A Cruise for Cinderella
A Cruise for Cinderella
A Cruise for Cinderella
© Vivian Stuart, 1956
© eBook in English: Jentas ehf. 2022
ISBN: 978-9979-64-477-4
This book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, resold, hired out, or otherwise circulated without the publisher’s prior consent in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition, including this condition, being imposed on the subsequent purchase.
All contracts and agreements regarding the work, editing, and layout are owned by Jentas ehf.
CHAPTER ONE
THE DOORBELL shrilled an impatient summons. Mrs. Brown said, “Will you answer it, Janie? It’ll be the insurance man, I expect,” and went on with her springcleaning.
Janie obediently opened the door. She was wearing an apron that had belonged to her mother and was several sizes too big, and her soft dark curls were concealed beneath the all-enveloping folds of a scarf. She opened her mouth to greet the insurance man and closed it again in some confusion, for the caller was a stranger—a slim, glamorous young woman in an impeccable black suit, who regarded her without much interest and asked distantly, “Is Miss Jane Brown at home? I’d like to speak to her.”
“Oh!” Janie was startled and drew back a pace into the narrow hall. “I—I’m Jane Brown.”
“Are you?” said the visitor, in the tone of one who has received a shock but is determined not to show it. A pair of intelligent blue eyes studied Janie’s flushed young face, and then the caller smiled and, clicking open her handbag, she produced a printed card. “My name is Fielden, Sonia Fielden, and I represent the organizers of the Graphic Theaters Cinderella Competition, Miss Brown. I came to tell you that your entry has been awarded second prize. Congratulations, my dear! May I come in?”
“Oh—oh, yes, please do,” Janie invited, still confused. “I’m afraid the house is all upside down. We— we’re spring-cleaning, you see, and—”
“Please don’t worry about that,” Miss Fielden put in swiftly. She looked around her, seeing the piled furniture and the rolled-up carpets. From the kitchen across the hall came the sound of expert scrubbing and Mrs. Brown’s cheerful if unmelodious rendering of “Three Coins in the Fountain.”
“Your mother?” the visitor suggested. “Won’t you call her, Miss Brown? Then you can both listen to the good news together. I’m sure your mother will be thrilled to hear what a wonderful prize you’ve won.”
“Yes,” Janie agreed faintly. “Yes, I’m sure she will. Only—” she hesitated. For the life of her, she couldn’t remember any details of the prize list.
The Cinderella competition had been organized by a chain of suburban theaters, just before Christmas, and Janie had entered it without the slightest hope of winning one of the major prizes. The first prize, she recalled suddenly, had been a gorgeous red sports car and two weeks in the south of France. But the second . . . goodness, hadn’t the second prize been a cruise? A Mediterranean cruise on a luxury liner, four whole weeks of romance and sunshine. . . .
Janie sat down abruptly on one of the rolls of carpet. “Have I really won the cruise?” she asked, in a small, frightened voice. “The—the Mediterranean cruise?”
Miss Fielden’s smile was warm. “Indeed you have, my dear. A four-week cruise on the S.S. Goldinia, to Gibraltar, Naples, Athens, Istanbul, Dubrovnik and Barcelona—and a complete new wardrobe, which I’m to help you choose.”
“Oh,” faltered Janie. “oh—” she burst into tears.
“I’ll call your mother,” said Miss Fielden practically. “I think what we all need is the proverbial cup of tea, don’t you?”
Over their tea, served in the newly scrubbed kitchen, the caller went into efficient detail. First there was a choice of dates for the cruise—Janie might pick whichever one suited her best. Then there was her outfit. This could be chosen at once, if she wanted it, and was to include an evening dress designed specially for her by a famous West End fashion designer. She might also, if she wished, Miss Fielden added kindly, have her hair restyled.
Janie touched her scarf with trembling hands and tried vainly to believe it all. It didn’t seem possible, somehow. It couldn’t, it simply couldn’t, be happening to her! She must, she told herself dazedly, she must be dreaming. In a moment or two, she would wake up, the caller— this poised, smiling fairy godmother who had materialized so unexpectedly from another world—would be gone and only Janie and her mother would be left in the small, disordered house, sipping tea, before going on with the spring-cleaning. Because things like this, marvelous things, just didn’t happen, except in dreams. . . .
“Janie—” Her mother’s voice shook a little and seemed to Janie to be coming from a long way off.
“I—yes, mom?” Janie turned her head and saw, with astonishment, that there were tears in her mother’s dark eyes.
“Miss Fielden’s talking to you,” Mrs. Brown admonished gently.
“Oh, I—I’m sorry. I’m afraid I—didn’t hear.”
“I wanted you to tell me a little about your background,” Miss Fielden answered briskly. She took a notebook from her bag and waited, pencil poised, smiling encouragingly at Janie. “How old are you?”
“I’m twenty-one.”
“Twenty-one?” Miss Fielden echoed. She sounded surprised. ‘Well, that’s a nice age. And what do you do, for a living, I mean? Have you a job?”
“I’m a typist,” Janie said. She added shyly, “In a lawyer’s office. I’m secretary to one of the partners.”
“That’s interesting. Do you like it?”
“Oh, yes. I’ve been there since I left business college.” She did like it, Janie reminded herself. She had a good, safe job, was well paid and had earned promotion. But it was dull. Harmer, Coates and Harmer was an old established firm, dealing for the most part with wills and country estates. They never handled criminal cases, seldom appeared in court, and the three partners were all well over sixty. Yet, until that moment, Janie had never paused to think whether or not she liked her job. She had simply done it, to the best of her ability, for the past five years. She stared at her questioner. “Actually, it’s not very interesting,” she confessed. “I mean, nothing much happens.”
Miss Fielden suppressed a smile. “Well, I expect it keeps you busy. And what do you do with your spare time?”
Janie flushed. “I help mom. We—we run a little laundry, here at home. Just the two of us.”
“That’s very enterprising of you,” Miss Fielden approved. She glanced questioningly at Mrs. Brown, who launched into a not very coherent explanation of how their small business was run.
They had started it together almost two years ago, when Janie’s father had been disabled and had to resign from the navy with an artificial right arm in place of the one he had lost when a jet aircraft exploded on the flight deck of his carrier. His pension was small, and his present job in a nearby factory didn’t bring in enough for the needs of a hungry, school-age family. The laundry had made all the difference to all of them. Only it had its disadvantages, Janie reflected—mom worked much too hard and dad hated her having to do so; the rest of the street called it “taking in washing” and didn’t approve; and Janie herself found it a tie, because it occupied most of her spare time. But still, they had made it pay, she and mom, and they were proud of the fact.
Miss Fielden asked several shrewd pertinent questions, then she turned to Janie again. Skillfully, she continued to ask questions, getting Janie to talk about herself, her work and her friends. Mrs. Brown listened in sile
nce, occasionally putting in a word when her daughter stumbled.
“The object of this competition,” Miss Fielden explained, closing her notebook at last, “was to find three girls who really needed a fairy godmother to make their dreams come true. We asked, if you remember, for a short essay on what you would wish for if you were given three wishes. That was why we called it a Cinderella competition.” She smiled at Janie. “The prizewinners are going to be Cinderellas in real life. We had a very eminent psychologist to judge the essays. I didn’t see your entry, of course—all the essays were considered in the strictest confidence—but I understand that it impressed the judge very much, Miss Brown.”
“There,” sighed Mrs. Brown, “there! Just fancy that. Oh, Janie, love, I’m so proud of you.”
Janie lowered her gaze. She could not look at her mother, she was too ashamed. For she had wished, she remembered, for the chance, just once, to look beautiful, to know, however briefly, what it was like to be in love with a Prince Charming and to watch, in his arms, the moon rising over a tropical sea. . . .
“I wouldn’t mind,” she had written, “what happened to me afterward, so long as I had one perfect memory to look back on, all the rest of my life.” It wasn’t true, really, Janie thought wildly. She’d written her essay when she returned home after going to a movie, when the spell was still upon her, wrapping her up in a world of fantasy, of foolishness, of vain, improbable dreams. If she’d really been given three wishes she wouldn’t have wasted them thus—she’d have asked for practical, commonsense things, for security, for a good, kind, reliable husband and a home of her own, for health and happiness, for money for her weary, harassed father, a holiday for her mother.
“I didn’t mean what I wrote,” she began.
Miss Fielden cut her short. “This is no time to admit it,” she pointed out dryly, “when your essay’s won you the prize you wanted. I’m sure it must have been extremely good—there were over eight thousand entries, you know.” She patted Janie’s hand. “It’s been a shock to you, you’re feeling confused. But you’ll get used to it. Now then, let’s see—” She referred to some papers she took from her handbag. “The Goldina’s next cruise starts on the fifteenth, the one after that on the twelfth of next month. When could you get away?”
“I—” Janie glanced quickly at her mother. It was impossible for her to go. Her holiday from the office was due, admittedly, but she had planned to spend it relieving her mother, giving her the break she so badly needed. The fifteenth was out of the question—besides, she was only entitled to two weeks and this cruise would last four weeks. And in June . . . .
“The fifteenth,” Mrs. Brown announced firmly. She silenced Janie’s protests with a quick, reassuring smile. “We’ll close the laundry down, love, if we can’t get someone to take it on. You’re going to have your cruise, make no mistake about that. Would the fifteenth suit?” she asked Miss Fielden anxiously. Her hand found Janie’s and held it tight. “You can ask Mr. Harmer to give you the extra two weeks. Or I’ll ask him for you,” she added beneath her breath.
Miss Fielden referred efficiently to her papers. “Oh, yes, the fifteenth will be quite all right. It gives us a clear couple of weeks, doesn’t it? Plenty of time, except perhaps for the Simon evening dress.” She eyed Janie’s small, overthin figure with cool, professional interest. “Still, I expect they’ll manage it. Now, about your companion—you’re allowed to take anyone you like as your guest, you know. Who shall it be? A girl friend, one of your sisters? Or are you engaged?”
Janie shook her head, feeling the color rush to her cheeks. “No, I’m not engaged.” She looked across at her mother. “Mom, you—I’d like you to come.”
For a long moment her mother didn’t answer. Her eyes, Janie saw, were bright with the glint of tears. When at last she spoke, her voice was husky.
“It’s ever so sweet of you, Janie. But what would I do on a cruise? And there’s dad and the others, who’d look after them if I went? It’s ever so sweet of you and I do appreciate it, but I’ve got to say no. You take someone else, one of the girls from your office, perhaps. You’d have more fun with someone your own age, wouldn’t you? Having me, why, it’d cramp your style, love. You know it would.”
“It wouldn’t,” Janie objected loyally, “it wouldn’t, mom. And you need a holiday.”
“My sort of holiday,” Mrs. Brown returned gently, “is a week at Southend, Janie, with dad and the family. I wouldn’t know what to do on a cruise. You have your cruise and enjoy it—after all, it’s your prize. Isn’t it, Miss Fielden?”
Miss Fielden nodded briskly. “Indeed it is, Mrs. Brown. But if it would help you to enjoy it more, Janie—I may call you that, mayn’t I—you needn’t take a guest with you on the cruise if you don’t want to. You could have the money instead. I think one first-class fare on the Goldinia would pay for a holiday at Southend for your mother and father and the family and leave something over for a rainy day, if they weren’t too extravagant. How about that? It’s only a suggestion—you can think it over if you want to. We want our Cinderella to enjoy her dream holiday without any worries—just as if we’d waved a magic wand to drive them away. Well—” she rose “—I’ll leave you now. Talk things over with your mother and let me know what you decide. I’ll call for you—” she glanced at her watch and held out her hand “—after lunch, shall I? And we’ll go shopping.”
“Shopping?” Janie questioned. Her eyes were huge in her small, pale face. “But isn’t that a bit—well, soon? I mean—”
“Janie,” interrupted Miss Fielden, “there’s the presentation of your prize on the stage of the Graphic on Wednesday night. We’ve got to get you a dress and see about your hair. There will be photographers, reporters wanting to interview you, publicity. Today’s Saturday and I expect you’ll be at work on Monday.”
“Photographers?” Janie echoed, appalled. “Reporters? Oh, but—”
Miss Fielden smiled. “Of course. But it won’t be such an ordeal as you imagine. And there’ll be no publicity when you go for your cruise. No one on board the Goldinia will know who you are, if you don’t want them to. I’ll take care of that. You see, the competition was organized in order to publicize our film Cinderella, and the appearance of our prizewinners, before and after their dream holidays, will be all that we’ll ask of them. Wednesday will be the first night of the film—you’ll want to look your best for that, won’t you?”
“Yes, but—” Janie’s cheeks flamed scarlet “—I don’t need a—a lot of clothes. Not even for the cruise, I mean. Not really. If we—if mom and I had the money instead, we—”
Miss Fielden slipped an arm around her shoulders. “Listen, Janie,” she said kindly, “you can accept this prize or not, as you wish. But if you do accept it. you must obey the rules. I told you that the object of the competition was to find three girls who would play the real-life role of Cinderella and to give each of them the holiday of her dreams, with a dream wardrobe and everything that goes with it. We hope that each of our Cinderellas will find her fairy prince—we want to transform her with a wave of our magic wand, give her lovely clothes and the chance to wear them in a romantic setting. You’ve won this prize, Janie. You’re going to take it, aren’t you?”
Mrs. Brown answered for her. “Of course she is, Miss Fielden. You don’t have to worry—I’ll see she takes it, because she deserves it. No one—” she added, and there was a catch in her voice “—no one deserves it more than Janie does.”
“No,” agreed Miss Fielden. Her tone was thoughtful. “No, I don’t believe we could have found anyone who deserved it more.” She shook Mrs. Brown’s hand. “Goodbye. I’ll be around to fetch Janie at two-fifteen. Don’t you trouble to show me out, I can find my way.”
Janie and her mother were silent until the door had closed behind the visitor. Then they looked at each other and Janie said, her lips quivering, “Oh, mom! Is it really true?” She was sud
denly, inexplicably afraid.
“Of course it’s true, love,” her mother told her. She drew her close. “You’re a clever girl, Janie, and a good one. You do deserve this and you’re going to have it, just the way they’ve got it planned for you, all of it! And the rest of us are going to Southend, thanks to you. I’ll ask Mrs. Moss to take over the laundry. She always said she’d do it if I wanted her to and—why, Janie—” she looked down at Janie’s face “—you’re crying!”
“So are you!”
“Well—” Mrs. Brown’s arms tightened around her “—it’s the shock, I think. And because I’m so happy for you—and proud of you. Fancy my Janie winning a competition like that! My Janie, a real-life Cinderella!”
“I don’t feel like Cinderella,” Janie confessed. She buried her face against her mother’s thin breast. “Oh, mom, I know it’s silly but—I’m frightened. The thought of it—that ship, all those foreign ports, I—”
“Your dad will be able to tell you about them.”
“Yes, I know. But it’s not only that, it’s—well, it’s—”
“What is it, love?” Mrs. Brown prompted.
Janie raised her face, met her mother’s understanding gaze and sighed. “The girls at the office,” she said wretchedly, “they don’t know I know, but they—they call me ‘Plain Jane’ and—I am, mom. I am.”
“I think,” replied her mother briskly, “that you can safely leave that to Miss Fielden, Janie. You aren’t plain, it’s just that you’ve never had the clothes or the time to worry about your appearance. You’re going to have both now. And I’ll warrant those girls at your office will laugh the other side of their faces when Miss Fielden’s finished with you. Well—” she smiled and gave Janie a gentle push “—we’d better get on and put things back as they were. Because I don’t suppose we’ll get any more springcleaning done this year. We’ll be too busy giving Cinderella her send-off!”