as gravely as she possibly could.
‘Jasmin Field please,’ said a highly efficient voice.
‘Speaking.’
‘Oh hello, this is Sharon Westfield at the Daily Echo,’ said a person for whom this information was most impressive. ‘We’re looking for a new columnist for our woman’s page and read the piece about you in
the Evening Herald. I’ll be completely honest with you — always am. Loved your attitude. Loved your sister Josie. How different she is from you — married, a young mum with a good sex-life, happy family.’
Jazz mumbled a sort of yes sound. She’d always detested the Daily Echo; it was a shabby tabloid full of horror stories and scantily clad ‘girls’ who wore ‘panties’. But there was no denying that it had the second largest circulation of all the daily papers, and once you’ve written for the Daily Echo, all sorts of doors start opening for you. Weirdly though, Jazz didn’t feel as impressed today as she might have done a week earlier.
‘You see,’ Sharon Westfield continued, ‘that’s just the sort of new angle we’re looking for. Sort of post-Bridget Jones, post-ironic, post-modern, post-post-feminist sort of thing. D’you see? Women being content and capable. It’s so new. Very exciting.’
‘Ye-es,’ said Jazz dubiously.
‘We’d like you to write us three provisional columns of twelve hundred words each. And remember, our readers are right-wing bordering on fascist, chauvinistic bordering on misogynistic - especially the women - and, of course, thick as pigshit. These are people who record Jeremy Beadle. Try and remember all that while you write, it’ll save you having to do a re-write. That will be, what? Five thousand pounds?’
Jazz couldn’t speak.
‘OK - call it seven and a half. Fax it to me by Monday. Triple four, double five, double three. For the attention of Sharon Westfield. Ciao.’
Jazz put the phone down, bubbling with anger and excitement in equal proportions — a reaction that was becoming strangely familiar.
‘What was that?’ asked Mark, intrigued. Jazz rarely remained monosyllabic on the phone.
Jazz told him.
‘Jeez, some people have all the luck,’ he said.
‘You think I should go for it?’
‘Are you stark-bollocking mad? Of course you should go for it! A column at the Daily Wacko’? You’d
be set up for life.’
‘Even if it means selling out bigtime?’
Mark frowned. ‘What do you mean?’
‘Never mind.’
Jazz had the rest of the week to consult George and Mo. And, of course Josie. But there were other things on her mind that she had to sort out first.
*
Jazz sat on the sofa in her room, the soft sound of monks chanting from her stereo speakers rocking her into a calm state. Now that she had sorted out in her mind why the e-mail had distressed her so much,