Jazz was convinced.
'Of course,' she said finally. 'You're right – it would kill her. Who am I to do that to her?' She plonked herself down at the table. 'Thanks George,' she said wearily.
They sat in glum silence.
'Of course,' said George quietly, 'you could always let William know that you know about him and Carrie. Keep him on his toes a bit.'
Jazz looked at her sister in a new light. 'You clever, conniving thing. Of course! What's happened to you? Am I slowly having a wicked effect on you?'
George tutted loudly. 'Just because I'm not a cynical hard bitch, there's no need to treat me like I'm Beth from Little Bloody Women!'
Jazz smiled thoughtfully and wondered if that's who she should try emulating from now on.
'I'm afraid there's something else I need your advice on,' she said softly.
George listened to her career dilemma. Should Jazz start writing for the Daily Echo? Could she do that and keep a part-time job at Hoorah! just in case the column wasn't successful? At the end, George asked one simple question: 'How will you feel about yourself if you write for the Daily Echo?'
Jazz thought hard. 'I suppose I'll feel wretched in one way, but then this is my career. This is everything I've worked for. This is my life, it's who I am. It's me.'
'Then do it.'
'But I hate everything this rag stands for.'
'Then don't do it.'
Jazz looked at George. Her eyes seemed dead.
* * * * *
By a fluke, Mo was in the flat the next night. And of course, Gilbert was there too. Although Jazz didn't want to talk in front of him, she knew she probably wouldn't get Mo alone for months – if ever again, she thought sourly. Gilbert lived on his own half an hour away and Mo had practically moved in with him. She hardly lived in her own flat any more. For weeks now, there had been none of her underwear airing in the bathroom, none of her mugs left unwashed on the sideboard and none of her shoes lying scattered in the hall. Jazz missed her terribly, especially during this period of monumental self-doubt and depression. Her father had been right. She was desperately jealous of Gilbert.
She didn't suppose it made much difference if Gilbert knew about her work dilemma. He was hardly a rival – being strictly a theatre writer. She just hated having to talk about herself in front of him. Still, it would have to be done. She waited until they were having dinner and joined them for coffee.
Gilbert was still super-smooth with Jazz, but it now took the form of patronising, pitying patter, as if he had done the rejecting and not her.
'Jazzy, sweetie,' he welcomed her into the kitchen. 'Join us, we're just having coffee.'
Jasmin wanted to tell him that she didn't need to be invited to join Mo anywhere. Mo smiled pleasantly at her as she sat down.
'How's it going?' said Mo quietly.
'Fine. The bathroom's been clean without you.'
'Only because you don't use it.'
They grinned at each other. Gilbert sat unsmiling.
'You never laugh at my jokes like Jazz does,' Mo said squarely.
Gilbert put his hands up in the air. 'Sorry, pussycat, I guess I'm not with you for your jokes.' He tried to make that sound sexy, but Mo just looked at him hard. Jazz could have punched him right there and then.
'It's nothing to get het up about,' he continued with an explanatory shrug. 'Everyone knows men are funnier than women.'
'Only to look at,' said Jazz grumpily, an eye on his paunch.
Mo sniggered and Gilbert smiled pityingly.
'You see?' he said to Mo. 'That's just not very funny.' He decided to change the subject. 'Jazzy, me and Mo wondered if you would like to come to the flicks with us one evening, and maybe for a meal afterwards. What d'you say? Make a night of it?'
Jesus, thought Jazz, he actually thinks I'd rather go out with them than stay in all evening counting my nasal hairs.
'Maybe a nice soppy romantic film,' he was saying, in a voice he thought was endearing.
Jazz looked him in the eye, something she hadn't done since the auditions.
'You mean a film where the man gets to make all the sacrifices, deliver all the funny lines, drive all the cars and go on top?' she asked.
He stared at her.
'No thanks, all the same,' she said with a tight smile. 'I've got to stay in. I'm growing my hair.'
She could practically see Gilbert's mind working. Finally, he asked, 'You mean you like to go on top?'
Jazz decided it was time to take control of the conversation before she got suicidal. She told Mo her news. Her column's new angle. The call from Sharon Westfield at the Daily Echo.
'That's fantastic!' squeaked Mo. 'Well done! I'm so proud! I always knew––'
'But I don't know if I should do it,' interrupted Jazz.
'Why?' asked Gilbert. 'Sharon's a bitch, but she's a good boss – as long as you don't annoy her, of course. Do that and you can say goodbye to a career in the popular press. Keep on her right side and you have a very powerful friend.'
'When did you ever work for her?' asked Jazz, intrigued.
'Oh, I've done bits and pieces for her over the years,' he said airily. 'She used to be Commissioning Editor on Your Monthly periodical.'
Jazz and Mo tried to be mature and not smirk.
'Not a great Commissioning Editor, to be honest,' continued Gilbert authoritatively. 'Waffles in her briefs.'
His perplexed expression at Jazz and Mo's sudden convulsion of laughter grew into a look of repulsion as Mo started snorting. His face only made Jazz laugh more heartily. Perhaps Gilbert wasn't so bad after all, she thought eventually, wiping her eyes.
Feeling happier than she had in ages, Jazz explained her predicament.
'Yes,' nodded Gilbert. 'One's self-respect is paramount in these things.'
Jazz and Mo just gawped at him and Jazz wondered if it would be acceptable to start laughing again.
She chose instead to ignore him.
'So what do you reckon?' she asked Mo as if Gilbert hadn't spoken. 'You think I shouldn't take it?'
Mo looked doubtful.
'I think you should do what you would be happy with,' said Gilbert.
Mo looked on, almost impressed.
'What sort of an answer is that?' asked Jazz tetchily. 'If I knew that one, I wouldn't be asking Mo, would I?' Damn.
They sat there in silence for a while, until Jazz eventually left them to their own company and went to bed. She decided she'd have to talk to Josie. At the Evening Herald Columnist Personality of the Year award ceremony.
19
The day of the award ceremony, two days before she was supposed to fax her column to Sharon Westfield, Jazz's nerves were stretched to breaking point. She was daunted by the prospect of winning an award for which her boss had nominated her, for a column she was contemplating selling to a different publication. And she was daunted by the prospect of having to wait weeks before seeing Harry. Every time she thought of him, she felt a deep sense of shame. Seeing his proud, haughty face might just be the perfect antidote to that. And she could do with an antidote to the after-effects of that e-mail.
Josie was to be her guest at the awards. Jazz had wangled it with Michael that if she won the award, Josie deserved a night off from Ben and would go with her sister to the next cast party that weekend and stay the night in Mo's bed. Josie was going to leave Michael the number of the local casualty department if anything went wrong, instead of Jazz's mobile. A girl deserved a night off once in a while. Jazz was praying she'd win, just for Josie's sake.
Then on Saturday there would be the first of several rehearsals without Harry; he was doing a three-week stint at The Pemberton in a one-man play written specially for him by hot new playwright Patrick Clifton. It was already sold out, of course.
Jazz sat in her office frowning at the dailies. The tabloids were full of vitriolic, un-newsworthy gossip and the qualities were so dry she actually fell asleep reading one. Harry was right. What had possessed her to
be proud of her career? Things couldn't get much worse, she thought morosely.
She was wrong.
The next morning she had to carry her new little black number in on the tube.
'Ooh, let me see it,' said Maddie excitedly, as Jazz walked into the office. Jazz could hardly look at Maddie any more for guilt about her conversation with Sharon Westfield.
When she showed her the dress, Maddie's grin froze on her pretty little face.
'OhmyGod,' she whispered.
'What?' said Jazz. 'What could possibly be wrong with that? It's just a mangy little black dress.'
'It's exactly the same mangy little black dress that I've got,' said Maddie.
Jazz looked at her, bemused. 'All little black dresses look the same, Maddie.'
'This is a catastrophe,' said Maddie, not hearing her. 'One of us is going to have to go and buy another one.'
'Are you joking?' She could hardly believe that Maddie, who coped daily with mad readers, hopeless writers, insane deadlines and a tempestuous Editor, was actually panicking. A line of sweat was breaking out on her upper lip.
'No, I'm not. Where did you buy yours?'
'Paris,' lied Jazz. It was worth a try. 'Years ago.'
'Well then, it'll have to be me – I got mine in Covent Garden. I'll be back in an hour. Take my calls, Alison.' And she was gone.
Jazz looked over to Mark and awaited a smart reply, but he was actually looking concerned. Of course, thought Jazz. Women worrying about dresses made sense in his world.
Three hours later, a radiant Maddie wandered in. She showed her dress off proudly and Jazz was amazed. It was stunning. A minuscule red number with, in certain key areas, sequins where there should have been fabric. If Jazz was the kind of woman who hated being outdone by another woman, she'd have been very unhappy. Instead she just marvelled at the dress. As did Mark.
He gave a very long wolf whistle, which delighted Maddie.
'You may be my boss,' he said approvingly, 'but you know your clothes.'
Maddie was now in a good mood. Alison made her a cup of tea and Maddie sat down to read the papers. Today had been exhausting.
'Ooh,' she suddenly piped up. 'You didn't tell me Harry Noble was on at the Pemberton!'The theatre was a five-minute walk from their offices.
Jazz said nothing.
'Oooh,' swooned Maddie with a silly grin on her face. 'He's fabulous. I could watch him in anything.'
'Yes, I bet,' said Jazz. 'Particularly the shower.'
Maddie gasped at Jazz's comment and then giggled at the truth of it. Then she made a boss's decision. 'We have to go,' she commanded.
The sound of a newspaper being furiously rustled came from Mark's corner.
'No way,' said Jazz, before thinking.
'Why not?' asked Maddie. 'He'll never know you're there.'
'He might,' said Jazz. 'I'd kill myself if he ever knew.'
'Why? It would be research. Oh, I've got to see him,' and with that, Maddie phoned the box office, told them she was from the press and was immediately promised two tickets. Jazz watched her, frozen. She knew she would be fascinated to see Harry on stage yet mortified if he discovered she'd been there. Maddie put the phone down with a flourish and let out a little yippee.
'Research, darling!' she exclaimed.
Mark tutted from behind a paper. 'Research, bollocks!' he said. 'You're there to watch the man's crotch so you've got something to think about when you jerk off tonight.'
Maddie and Jazz both turned to him in disgust as he twitched his paper violently. Infuriatingly, Jazz couldn't think of anything to say to him that would crush him enough.
Maddie spoke instead.
'You know, Marcus,' she said archly. 'You are such a typical Gemini.'
Jazz smiled. She couldn't have done better herself.
* * * * *
With all the stress that was going on in Jazz's life at the moment, she had actually managed to forget that tonight was being televised. It was like a mini-Oscars, full of cameras, bright white lights and big names. The Evening Herald obviously knew a thing or two about putting on a spread. A couple of the women's magazines were there and all the dailies plus their Sunday counterparts. In the world of journalists, columns were the new black. Hell, they were so hot, they were the new grey.
Jazz looked at the table plan and saw that Sharon Westfield from the Daily Echo was on table five. She scanned the enormous hall and spotted her table. There was only one woman on it. She was sandwiched between two typical elder statesmen of the press, both balding, fat and with very red noses. One was the Patron of the rag, the other his Editor. From their body language, it looked like Sharon was on rather intimate terms with at least one of them. There was no way Sharon would be concerned about finding Jazz with such pressing engagements nearer home, so she relaxed a bit and started to work at enjoying herself. Some of the awards were even more ridiculous than hers.
Rosie Smith and Robyn Anderson had been neck and neck for the Columnist's Most Moving Personal Trauma of the Year Award. Tragically, both were now in hospices, but their colleagues were there to take their places. There was a phone call during dinner to announce that Robyn had in fact died earlier this evening, so it came as no surprise when she won the award posthumously. Seems fair, thought Jazz. First past the posthumous, and all that.
Alastair Gibbon won the Columnist's Most Revealing Intimate Secret of the Year, and as he walked up to the podium to collect his four-inch-high Nelson's Column, the entire audience tried not to think of his anal fissures.
But the rest of the categories were intimidating enough and Jazz was truly humbled to see herself in such company as John Pilkin, whose column had alerted worldwide support for some very worthy charities, and Suzanne Edwards, whose column had reminded everyone that feminism could be trendy once more.
When the Columnist Personality of the Year award was being read out, Jazz's whole body went into fight or flight mode. Great, she thought to herself as her shins started to sweat. At least I know that if I ever get trapped in a dark alleyway, my body will react properly. So tonight won't have been a complete loss. It didn't help that Josie was holding her hand, but Jazz was too nervous to pull it away.
When she heard her name read out over the microphone and her entire table start to whoop, Jazz thought she must be dreaming. She couldn't remember walking up to the front of the room nor thanking everyone nor walking back to her seat. She just knew she felt overwhelmed with a sense of other-worldliness. Josie was ecstatic, and Jazz was too, for her.
But she also knew that she was made. This was it, the big time. She was an award-winning columnist. She was on TV. She put on a big smile and tried to stop thinking of that wretched e-mail and how it proved she didn't know what the hell she was talking about.
Immediately after the awards, she and Josie were interviewed live on TV. The young male interviewer had introduced them to camera as 'the acerbically judgemental Jasmin Field and her happily-married sister Josie'. He'd even asked if their parents would be proud, at which point Josie had waved to the camera and said, 'Hello, Mum.' Jazz knew both her parents would probably be weeping with pride.
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