10

Picture Perfect

Paul phoned that night from Baton Rouge and I told him about Mrs. Flemming.

"I'll come right home," he said.

"You don't have to, Paul. We're all right. I'm just very sad for her and for her daughter."

"I like to be with you when you're sad, Ruby. I don't like your being alone at times like this," he said.

"You can't protect me from every little storm that befalls me, Paul. Besides, I didn't have a nanny helping me when I lived in the shack and things were twice as difficult, did I?" I replied, my tone of voice harder than I had intended.

"I'm sorry. I didn't mean to suggest you couldn't do everything for Pearl yourself," he said in a small voice.

"You don't have to be sorry, Paul. I'm not angry. I'm just . . . upset about Mrs. Flemming."

"Which is why I should be home," he insisted. "Paul, do what you have to do and then come home. I'll be all right. Really," I said.

"Okay. I should be able to leave here before lunch tomorrow anyway," he said. There was a short pause and then he asked how things went in New Orleans.

"Fine. Dominique and I made all the arrangements, but I think I'll postpone it until things get calmer around here."

"We'll begin a search for a new nanny as soon as I come home," he said. "There's no need to postpone your show, Ruby."

"Let's not talk about it now, Paul. Suddenly that's not as important to me anyway, and I don't want to go out and get a new nanny just yet. Let's wait and see what happens with Mrs. Flemming and her daughter."

"Whatever you want."

"Besides, I think I can be a full-time mother and an artist at the same time."

"Okay," he said. "I'll be home as soon as I can."

"Don't speed, Paul," I warned. "We don't need another car accident."

"I won't," he promised. "See you soon. 'Bye." "Goodbye, Paul."

The day's ride on an emotional roller coaster exhausted me. After I put Pearl to sleep, I crawled into bed myself. I lay there for a while with my eyes open debating about calling Beau. I just dreaded the thought that Gisselle would find out I was calling, however, and I decided against it. I would wait for him to call me. I shut my eyes, but despite my fatigue, I tossed and turned, fretting in and out of nightmares, some of which had terrible things happening to Paul and some had terrible things happening to Beau. How fragile our lives were, I thought. In seconds, everything we had, everything we learned, everything we built, could become dust. It made me question what were really the most important things and what were not.

I knew Paul must have driven fast despite his promises, because he was at Cypress Woods very early in the afternoon the next day. When I accused him of it, he swore he had been able to end his meetings earlier than anticipated. I was just finishing my lunch and having coffee on the patio. Pearl was beside me in her playpen, sitting comfortably and coloring with her crayons. She couldn't stay within the lines, but she was content smearing the colors over the faces and figures, pretending she was doing what Mommy did. Occasionally she would stop and raise her eyes to see if I was watching and admiring her work.

"Another artist in the family," Paul declared when he sat down.

"She thinks she is. Did your meetings go well, then?"

"I signed a new contract. I don't want to tell you the numbers. You'll tell me they're obscene, just like you did the last time."

"They are. I can't help feeling guilty about making so much money when there are so many people in need of the simple, basic things."

"True, but our industrious work and clever arrangements will create hundreds of new jobs and provide employment, opportunities, and money for many people, Ruby."

"You're beginning to sound like a big businessman, all right," I said, and he laughed.

"I suppose in my heart I always was. Remember when I was only ten and I had my roadside stand, selling my Cajun peanuts, the dried shrimp, from my father's cannery?"

"Yes. You were very cute, dressing yourself neatly in your shirt and little tie, having your cigar box of change."

He smiled at his memories. "I never wanted to charge you and your Grandmère Catherine when you walked by and stopped, but she wouldn't take it for nothing. 'You can't stay in business that way,' she told me."

I nodded, remembering.

Paul gazed at Pearl for a moment and then turned back to me. There was a deep dark look in his blue eyes. I could see the hesitation, too.

"What is it, Paul?"

"I don't want you to think I was checking up on you. I just called to see how you were."

"Called? When? Where?"

"The night before last, when you were at the hotel in New Orleans," he said.

My heart throbbed in triple time as I held my breath. "What time?" I asked softly.

"After eleven. I didn't want to call too late for fear I might wake you, but . . ."

I turned away.

"As I said," he continued, "don't think I was checking up on you. You don't owe me any explanations, Ruby," he added quickly.

Over the cypress trees that walled the swamps, I saw a marsh hawk lift itself and float downward, probably to pluck some unwary prey. It caused a half dozen rice birds to scatter. Beyond the trees, a ceiling of bruised clouds made its slow but determined journey in our direction, promising torrents of rain before the day ended. I felt a cloud burst within me, releasing drops of ice over my heart. They streamed down into my stomach and into my legs, filling me with a cold numbness.

"I wasn't in the hotel, Paul," I said slowly. "I was with Beau."

I turned quickly to catch the confirmation in his face. He was caught in a tug-of-war of emotions. He had known, but I knew he didn't want to know; and yet he did. He wanted to face reality, but he was hoping it wasn't the reality he dreaded. Pain flashed in his eyes. I shrank into a tighter ball.

"How could you do that? How could you be with that man after the way he deserted you?"

"Paul . . ."

"No, I'd like to know. Don't you have any self-respect? He left you to have his baby while he went off and enjoyed Paris and who knows how many Frenchwomen. Then he married your sister and inherited half your wealth. Now you go running back to him, sneaking in the night."

"Paul, I didn't mean to be deceitful. Really . . ."

He turned quickly to me. "That was your real purpose for going to New Orleans, wasn't it? It wasn't the paintings, your art career. It was to run to his arms again. Have you planned other sneaky rendezvous?"

"I was going to tell you," I said. "Eventually."

"Sure," he said. He sat back and pulled up his shoulders. "What have you two decided to do?"

"Decided to do?"

"Is he going to divorce Gisselle?"

"No such proposal was discussed," I said. "Except we both know what our religious beliefs are and how divorce is not an acceptable option, especially to his family. Besides, I can't imagine Gisselle being cooperative, can you?"

"Hardly," Paul said.

"Just the opposite would happen. She would feed on the scandal. She would help write the headline: One Twin Steals the Other's Husband. You can just imagine what it would do to Beau and his family in New Orleans, and . . . it wouldn't be fair to you, Paul. These people here . . ."

"Really?" he said with a smirk.

"Paul, please. I feel dreadful about this. There's no one I want to hurt less than you."

He looked away so I wouldn't see the tears and anger in his face. "It's nothing I haven't brought on myself," he muttered. "Mother said it would happen eventually." He was silent.

"Don't just sit there like that, Paul. Scream at me. Throw me out."

He turned slowly. The pain in his face was like a sword in my heart. "You know I won't do that, Ruby. I can't stop myself from loving you."

"I know," I said sadly. "I wish you didn't. I wish you could hate me," I said.

He smiled. "You might as well wish for the earth to stop spinning, the sun to stop coming up in the morning and going down at night."

We gazed at each other and I thought how cruel it was for Fate to cause him to have such unrequited passion for me. Fate had turned him into a thirsty man forever hovering above cool, clear water, but forbidding him to drink. If only there were a way to get him to hate me, I thought with irony. It would be painful for me, but it would be so much better for him. Between us, like a raw wound that refused to heal, lingered our regrets and sadness.

"Well," he said finally, "let's not speak of unhappy things right now. We have too many other problems at the moment. You're certain about us not seeking another nanny?"

"For the time being, yes."

"Okay, but I hate to see you put your career on hold. I'm supposed to be married to a famous Cajun artist. I did a great deal of bragging in Baton Rouge. There are at least a dozen rich oil men eager to buy one of your paintings."

"Oh, Paul, you shouldn't do that. I'm not that good."

"Yes you are," he insisted, and rose. "I have to stop at the cannery and speak to my father, but I'll be home early."

"Good, because I invited Jeanne and James to dinner. She called earlier and sounded like she wanted to see us very much," I said.

"Oh? Fine." He leaned over to kiss me, but he was much more tentative about it and his kiss was much more perfunctory: a quick snap of his lips against my cheek, the way he would kiss his sister or his mother. A new wall had fallen between us, and there was no telling how thick it might become in the days and months to follow.

After he had left I sat there on the verge of tears. Although I was sure it wasn't his intention, the more he demonstrated his love for me, the more guilty I felt for loving and being with Beau. I told myself I had warned Paul. I told myself I had never made the same sort of vows he had made, marrying myself to some pure and religious idea of a relationship that rivaled a priest or a nun's marriage to the church. I told myself I was a full-blooded woman whose passions raged through her veins with just as much intensity as any other woman's and I could not quiet them down nor shut them away.

What's more, I didn't want to. Even at this moment, I longed to be in Beau's arms again, and I longed for his lips on mine. Filled with frustration, I sucked in my breath and swallowed back my tears. It wasn't the time to weaken and sob on pillows. It was the time to be strong and face whatever challenges malicious Fate threw my way.

I could use some good gris-gris, I thought. I could use one of Nina Jackson's fast-luck powders or Dragon Blood Sticks. Some time ago, she had given me a dime to wear around my ankle. It was to bring me good luck. I had taken it off and put it away, but I remembered where it was, and when I took Pearl up for her afternoon nap, I found it and fastened it around my ankle again.

I knew many would laugh at me, but they had never seen Grandmère Catherine lay her hands on a fevered child and cause his or her temperature to go down. They had never felt an evil spirit fly by in the night, fleeing from Grandmère Catherine's words and elixirs. And they had never heard the mumbo jumbo of a Voodoo Mama and then saw the results. It was a world filled with many mysteries, peopled by many spirits, both good and bad, and whatever magic one could conjure to find health and happiness was fine with me, no matter who laughed or who ridiculed it. Most of the time, they were people who believed in nothing anyway, people like my sister who believed only in their own happiness. And I, better than most people my age, already knew how vulnerable and how fleeting that happiness could be.

That night I saw how eager Paul was for us to have an enjoyable dinner with his sister and her husband. He wanted to do all that he could to drive away the dark shadows that had fallen between us and lingered in the secret corners of our hearts. He stopped by the kitchen and asked Letty to make something extra special and he served our most expensive wines, both he and James drinking quite a bit. At dinner our conversation was light and punctuated by many moments of laughter, but I could see Jeanne was troubled and wanted to have a private talk. So as soon as dinner ended and Paul suggested we all go into the living room, I said I wanted to show Jeanne a new dress I had bought in New Orleans.

"We'll be right down," I promised.

"You just want to skip our political talk, that's all," Paul accused playfully. But when he looked at me closer, he saw why I wanted to take Jeanne upstairs and he put his arm around James and led him away.

Jeanne burst into tears the moment we were alone. "What is it?" I asked, embracing her. I led her to the settee and handed her a handkerchief.

"Oh, Ruby, I'm so unhappy. I thought I would have a marriage as wonderful as yours, but it's been disappointing. Not the first two weeks, of course," she added between sobs, "but afterward, when we settled down, the romance just seemed to die. All he cares about is his career and his work. Sometimes he doesn't come home until ten or eleven o'clock and I have to eat dinner all alone, and then when he does arrive, he's usually so exhausted, he wants to go right to sleep."

"Did you tell him how you feel about it?" I asked, sitting beside her.

"Yes." She sucked in her gasps and stopped sobbing. "But all he says is he's just starting his career and I have to be understanding. One night he snapped at me and said, 'I'm not as lucky as your brother. I wasn't born with a silver spoon in my mouth so I would inherit oil-rich land. I've got to work for a living.'

"I told him Paul works for a living. I don't know anyone who works harder. He doesn't take anything for granted, right, Ruby?"

"Paul thinks there are twenty-five hours in every day, not twenty-four," I said, smiling.

"Yet somehow he manages to keep the romance in your marriage, doesn't he? A person would just have to look at you two together and he or she would see how devoted you are to each other and how much you care about each other's feelings. No matter how hard Paul works, he always has time for you, doesn't he? And you don't mind his being away so much, right?"

I shifted my eyes away quickly so she couldn't read the truth in them and then I folded my arms across my chest in Grandmère Catherine's way and filled my face with deep thought. She waited anxiously for my reply, her hands twisting in her lap.

"Yes," I finally replied, "but maybe that's because I'm so involved in my art."

She nodded and sighed.

"That's what James said. He said I should find something to do so I don't dote upon him so much, but I wanted to dote on him and our marriage. That's why I got married!" she exclaimed. "The truth is," she continued, dabbing at her cheeks with the handkerchief, "the passion is already gone."

"Oh, Jeanne, I'm sure that's not so."

"We haven't made love for two straight weeks," she revealed. "That's a long time for a husband and wife, right?" she followed, fixing her eyes on me for my reaction.

"Well . . ." I looked down and smoothed out my skirt so she wouldn't see my face again. Grandmère Catherine used to say my thoughts were as obvious as a secret written in a book with a glass cover. "I don't think there's any set time or rate of lovemaking, even for married people. Besides," I replied, now thinking about Beau, "it's something that both have to want spontaneously, impulsively."

"James," she said, gazing at her entwined fingers, "believes in the rhythm method because he's such a devout Catholic. I have to take my temperature before we make love. You don't do that, do you?"

I shook my head. I knew that a woman's body temperature was supposed to reflect when she was most apt to become pregnant, and that was considered an acceptable method of birth control, but I had to admit, taking your temperature before sleeping together would diminish the romance.

"So you see why I'm so unhappy?" she concluded.

"Doesn't he know just how deeply unhappy you are?" I asked. She shrugged. "You should talk to him more about it, Jeanne. No one else can help you two but you two."

"But if there's no passion . . ."

"Yes, I agree. There must be passion, but there must be compromise, too. That's what marriage is," I continued, realizing how true it was for Paul and me, "compromise —two people sacrificing willingly for the good of each other. They must care as much for each other as they do for themselves. But it works only if both do it," I said, thinking about Daddy and his devotion to Daphne.

"I don't think James wants to be like that," Jeanne worried.

"I'm sure he does, but it doesn't happen overnight. It takes time to build a relationship."

She nodded, slightly encouraged. "Paul and you have certainly spent a long time together. Is that why your marriage is so perfect?" she asked.

A strange aching began in my heart. I hated how one lie led to another and then another, building one upon the other until we were buried under a mountain of deceit.

"Nothing is perfect, Jeanne."

"Paul and you are as close as can be. Look how the two of you were toward each other from the first day you two met. The truth is," she said sadly, "I was hoping James would worship me as much as Paul worships you. I suppose I shouldn't compare him to my brother."

"No one should worship anyone, Jeanne," I said softly, but the way she viewed Paul and me and the way others saw us made me feel ever so guilty for loving Beau on the side. What a shock it would be if the truth were to be known, I thought, and how devastating it would be to Paul.

Talking like this with Jeanne made me realize that my relationship with Beau would go nowhere. It might even destroy Paul little by little. I had made my choice, accepted his kindness and devotion, and now I had to live with that choice. I couldn't be selfish enough to do anything else.

"Maybe I will have another long talk with James," Jeanne said. "Maybe you're right—maybe it takes time." "Anything worthwhile does," I said softly.

She was so involved with her own problems, she couldn't see the longing in my eyes. She seized my hands in hers. "Thank you, Ruby. Thank you for listening and caring."

We hugged and she smiled. Why was it so easy to help other people feel happy, but so hard to help myself? I wondered.

"There really is a new dress to show you," I said, and took her to my closet. Afterward, we joined Paul and James in the living room and had some after-dinner cordials. Jeanne smiled at me when James put his arm around her and kissed her on the cheek. He whispered something in her ear and she turned crimson. Then they announced they were tired and had to go home. At the doorway, Jeanne leaned over to thank me again. From the look in her eyes, I saw she was excited and happy. Paul and I remained on the gallery and watched them go to their car and drive away.

It was a rather clear evening, so that we could look up at the star-studded sky and see constellations from one horizon to the other. Paul took my hand.

"Want to sit outside awhile?" he asked. I nodded and we went to the bench. The night was filled with the monotonous symphony of cicadas interrupted by the occasional hoot of an owl.

"Jeanne wanted some big-sister advice tonight, didn't she?" he asked.

"Yes, but I'm not sure I'm the one she should have been asking."

"Of course you are." After a pause he added, "James asked me for advice, too. Made me feel older than I am." He turned to me in the darkness, his face cloaked in the shadows. "They think we're Mr. and Mrs. Perfect."

"I know."

"I wish we were." He took my hand again. "So what are we going to do?"

"Let's not try to come up with all the answers tonight, Paul. I'm tired and confused myself."

"Whatever you say." He leaned over to kiss me on the cheek. "Don't hate me for loving you so much," he whispered. I wanted to hug him, to kiss him, to soothe his troubled soul, but all I could do was shed some tears and stare into the night with my heart feeling like a lump of lead.

Finally we both went in and up to our separate bedrooms. After I put out my light, I stood by my window and gazed into the evening sky. I thought about Jeanne and James hurrying home after a wonderful meal, wine, and conversation, excited about each other, eager to hold each other and cap the evening with their lovemaking.

While in his room, Paul embraced a pillow, and in mine, I embraced my memories of Beau.

Shortly after Paul left for work the next morning, Beau called. He was so excited about our next rendezvous, barely squeezing in a breath as he described his plans for our day and evening, that at first I couldn't get in a word.

"You don't know how this has changed my life," he said. "You've given me something to look forward to, something to cheer me through the most dreary days and nights."

"Beau, I have some bad news," I finally inserted, and told him about Mrs. Flemming's daughter. "I'm afraid I'm going to have to postpone things."

"Why? Just come in with Pearl," he pleaded.

"No. I can't," I said.

"It's more than that, isn't it?" he asked after a pause.

"Yes," I admitted, and told him about Paul.

"Then he knows about us?"

"Yes, Beau."

"Gisselle has been very suspicious lately, too," he confessed. "She's even uttered some veiled threats and some not so veiled threats."

"Then maybe it's best we cool things down," I suggested. "We must think of all the people we might hurt, Beau."

"Yes," he said in a cracked voice.

If words had weight, the telephone lines between New Orleans and Cypress Woods would sag and tear apart, I thought.

"I'm sorry, Beau."

I heard him sigh deeply. "Well, Gisselle keeps asking to go to the ranch for a few days. I guess I'll take her next week. The truth is, I hate living in this house without you, Ruby. There are too many memories of us together here. Every time I walk past your room, I stop and stare at the door and remember."

"Talk Gisselle into selling the house, Beau. Start new somewhere else," I suggested.

"She doesn't care. Nothing bothers her. What have we done to each other, Ruby?" he asked.

I swallowed back the throat lumps, but fugitive tears trickled down my cheeks. For a moment I couldn't find my voice.

"We fell in love, Beau. That's all. We fell in love."

"Ruby . . ."

"I've got to go, Beau. Please."

"Don't say good-bye. Just hang up," he told me, and I did so, but I sat at the phone and sobbed until I heard Pearl wake from her nap and call to me. Then I wiped my eyes, took a deep breath, and went on to fill my days and nights with as much work as I could find, so I wouldn't think and I wouldn't regret.

A quiet resignation fell over me. I began to feel like a nun, spending much of my time in quiet meditation, painting, reading, and listening to music. Caring for Pearl was a full-time job now, too. She was very active and curious about everything. I had to go about and make the house child-proof, placing valuable knick-knacks out of her reach, being sure she couldn't get into anything dangerous. Occasionally Molly would look after her for me for a few hours while I shopped or had some quiet time alone.

Paul was busier than ever; deliberately so, I thought. He was up at the crack of dawn and gone some days before I came down for breakfast. Sometimes he couldn't get back in time for dinner. He told me his father was doing less and less at the cannery, and talking about retirement.

"Maybe you should hire a manager, then," I suggested. "You can't do it all."

"I'll see," he promised, but I saw that he enjoyed being occupied. Just like me, he hated leisure because leisure made him reflect on what his life was really like now.

I thought it would go on like this forever until we were both old and gray, rocking side by side on the gallery and looking out at the bayou, wondering what life would have been like had we not made some of the decisions we had made when we were young and impulsive. But one night after dinner toward the end of the month, the phone rang. Paul had already settled himself in his favorite easy chair and had the journal opened to the business pages. Pearl was asleep and I was reading a novel. James appeared in the doorway.

"It's for Madame," he announced. Paul looked up curiously. I shrugged and rose.

"Maybe it's Jeanne," I suggested. He nodded. But it was Beau, who sounded like a voice without a body . . . a wisp of himself, so soft and stunned, I questioned whether it was really he.

"Beau? What is it?"

"It's Gisselle. We're at the ranch. We've been here for more than a week now."

"Oh," I said. "She knows about us, then?"

"No, that's not it," he replied.

I held my breath. "What then, Beau?"

"She was bitten by mosquitoes. We thought nothing of it. She complained like crazy, of course, but I rubbed alcohol on her and forgot it. Then . . ."

"Yes?" My legs felt as if they might turn to air and float out from under me.

"She started to have these severe headaches. Nothing I gave her helped. She took nearly a bottle of aspirin. She had a fever, too. Last night the fever went way up and she was hallucinating. I had to call the doctor from the village. By the time he arrived, she was paralyzed."

"Paralyzed!"

"And she was babbling incoherently. She couldn't remember anything, not even who I was," he said, amazed.

"What did the doctor say?"

"He knew what it was immediately. Gisselle has contracted St. Louis encephalitis, an inflammation of the brain caused by a virus mosquitoes transmit to people."

"Mon Dieu," I said, my heart thumping. "Is she in the hospital?"

"No," he said quickly.

"No? Why not, Beau?"

"The doctor said the prognosis is not good. There is no known treatment of the disease when it is transmitted by viral infections other than the herpes simplex virus. Those are his exact words."

"What does this mean? What will happen to her?"

"She can remain in this condition for some time," he said in a voice devoid of any feeling, a voice drained and lost. And then he added, "But no one back in New Orleans knows about it yet. In fact, only this doctor and some servants here are aware of what's happened, and they can be persuaded not to talk about it."

I held my breath. "What are you suggesting, Beau?"

"It came to me just a little while ago while I stood by her bedside and watched her sleep. When she's asleep, she looks so much like you, Ruby. No one would question it."

My heart stopped and then began to pound so hard, I thought I would lose my breath and consciousness. I shifted the receiver to my other ear and took a deep breath. I knew what he was suggesting.

"Beau . . . you want me to assume her identity?"

"And become my wife now and forever," he said. "Don't you see what an opportunity this is?" he asked quickly. "None of the secrets of the past have to be revealed and no one has to be hurt."

"Except Paul," I said.

"What good is it if we're all unhappy?"

Could we do this? I wondered, my excitement building. Would it be wrong?

"What will happen to Gisselle?"

"We'll have to institutionalize her, secretly, of course. But it won't be hard to do."

"That's terrible. You remember when Daphne tried to do that to me," I said.

"That was different, Ruby. You were alive and well and had your whole life ahead of you. What difference will it make to Gisselle? She has accidentally given us a gift, repaired so many wrongs she has committed. Fate wouldn't hand us this opportunity if Fate didn't want to right the wrongs, too. Come to me," he pleaded. "With you I can restore my troubled soul and become someone I can respect again. Please, Ruby. We can't waste a moment of this chance."

"I don't know. I have to think." I turned and looked toward the study. "I have to talk it over with Paul."

"Of course, but do it right away and call me back," he said, and gave me the telephone number. "Ruby, I love you and you love me and we should be together. Destiny has come to realize that, too. Who knows? Maybe your Grandmère Catherine's at work someplace in the hereafter or maybe Nina Jackson's cast a spell for us."

"I don't know, Beau. It's all happening so fast. It's complicated."

"Talk it over with Paul. It's right; it's good. It's what was meant to be, finally," he said.

After we hung up, I stood there, my heart still pounding very hard and quickly. The possibilities loomed before me as well as the dangers. I would have to assume my sister's identity, become Gisselle, but we were so unalike, really. Could I do it well enough to fool people and be with Beau forever? Love, if it's strong enough, I thought, gives you the power to do things beyond your imagination. Maybe this was true for us now.

I took a deep breath and then returned to the study and told Paul what had happened and what Beau had proposed. He sat there with amazing calm and listened as I gushed the story and the fantastic proposal. Then he got up and went to the window. He stood there for the longest time.

"You'll never stop loving him," he muttered bitterly. "I was a fool to think otherwise. If I only had listened to my mother . . ." He sighed deeply and turned.

"I can't help the way I feel about him, Paul."

He nodded and looked very thoughtful for a moment. "Maybe you have to live with him to see what sort of a man he really is. Maybe then you'll understand the difference between him and me."

"Paul, I love you for what you've done for Pearl and me and your devotion to me, but we've been living only half a marriage. Besides, we once agreed that if either of us could have someone else, someone we loved and could have a full relationship with, the other would not prevent it."

He nodded. "What a dreamer I was when I made those vows with you on your Grandmère Catherine's gallery. Oh well," he continued with a wry smile, "I'll finally be able to do something that will make you truly happy." His eyes suddenly brightened with an additional thought. "Even more than you and Beau would expect." He paused, his face tight with determination.

"What?" I asked, breathlessly.

"When you call Beau, tell him we'll bring Gisselle here," he said.

"What?"

"He's right. What difference will anything make to her now? You and I will go to the ranch after lunch tomorrow. I have some important business to conduct. We'll pretend we're going for a short holiday and then I will return with Gisselle and give out the story that it is you who have suffered the encephalitis. I'll fix a comfortable place for her upstairs and we'll have nurses around the clock. Since she has lapses of memory and is confused and semiconscious most of the time, it won't be difficult."

"You would do that for me?" I asked, incredulous.

He smiled. "I love you that much, Ruby. Maybe now you'll really understand."

"But I can't do this to you, Paul. It would be too hard and unfair."

"It's nothing. In this big house, I wouldn't even notice the arrangements," he said.

"I don't mean only that. You have a life to live, too," I insisted.

"And I will. In my own way. Go on, call Beau."

He had such a strange look in his eyes. I sensed that he believed this would somehow bring me back to him someday. Whatever his reasons, it certainly made our switch of identities far more possible.

I turned to call Beau and then stopped, realizing the biggest problem of all.

"We can't do this, Paul. It's impossible."

"Why?"

"Pearl!" I said. "If I'm Gisselle, what happens to her?"

Paul thought a moment and then nodded. "With you supposedly seriously ill and with our nanny gone to care for her own family, I will take her to live with her aunt and uncle until the ordeal at Cypress Woods ends. For the time being, it will serve as a good cover story."

I was overwhelmed with his quick thinking. "Oh, Paul, I don't deserve this kindness and sacrifice. I really don't," I cried.

He smiled coolly. "You'll come visit your sick sister from time to time, won't you?" he asked, and I understood that in this strange way, he hoped to keep me tied to him.

"Of course, although Gisselle wouldn't care."

"Be careful," he warned with another grin. "Don't be too nice or people will say . . . what's come over her? She's not herself these days."

"Yes," I said, realizing how great the challenge ahead of me was. I had very little confidence in myself. For now, I would have to be happy with only desire, the desire to be with Beau as his wife forever. Maybe that was enough. For Pearl's sake and mine, I prayed it was.

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