By Kathleen Harris,
©1958
All the women who knew
Dr. Tony Gray agreed that he was too attractive for his own good—yet none of
them could help falling under his spell. When Jane Arden met Tony, first as his
head surgical nurse, then as his latest romantic interest, she felt his belief
that marriage didn’t mix with medicine made him “safe” for a girl who had an
understanding with another man. And then, abruptly, she found herself up
against the most difficult question a girl ever faces …
GRADE: C-
BEST QUOTES:
“Most of them, especially if they happen to be young and
pretty, only take up nursing because they think it will pay off—in good wages,
extra bonuses from grateful patients, eventually a husband!”
“So you’re a doctor! Small wonder that so many girls take to
nursing.”
“Most girls, as you claim, are smart enough to make the most
of their appearance. But some still are not as smart as their grandmothers. …
Your grandmother was too smart ever to do things better than a man.”
“[Nurses are] big husky individuals who look down on
everyone disapprovingly as though he was covered with germs. As a rule, they
are quite unattractive, too.”
“‘Age of the Ultimate Weapon,’ she reminded herself, as one
commentator had called it. An age so hurried there was little time for people
to be kind to one another, a frightening age, with satellites being sent into
outer space and talk of people going to the moon, weapons being created whose
power was unthinkable.”
“You must be happy in your new job, watching the doc cut
people up.”
“Men should realize that it often takes a woman to help them
reach the top.”
“Perhaps she put too much of herself into her work. Perhaps
there was not enough left over for a real life, aside from her chosen career, a
home of her own, her own man, her own children. Every girl wanted these things
more than anything else.”
REVIEW:
Jane Arden, who should be called vagabond nurse, has moved
to New York for this book, after stints in Ohio, Florida, and Tennessee in the
first three. Again she’s moved into her sister’s apartment, as she did in
Florida for Jane Arden Registered Nurse,
Roberta also possessing a serious case of wanderlust, as having herself moved
from Miami to New York, she’s now set off for Europe and left her empty
apartment to Jane. We learn early that heartthrob Dr. Tony Gray is not going to
be a problem because “Jane was immune to men,” but we know better! Early on she
catches Dr. Tony’s eye because they work in the same OR, and agree to be friends
because neither of them wants to get married—Tony because he’s concentrating on
his training, Jane allegedly because two years later she is still in mourning
her childhood sweetheart, whom she had agreed to marry in JARN despite the fact that he’d turned out to be a complete ass
before conveniently dying in a plane crash, but I suspect that in fact it’s
because she does not have a heart. You will not be surprised to learn that on her
first date with Tony—which of course she accepts because they’re just friends
and will never be anything else—Jane shows her true colors when, at a party
thrown for her by Roberta’s friends, “Jane couldn’t help a certain coolness
from creeping into her voice. She was disappointed in Tony. She had wanted to
accept him as a friend. But his actions this evening made this practically
impossible.” His big crime? Roberta’s married friend Carol Gaylord flirted with
him. The nerve! When he asks her what’s wrong, she lies, “You must be imagining
things.” Did I mention that I am not particularly fond of Jane?
In JARN Jane had
met young millionaire Nicky Powers, who had inexplicably fallen in love with her,
but in book three, he’d packed off to Europe to study art. He’d promised to beg
Jane to marry him when he comes home, which he has not yet done in this series.
Jane has nothing other than sisterly feelings toward Nicky, yet when she learns
that Roberta has met up with Nicky in Paris, she again demonstrates jealous
possessiveness of a man she says she doesn’t want. Now,
suddenly, “Jane still did not know how she felt toward Nicky,” her jealousy apparently
changing her feelings, especially now that a previously smitten man’s ardor for
her may be cooling.
When Jane comes down with the flu, Tony shows up at her
apartment to take care of her. Though she is still angry with him, she lets him
in, because “what could she do? A nurse always obeyed the doctor.” So now they
are dating again, and Jane continues her self-delusion that she isn’t jealous
of Carol, and also perpetrates an ongoing stream of obvious lies to Tony about her
feelings about his friendship with Carol: “It doesn’t matter, Tony. It’s none
of my business,” she tells him, while all along she’s thinking he’s “pretty
dumb for being taken in.” Eventually they are kissing with an “exhilaration
that had taken her on a trip to the moon.” But when Tony is appointed the new
chief of surgery and is too busy for dates, here she goes again, “wishing that
Nicky would come back from Paris. Maybe she would discover that she did love
Nicky. Jane was tempted to urge Nicky not to stay away much longer. She knew if
she wrote that she needed him, Nicky would not delay his return.” If she
doesn’t actually love any of her boyfriends, she certainly does love to jerk them
around.
Turning back to her other puppet, when Tony asks if he can
come to her apartment one evening, she goes all out with the standard VNRN
fare—salad, steak, cherry pie—and throws in candles and flowers to boot, for a
man she repeatedly states she is not interested in. Her ploy works, and Tony
tells her, “I’m crazy about you. Please say I don’t have to fight it any more.”
Interestingly, she interprets this as some sort of proposal: “They would have
to make plans, now that they were in love.” He comes over for dinner a lot,
though he never mentions love or marriage, and Jane is outraged when he tells
her he’s moving out of his slum apartment and taking a six-month lease on a
nicer place a few minutes from the hospital. “Jane felt her heart tighten.
Plans like these certainly did not include her. What she wanted to say—to cry
out—was, ‘What about us, Tony?’” As if a six-month lease equals a breakup.
Honestly, this woman and logic have never even shaken hands. Naturally, she
just lies some more: “It sounds pretty grand,” she tells him. But she won’t go
there to see Tony, because even though “some girls would think nothing of going
to a man’s apartment,” nice girls like Jane, who invite men to their own
apartments several times a week, have bizarre double standards.
As much as she wants to put that collar on Tony, she’s doesn’t
know how she feels. “Was she in love? she asked herself. She must be. She was
almost deliriously happy when she was with Tony. Tony needed her; he had come
to depend on her. And it was good to be needed. David had never needed her. He
had been so self-sufficient.” And her waffling continues when she decides that
“she hoped that when the time came to renew her contract as a surgical nurse,
she would be quitting, to be married.” Which she had ardently insisted when she
was engaged to her first fiancé that she would never do—though you will be
completely astonished to learn that she had never actually mentioned it to the
man. And yet she still doesn’t know what she’s going to say when Nicky comes
home and proposes. It was all I could do not to hurl this book across the room.
Roberta returns to New York—catching Jane and Tony in the
clinch—and Jane can only say “I guess” when Roberta asks if she loves him. To
clarify, she explains, “Tony has an allergy when it comes to marriage,” so it
seems that “love” to Jane just means “husband.” Roberta decides she is going to
help Jane get Tony to propose, and before long Tony is angrily dragging Jane
out of the hospital to demand to know why Jane has not told him about “this
fellow.” Jane cannot stop with the lies. “What fellow?” she asks. “Are there
more than one?” Tony roars, and you know there would be, if Jane could find
them. It comes out that Roberta has shown Tony a cable saying that Nicky is
coming home and Jane should make arrangements for the wedding. Rather than tell
Tony the truth—that’s so not Jane’s
way—she snaps that there’s no relationship between her and Tony because “during
the very first talk we had, you informed me that you had no intention of
becoming involved with anyone.” He reminds her that she said the same thing,
and she stomps home. Roberta is pleased with her work: “The best way to get to
the bottom of anything is to give the other person a severe jolt—and the fact
that Tony took it so much to heart is a good sign.” The only shock here is that
Jane then tells Roberta that she can’t marry Nicky. Roberta only gently chides
Jane for keeping him dangling for so long, and then mentions that she herself
is going to marry Nicky “since you don’t want him. Naturally, being a
gentleman, he had to wait until you turned him down before he could ask me to
marry him.” So it seems Roberta’s “jolt” was delivered to two people, not just
one. These Arden women are cold-blooded killers. Roberta’s wedding goes off in
two paragraphs, and Jane makes it clear that though Nicky’s aunt and uncle
cable their congratulations, “Jane had been their first choice.” What a
self-centered bitch Jane has turned out to be!
Tony hears about the wedding and calls Jane to tell her for
the first time that he loves her, but Jane is going to jerk the hook around a
bit and asks him if Carol is keeping him from being lonely. “Didn’t I just tell
you I love you? What else do you want me to say?” he asks her. Jane, of course,
“could have told him, but she didn’t.” Tony, however, is not too dumb to read
between in the lines, but too dumb to run screaming from the horror show that
is Jane Arden, and he actually proposes. Jane “caught hold of a chair to keep
from toppling over.” Then she makes snarky remarks about waiting six years
until Tony has become a successful surgeon. “Jane still thought it a good idea
not to let this handsome young man be too sure of her,” so she refuses to
answer him, saying they will talk about it when she gets home from her sister’s
wedding. “She knew she was going to have a good cry as soon as she hung up. But
this time her tears would be tears of happiness—all was well with Jane Arden’s
world once more.” Unbelievable. I’m going to cry, too, but only because I’m
going to have to read three more books about Jane Arden.
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