by Jane Heller
The Club
Jane Heller
Copyright
Diversion Books
A Division of Diversion Publishing Corp.
443 Park Avenue South, Suite 1008
New York, NY 10016
www.DiversionBooks.com
Copyright © 1995 by Jane Heller
All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or portions thereof in any form whatsoever.
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events or locales is entirely coincidental.
For more information, email [email protected]
First Diversion Books edition March 2016
ISBN: 978-1-68230-357-3
Also by Jane Heller
Fiction
Best Enemies
Crystal Clear
Female Intelligence
Infernal Affairs
Lucky Stars
Name Dropping
Clean Sweep
Sis Boom Bah
Princess Charming
The Secret Ingredient
An Ex to Grind
Some Nerve
Non-Fiction
Confessions of a She-Fan: The Course of True Love with the New York Yankees
You’d Better Not Die or I’ll Kill You: A Caregiver’s Survival Guide to Keeping You in Good Health and Good Spirits
For my father, Mort Reznick, a golf lover and a great guy.
Acknowledgments
A heartfelt thanks to those whose advice and expertise proved invaluable while I was writing this book: Michael Barrett, Jane Dystel, David Goldner, Ruth Harris, Ann LaFarge, Bob Patent, and Edwin Shmerler.
Special gratitude to my husband, Michael, and to my family and friends, who cheered me on and made me feel that I wasn’t in over my head.
Part One
Chapter One
“You’re fired.”
Is there a more dreaded sentence in the English language? Sure, “You’ve got six weeks to live” is right up there on the All-Time Dreaded Sentences List. So is “I’m leaving you for somebody else.” But “You’re fired” really, really hurts if: (a) you’re a loyal and longtime employee of the company; (b) you’re good at your job; and (c) you make a point of never letting your boss know how profoundly incompetent you think she is.
To be fair, my incompetent boss, Leeza Grummond, the vice president and associate publisher of Charlton House, didn’t exactly say “You’re fired.” She opted for the cozier “We’re going to have to let you go.”
Let me go, my ass. Twenty-six-year-old Leeza was canning thirty-nine-year-old me. I was in shock. Total shock. I was in such shock that my mouth dropped open and stayed that way for several seconds, and I began to drool all over my robin’s egg blue, just-back-from-the-dry-cleaner, Anne Klein II silk blouse.
I must be dreaming, I thought, aware of the cliché but in too much pain to come up with a fresher explanation. Yes, that was it. I was dreaming that Leeza Grummond, my nightmare-of-a-boss, was firing me.
“Last year’s merger with Pennington Press has necessitated a reevaluating and refocusing of our publishing program,” Leeza explained as I continued to stare at her in disbelief. “We’ve decided to return to Charlton House’s roots, to revitalize the company’s literary legacy.”
What would you know about the company’s literary legacy, I wanted to say to Leeza, who graduated at the top of her class at Harvard Business School but hadn’t read a novel since high school. The little shit talked incessantly of focus groups and direct respondents and profit and loss statements but was speechless on the subject of literature. Sure, she had expertise in the selling of toothpaste. But she knew as much about the book business as my mother, whose idea of “business” was what you did in the bathroom, not the boardroom.
“Charlton House published Henry James and F. Scott Fitzgerald,” she was saying, as if I didn’t know. “But somewhere along the way we lost our reputation as a quality publisher.”
Yeah, bitch. When you showed up, fresh from Procter & Gamble in your androgynous suit and androgynous hair, and made us the joke of the industry.
“We’ve decided that 1995 will mark our renewed commitment to our heritage,” she droned on. “The Pennington Press division of our company will publish the more commercial, mass market titles, while the Charlton House imprint will be devoted to books with literary appeal, books that will endure.” She paused, letting her words hang in the air like bad perfume. “Which brings me to you, Judy.” She cleared her throat. “I regret to say that cookbooks won’t be part of this new publishing mix. You’ve been a fine editor, but we just won’t be needing a cookbook editor any longer.”
“But I’ve been here eight years,” I managed to say. “And I’ve made money for this company. A lot of money.”
In the past couple of years alone, I’d edited half a dozen bestselling cookbooks. No, I wasn’t Julia Child’s editor or Martha Stewart’s editor or even The Frugal Gourmet’s editor. I was a scrappy sort of editor who found cookbooks where others wouldn’t think to look. For example, when George Bush let it be known that he hated broccoli, I moved quickly to publish The I Hate Broccoli Cookbook, which hit The New York Times bestseller list and stayed there for two months. And when USA Today ran a front-page story on the health benefits of garlic, who do you think was the genius who signed up So Your Breath Smells—You’ll Live Longer! And then, of course, there was my real blockbuster, Valerio’s Kitchen. It was I who saw the “singing restaurateur” on “Regis and Kathie Lee” and contacted him about doing a cookbook for Charlton House. The book sold a hundred thousand copies in hardcover and Valerio became a household name. He was so grateful to me for discovering him that he insisted he was in love with me. “You’re not in love with me,” I told him. “You just think you’re in love with me, the way patients think they’re in love with their doctors.” Undaunted, Valerio held fast to his love and continued to propose marriage to me, even though I was married to someone else.
“Yes, Judy, you have made money for Charlton House,” Leeza acknowledged. “You’ve been a very valuable member of our team.”
Our team. The woman ran the company like a dictator of a third world country.
“You’ve been so valuable to us,” she said, “that we’re giving you three months’ severance.”
“Three months’ severance?” Was she kidding? I was worth much more than that.
“Yes, three months,” she said as she straightened her bow tie and flicked a speck of lint off her skirt. “In exchange, we’d like you to stay for a couple of weeks. To make the transition easier.”
“Easier for whom?” I said, trying not to sound shrill. “For you? For the person who’ll be taking over my office? For the accounting department?”
“For all of us, frankly,” she said. “We don’t want there to be any bumps.”
Bumps? My career had been reduced to bumps? I was being reduced to bumps? What was there left to say? To do? Crying in front of Leeza was out of the question. I was a professional, after all. So was stabbing her with the sterling silver letter opener on her desk. And I certainly wasn’t going to beg her to reconsider. Obviously, her mind was made up to fire me. Still, there was a tiny part of me that kept waiting for her to say, “April Fool’s,” even though it was March, and hand me a bonus check instead of a pink slip.
I looked at her expectantly, but she only blinked a couple of times, then checked her watch. I was keeping her from something. Something extremely important, no doubt. Perhaps there were other employees to fire, other hearts to break, other lives to ruin.
I stood up and made a move to leave her office.
 
; “I won’t be staying for a couple of weeks,” I said, my voice quivering but clear. “Or even for a couple of days. I’ll be out of here within the hour.”
Now it was Leeza’s turn to look shocked. “I’m afraid you can’t just leave,” she said when she recovered. “What I mean is, there’s still the matter of your interfacing with Human Resources. For your exit interview.”
Interfacing. Human Resources. Exit interview. What had Charlton House come to? What had corporate America come to?
“Goodbye, Leeza,” I said, as I gave her one last look. “I hope you realize what a terrible mistake you’ve made.”
I turned and stormed out of her office, my eyes flooding, my heart pounding, my stomach churning. Down the hall I marched, ignoring the stares, the questions, the whispering. I was desperate to reach the safety of my little office, where I had happily spent most of my adult working life. When I got there, I locked the door and began to pace, back and forth, back and forth, back and forth. Since my office was the size of a hamster’s cage, my pacing took the form of very short laps and, before long, I was dizzy.
I sat at my desk and began to sob.
What will I do without my job? I blubbered. It’s my identity. My power base. My source of income.
Well, it wasn’t my only source of income, I reminded myself. There was Hunt’s income from his job as the head of the commodities department at Fitzgerald & Franklin, the stuffy, old-line investment banking firm that kept promising to make him a partner and never did. But I couldn’t live off Hunt. In the seven years of our marriage, I’d never lived off Hunt. We’d always been a two-career couple, pooling our resources to buy cars and houses and trips to the Caribbean, a modern couple who split all our expenses, even groceries. We needed my income to keep things balanced. If I suddenly had no pay check, what would become of our lifestyle? What, for example, would become of our membership in The Oaks, the country club Hunt had insisted we join so he could network on the golf course, male-bond on the tennis court, and schmooze in the swimming pool? He’d said joining the club was his last shot at making partner at F&F. Personally, I thought country clubs were a total anachronism. They were exclusionary and cliquish and harkened back to the days when white Anglo-Saxon Protestant men ruled the world, and they had nothing I wanted or needed out of life. Even the athletic facilities held no lure for me. I didn’t care about sports (my idea of exercise was REM sleep). I didn’t play golf, was never very good at tennis, and because I feared what the chlorine would do to my frosted blond hair, I avoided swimming pools.
Still, Hunt had been persuasive. “If you don’t belong to a club, you’re out of the loop, Judy,” he’d said. “Getting into a prestigious club like The Oaks, where most of the members are CEOs of Fortune 500 companies, can mean a big boost to a guy’s business.”
“Sure,” I’d smirked. “If the guy is an undertaker. The people at The Oaks are so old that when you first meet them, the initials that come to mind are CPR, not CEO.”
Hunt had accused me of exaggerating, and he was right, of course. There were some young people at The Oaks. They just acted old.
My musings were interrupted by a knock on my office door.
“Judy?” came a voice. “It’s Arlene. Let me in, okay?”
Arlene was my best friend at Charlton House. She had been the company’s romance editor as long as I had been its cookbook editor. We were the only two editors whose books made any money for the place. And now I’d been fired. I guessed Arlene had heard the news and come to console me.
I unlocked the door and motioned for Arlene to enter. Her eyes were red and swollen and she looked paler than I’d ever seen her. Obviously, she had heard about my firing and was not taking it very well.
“Please don’t be upset,” I said, patting her on the back. “We’ll still see each other. You’ll come up to Connecticut for the weekend, and I’ll come into the city for lunch. It’ll be just like the old days. You’ll tell Loathsome Leeza stories and I’ll tell Loathsome Leeza stories and we’ll have a good laugh.”
“You don’t understand,” she said gravely.
“Of course, I do,” I said. “We were soul mates. Buddies in a storm. Editors in a sea of number crunchers. I know it’s very difficult for you to deal with my getting fired.”
“It’s not your getting fired that’s upsetting me,” she sniveled.
“Then what is it?” I asked.
“It’s my getting fired,” she said and began to cry.
“You too?” I couldn’t believe it.
“Leeza called me in a few minutes ago. I thought she was going to congratulate me about The Duchess and the Delivery Boy making the Times’ bestseller list. But no. She didn’t care that the book is selling better than any other romance novel out there right now. What she wanted to tell me was that the company was downsizing and I was getting downsized.”
I sat at my desk and tried to take it all in. “How could anybody be that stupid?” I asked. “Downsizing or not, you and I bring in bestseller after bestseller and instead of giving us a raise, Leeza fires us.”
Arlene shook her head. “She said the company is going in a different direction.”
“Yeah, down the toilet,” I said. “Doesn’t this idiot know that sex and food are the only things that sell in a troubled economy?”
With her shaggy brown hair and poignant, thin face, Arlene looked like a lost puppy, and no wonder. She didn’t just edit romance novels; they were her life. Thirty-eight and single, she buried herself in the books instead of going out and trying to meet a man. Night after night, in her Laura Ashley-decorated, one-bedroom apartment on the Upper West Side, she imagined herself lassoed by a cowboy or kidnapped by a pirate or seduced by a half-breed Apache, just like her favorite heroines. Every so often, I’d tactfully point out that life wasn’t nearly as dramatic as the stories she loved and that, perhaps, she was losing her sense of reality. “Reality is overrated,” she’d say.
The woman had a point.
“Feminism sucks,” I said suddenly.
“Why?” said Arlene.
“Because of the Leeza Grummonds of the world,” I said. “Feminism has unleashed these women, who have MBA degrees but no common sense, to run our big companies. Well, if they’re the best thing feminism can come up with, we should all go back to the kitchen. We can do less damage there.”
Arlene tried to smile. “Speaking of the kitchen,” she said, “I know you’ll get another job, Judy. You’re a great cookbook editor. You have a real understanding of food.”
“Thanks, Arlene. I appreciate that.”
I suppose I did have a real understanding of food, what with my family history. On my mother’s side were the eaters—big, fat women who ate and ate and ate and always wondered why they were so fat. On my father’s side were the food purveyors. My grandfather, Milton Millstein, arrived in this country from Germany, shortened his name to Mills and opened a butcher shop on Long Island. When he retired, my father took over the running of Mills’s Prime Meats. He made such a success of the operation that he opened two more stores. Then two more. Then, some advertising genius suggested my father should appear in his own TV ads, like Frank Perdue and Tom Carvel. My father loved the idea and, thanks to the power of television, went from being an anonymous butcher to being “Mr. Butcher.” He made a lot of money being Mr. Butcher, but the whole experience did something to his mind: he started speaking in cuts of meat. He called his brother Louis’s daughters a pair of rump cuts. He called his brother Louis’s wife a beat-up old brisket. He called me, his only daughter, a tenderloin. It wasn’t until I went off to college that I realized that when men call a good-looking woman a “ten,” it isn’t short for “tenderloin.”
“You’ll find another job too,” I told Arlene. “You’re the best romance editor in New York.”
“Maybe so, but the job market isn’t what it used to be,” she said. “There were so many mergers and takeovers in the eighties that there are only six publishing houses left in
the business. I just got fired from one of them, so that leaves five.”
“What a nightmare,” I said. “I’m going down to the mailroom to see if they have any cartons. Then I’m packing my stuff up and going home.”
“I’ll see you, Judy,” Arlene said wistfully.
I gave her a hug. “Of course you will. We’ll probably find jobs at the same company. It’ll be just like it was at Charlton House—only better.”
She managed a weak smile and left.
I returned from the mailroom fifteen minutes later and found that I had a couple of visitors.
“May I help you?” I said to the two security guards who stood on either side of my desk.
“No,” said one of them. “We’re here to help you.”
“Help me what?” I said.
“Pack up and leave,” said the other. “We’re here to make sure everything goes nice and smooth.”
I was outraged. “Why wouldn’t everything go nice and smooth? Do you expect me to set fire to the place?”
No response.
I decided to ignore them and began packing up my personal belongings—my Rolodex, my Filofax, the philodendron plant Hunt had given me, the crystal paperweight the author of The Psychic Cook had given me. I was about to reach for the Charlton House coffee mug on my desk when one of the guards stopped me.
“What do you think you’re doing?” I asked, peeling the man’s hand from my shoulder.
“The mug’s company property,” he said. “It stays here.”
Oh, so that’s it, I thought. This isn’t a dream. It’s an episode of “America’s Funniest Home Videos.” Someone is videotaping this and sending it to the network.
“How about these?” I said to the guards as I opened my desk drawer and pulled out a handful of Charlton House pencils. “These okay?”