Eligible is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
   Copyright © 2016 by Curtis Sittenfeld
   All rights reserved.
   Published in the United States by Random House, an imprint and division of Penguin Random House LLC, New York.
   RANDOM HOUSE and the HOUSE colophon are registered trademarks of Penguin Random House LLC.
   LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA
   Sittenfeld, Curtis.
   Eligible: a novel / Curtis Sittenfeld.
   pages ; cm
   ISBN 978-1-4000-6832-6
   International edition ISBN 978-0-3995-8952-2
   ebook ISBN 978-0-8129-9761-3
   1. Sisters—Fiction. 2. Families—Fiction. I. Austen, Jane, 1775–1817. Pride and prejudice. II. Title.
   PS3619.I94E45 2016
   813'.6—dc23
   2015027778
   eBook ISBN 9780812997613
   randomhousebooks.com
   Book design by Elizabeth A. D. Eno, adapted for eBook
   Cover design: Gabrielle Bordwin
   Cover illustration: Chuhail/Shutterstock
   v4.1
   ep
   Contents
   Cover
   Title Page
   Copyright
   Epigraph
   Part One
   Chapter 1
   Chapter 2
   Chapter 3
   Chapter 4
   Chapter 5
   Chapter 6
   Chapter 7
   Chapter 8
   Chapter 9
   Chapter 10
   Chapter 11
   Chapter 12
   Chapter 13
   Chapter 14
   Chapter 15
   Chapter 16
   Chapter 17
   Chapter 18
   Chapter 19
   Chapter 20
   Chapter 21
   Chapter 22
   Chapter 23
   Chapter 24
   Chapter 25
   Chapter 26
   Chapter 27
   Chapter 28
   Chapter 29
   Chapter 30
   Chapter 31
   Chapter 32
   Chapter 33
   Chapter 34
   Chapter 35
   Chapter 36
   Chapter 37
   Chapter 38
   Chapter 39
   Chapter 40
   Chapter 41
   Chapter 42
   Chapter 43
   Chapter 44
   Chapter 45
   Chapter 46
   Chapter 47
   Chapter 48
   Chapter 49
   Chapter 50
   Chapter 51
   Chapter 52
   Chapter 53
   Chapter 54
   Chapter 55
   Chapter 56
   Chapter 57
   Chapter 58
   Chapter 59
   Chapter 60
   Chapter 61
   Chapter 62
   Chapter 63
   Chapter 64
   Chapter 65
   Chapter 66
   Chapter 67
   Chapter 68
   Chapter 69
   Chapter 70
   Chapter 71
   Chapter 72
   Chapter 73
   Chapter 74
   Chapter 75
   Chapter 76
   Chapter 77
   Chapter 78
   Chapter 79
   Chapter 80
   Chapter 81
   Chapter 82
   Chapter 83
   Chapter 84
   Chapter 85
   Chapter 86
   Chapter 87
   Chapter 88
   Chapter 89
   Chapter 90
   Chapter 91
   Chapter 92
   Chapter 93
   Chapter 94
   Chapter 95
   Chapter 96
   Chapter 97
   Chapter 98
   Chapter 99
   Chapter 100
   Chapter 101
   Chapter 102
   Chapter 103
   Chapter 104
   Chapter 105
   Chapter 106
   Chapter 107
   Chapter 108
   Chapter 109
   Chapter 110
   Chapter 111
   Part Two
   Chapter 112
   Chapter 113
   Chapter 114
   Chapter 115
   Chapter 116
   Chapter 117
   Chapter 118
   Chapter 119
   Chapter 120
   Chapter 121
   Chapter 122
   Chapter 123
   Chapter 124
   Chapter 125
   Chapter 126
   Chapter 127
   Chapter 128
   Chapter 129
   Chapter 130
   Chapter 131
   Chapter 132
   Chapter 133
   Chapter 134
   Chapter 135
   Chapter 136
   Chapter 137
   Chapter 138
   Chapter 139
   Chapter 140
   Chapter 141
   Chapter 142
   Chapter 143
   Chapter 144
   Chapter 145
   Chapter 146
   Part Three
   Chapter 147
   Chapter 148
   Chapter 149
   Chapter 150
   Chapter 151
   Chapter 152
   Chapter 153
   Chapter 154
   Chapter 155
   Chapter 156
   Chapter 157
   Chapter 158
   Chapter 159
   Chapter 160
   Chapter 161
   Chapter 162
   Chapter 163
   Chapter 164
   Chapter 165
   Chapter 166
   Chapter 167
   Chapter 168
   Chapter 169
   Chapter 170
   Chapter 171
   Chapter 172
   Chapter 173
   Chapter 174
   Chapter 175
   Chapter 176
   Chapter 177
   Four Months Later
   Chapter 178
   Chapter 179
   Two Weeks Later
   Chapter 180
   Chapter 181
   Dedication
   Acknowledgments
   By Curtis Sittenfeld
   About the Author
   When the end of the world comes, I want to be in Cincinnati because it’s always twenty years behind the times.
   —Mark Twain
   WELL BEFORE HIS arrival in Cincinnati, everyone knew that Chip Bingley was looking for a wife. Two years earlier, Chip—graduate of Dartmouth College and Harvard Medical School, scion of the Pennsylvania Bingleys, who in the twentieth century had made their fortune in plumbing fixtures—had, ostensibly with some reluctance, appeared on the juggernaut reality-television show Eligible. Over the course of eight weeks in the fall of 2011, twenty-five single women had lived together in a mansion in Rancho Cucamonga, California, and vied for Chip’s heart: accompanying him on dates to play blackjack in Las Vegas and taste wine at vineyards in Napa Valley, fighting with and besmirching one another in and out of his presence. At the end of each episode, every woman received either a kiss on the lips from him, which meant she would continue to compete, or a kiss on the cheek, which meant she had to return home immediately. In the final episode, with only two women remaining—Kara, a wide-eyed, blond-ringleted twenty-three-year-old former college cheerleader turned second-grade teacher from Jackson, Mississippi, and Marcy, a duplicitous yet alluring brunette twenty-eight-year-old
 dental hygienist from Morristown, New Jersey—Chip wept profusely and declined to propose marriage to either. They both were extraordinary, he declared, stunning and intelligent and sophisticated, but toward neither did he feel what he termed “a soul connection.” In compliance with FCC regulations, Marcy’s subsequent tirade consisted primarily of bleeped-out words that nevertheless did little to conceal her rage.
   “It’s not because he was on that silly show that I want him to meet our girls,” Mrs. Bennet told her husband over breakfast on a morning in late June. The Bennets lived on Grandin Road, in a sprawling eight-bedroom Tudor in Cincinnati’s Hyde Park neighborhood. “I never even saw it. But he went to Harvard Medical School, you know.”
   “So you’ve mentioned,” said Mr. Bennet.
   “After all we’ve been through, I wouldn’t mind a doctor in the family,” Mrs. Bennet said. “Call that self-serving if you like, but I’d say it’s smart.”
   “Self-serving?” Mr. Bennet repeated. “You?”
   Five weeks prior, Mr. Bennet had undergone emergency coronary artery bypass surgery; after a not inconsiderable recuperation, it was just in the last few days that his typically sardonic affect had returned.
   “Chip Bingley didn’t even want to be on Eligible, but his sister nominated him,” Mrs. Bennet said.
   “A reality show isn’t unlike the Nobel Peace Prize, then,” Mr. Bennet said. “In that they both require nominations.”
   “I wonder if Chip’s renting or has bought a place,” Mrs. Bennet said. “That would tell us something about how long he plans to stay in Cincinnati.”
   Mr. Bennet set down his slice of toast. “Given that this man is a stranger to us, you seem inordinately interested in the details of his life.”
   “I’d scarcely say stranger. He’s in the ER at Christ Hospital, which means Dick Lucas must know him. Chip’s very well-spoken, not like those trashy young people who are usually on TV. And very handsome, too.”
   “I thought you’d never seen the show.”
   “I only caught a few minutes of it, when the girls were watching.” Mrs. Bennet looked peevishly at her husband. “You shouldn’t quarrel with me. It’s bad for your recovery. Anyway, Chip could have had a whole career on TV but chose to return to medicine. And you can tell that he’s from a nice family. Fred, I really believe his moving here right when Jane and Liz are home is the silver lining to our troubles.” The eldest and second eldest of the five Bennet sisters had lived in New York for the last decade and a half; it was due to their father’s health scare that they had abruptly, if temporarily, returned to Cincinnati.
   “My dear,” said Mr. Bennet, “if a sock puppet with a trust fund and a Harvard medical degree moved here, you’d think he was meant to marry one of our girls.”
   “Tease me all you like, but the clock is ticking. No, Jane doesn’t look like she’ll be forty in November, but any man who knows her age will think long and hard about what that means. And Liz isn’t far behind her.”
   “Plenty of men don’t want children.” Mr. Bennet took a sip of coffee. “I’m still not sure that I do.”
   “A woman in her forties can give birth,” Mrs. Bennet said, “but it isn’t as easy as the media would have you believe. Phyllis and Bob’s daughter had all sorts of procedures, and what did she end up with but little Ying from Shanghai.” As she stood, Mrs. Bennet glanced at her gold oval-faced watch. “I’m going to phone Helen Lucas and see if she can arrange an introduction to Chip.”
   MRS. BENNET WAS always the one to say grace at family dinners—she was fond of the Anglican meal prayer—and hardly had the word amen passed her lips that evening when, with uncontainable enthusiasm, she announced, “The Lucases have invited us for a Fourth of July barbecue!”
   “What time?” asked Lydia, who at twenty-three was the youngest Bennet. “Because Kitty and I have plans.”
   Mary, who was thirty, said, “No fireworks start before dark.”
   “We’re invited to a pre-party in Mount Adams,” Kitty said. Kitty was twenty-six, the closest in both age and temperament to Lydia, yet contrary to typical sibling patterns, she both tagged after and was led astray by her younger sister.
   “But I haven’t told you who’ll be at the barbecue.” From her end of the long oak kitchen table, Mrs. Bennet beamed. “Chip Bingley!”
   “The Eligible crybaby?” Lydia said, and Kitty giggled as Lydia added, “I’ve never seen a woman cry as hard as he did in the season finale.”
   “What’s an eligible crybaby?” Jane asked.
   “Oh, Jane,” Liz said. “So innocent and unspoiled. You’ve heard of the reality show Eligible, right?”
   Jane squinted. “I think so.”
   “He was on it a couple years ago. He was the guy being lusted after by twenty-five women.”
   “I don’t suppose that any of you can appreciate the terror a man might feel being so outnumbered,” Mr. Bennet said. “I often weep, and there are only six of you.”
   “Eligible is degrading to women,” Mary said, and Lydia said, “Of course that’s what you think.”
   “But every other season is one woman and twenty-five guys,” Kitty said. “That’s equality.”
   “The women humiliate themselves in a way the men don’t,” Mary said. “They’re so desperate.”
   “Chip Bingley went to Harvard Medical School,” Mrs. Bennet said. “He’s not one of those vulgar Hollywood types.”
   “Mom, his Hollywood vulgarity is the only reason anyone in Cincinnati cares about him,” Liz said.
   Jane turned to her sister. “You knew he was here?”
   “You didn’t?”
   “Which of us are you hoping he’ll go for, Mom?” Lydia asked. “He’s old, right? So I assume Jane.”
   “Thanks, Lydia,” Jane said.
   “He’s thirty-six,” Mrs. Bennet said. “That would make him suitable for Jane or Liz.”
   “Why not for Mary?” Kitty asked.
   “He doesn’t seem like Mary’s type,” Mrs. Bennet said.
   “Because she’s gay,” Lydia said. “And he’s not a woman.”
   Mary glared at Lydia. “First of all, I’m not gay. And even if I were, I’d rather be a lesbian than a sociopath.”
   Lydia smirked. “You don’t have to choose.”
   “Is everyone listening to this?” Mary turned to her mother, at the foot of the table, then her father, at the head. “There’s something seriously wrong with Lydia.”
   “There’s nothing wrong with any of you,” Mrs. Bennet said. “Jane, what’s this vegetable called? It has an unusual flavor.”
   “It’s spinach,” Jane said. “I braised it.”
   “In point of fact,” Mr. Bennet said, “there’s something wrong with all of you. You’re adults, and you ought to be living on your own.”
   “Dad, we came home to take care of you,” Jane said.
   “I’m well now. Go back to New York. You too, Lizzy. As the only one who refuses to take a dime and, not coincidentally, the only one with a real job, you’re supposed to be setting an example for your sisters. Instead, they’re pulling you down with them.”
   “Jane and Lizzy know how important my luncheon is,” Mrs. Bennet said. “That’s why they’re still here.” The event to which Mrs. Bennet was referring was the annual fundraising luncheon for the Cincinnati Women’s League, scheduled this year for the second Thursday in September. A member of the league since her twenties, Mrs. Bennet was for the first time the luncheon’s planning chair, and, as she often reminded her family members, the enormous pressure and responsibility of the role left her, however lamentably, unavailable to tend to her husband’s recovery. “Now, the Lucases’ barbecue is called for four,” Mrs. Bennet continued. “Lydia and Kitty, that’s plenty of time for you to join us and still get to your party before the fireworks. Helen Lucas is inviting some young people from the hospital besides Chip Bingley, so it’d be a shame for you to miss meeting them.”
   “Mom, unlike our sisters, Kitty and I are capable of getting boyfri
ends on our own,” Lydia said.
   
 
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