“I understand that.”
“Do you?” Win’s little black eyes skewered Jack. “I hope you do. I’ll do my best for you because I always have. But if you should make a mistake and step outta line—make me have to look out for my own and forget I ever knew you—you do that, and you better never let Amelia and attractive Celina Payne outta your sight.”
Twenty-four
Celina heard a key turn in Jack’s front door and walked to the top of the stairs. The door started to open, and she was tempted to retreat. This could be Tilly and Amelia. Jack had told her that if they arrived before he got back, Celina should say he’d been called away and had asked her to wait. She wanted to get back to Cyrus, whom she’d talked to on the phone. He was going out to meet Sally Lamar and Celina wanted to talk to him before he left.
First up the stairs came Amelia, her balding frog beneath an arm. She climbed so fast, she stumbled halfway up.
Jack bounded behind his daughter and caught her up. He carried Amelia much the same as Amelia carried her frog, and both father and daughter laughed.
Last, after closing and locking the door, Tilly clomped upward.
“Look what I found outside,” Jack said to Celina, and swung Amelia onto his shoulders.
“You are going to hit that child’s head one of these days,” Tilly said crossly. “She’s growing fast, Mr. Charbonnet. Growing taller. If your attention was where it should be, I wouldn’t have to point such things out to you.”
“Taller?” Jack said, arriving beside Celina and reaching up to find the top of Amelia’s head. “Why, Ι do believe Tilly’s right. My little girl is taller than her daddy. Will you look at that, Celina?”
“Daddy, you are silly!”
Celina folded her arms and smiled, watching them. This man’s love for his child beamed from him. And his child’s happiness was his reward for loving her without reserve.
“You’ll make Amelia sick, Mr. Charbonnet. Throwing her around like that.”
Tilly dropped a canvas shopping bag on the floor at the top of the stairs. She avoided looking at Celina.
“I want to tell you and Amelia something important,” Jack said to Tilly. “You’ll want to unpack your bag first. Take your time. I’ll send Amelia up to get you later.”
The woman didn’t have to say a word to convey her disapproval. She swept up her bag and left for her rooms.
“Is it okay if we talk in your bedroom, Amelia?” Jack said. He gave Celina a slight smile that didn’t lessen her apprehension.
They went into the very pink room and Jack plopped Amelia on the bed. She still kept her armlock on the frog, but her grin wavered and faded.
“Jack, maybe this isn’t—”
“Of course it is,” he said, cutting Celina off. “Is that a new dress, squirt? Nice. That granny of yours spoils you.”
Celina cleared her throat and said, “Yellow suits you. I love yellow.”
“Granny bought it. I don’t like it, but Daddy says it’s not nice to make someone else sad, so I said I did.”
“We’ll talk about that later,” Jack said. He pulled a chair toward the bed and indicated for Celina to sit. He perched beside Amelia. “What do you think I’m going to tell you?”
She pulled her shoulders up to her ears and let them drop. The corners of her mouth turned down.
Celina took a deep breath to calm her jiggling nerves.
Jack put a finger under his daughter’s pointed chin and raised her face. “If you don’t think you know what I am goin’ to say, then why the soggy face?”
Amelia squeezed her eyes shut. “I’m not crying, so my face isn’t soggy. I don’t mind if you want a new mommy for me. Tilly told me you were probably going to get one soon.”
“Thank you,” Jack said. He kissed her nose and Amelia opened her green eyes to look into his. “You are so much like your mama,” he added.
Thickness closed Celina’s throat. In a rush she felt such longing to be part of this forever, and for them to want her just as much.
“We could have planned this better, sweetheart. Taken longer for you to get to know Celina. But we don’t want to wait, so we decided to go ahead now. You’re a grown-up little girl, but you’re still a little girl, and we don’t want you to worry about things you don’t have to think about. Celina and I are getting married. But that doesn’t mean you and I are going to do things differently. We’ll have our special time together, the same as we always have. But you’ll have a stepmama who will share a lot of things with us.”
Surely no other five-year-old could manage the magnificent frown Amelia produced. Her fine, dark brows came down in a straight line. She wrinkled her nose and regarded Celina with the kind of intensity few adults could achieve.
“Amelia?”
“Yes, Daddy. I might like a new mama, but how do I know she’s the right one?”
“That’s not an agreeable thing to say, young lady. Celina—”
“Hush,” Celina told him. “I’m a stranger to her.” And still a stranger to you in too many important ways.
Father and daughter looked at Celina. Their likeness was startling, yet in his child Jack saw the wife he’d lost. He always would.
“I asked Celina to marry me and she’s said she will,” Jack said. His gentle finality overwhelmed her. “By the end of this week we’ll be a family and she will live here with us.”
Amelia lowered her eyes. She pressed her lips together and leaned against Jack. He stroked her soft black curls.
There seemed nothing to say. Celina held very still. She heard her own breathing, and theirs. Was that the way their life would be? Her, and them, at least when they were together.
He wanted to marry her, and she’d told him she wanted it, too.
Their hours alone no longer seemed real. For an instant Celina saw the kitchen, Jack’s intent face above hers, the ceiling behind his head. She closed the visions out. They embarrassed her, now in the company of the child. That woman, the one naked in the kitchen, seemed a stranger, her actions inappropriate.
Jack kissed the top of Amelia’s head and hugged her. He winked at Celina. “I thought you could move in here today. There’s a spare bedroom next to Amelia’s.”
Celina felt something near panic. “I’m just fine in Royal Street at present.”
“I would prefer you here.” His pleasant expression slipped away. “You and Amelia need time together as soon as possible. I’d attend to the formalities while you two discuss how you’ll keep me under your combined thumbs.”
Celina wasn’t amused. This was a new side of Jack, a manipulative angle that intended to get its own way.
“Have you heard anything from Antoine?”
She stared at him. “No. You’d know if I had. We—” Her mouth remained open and she clicked her jaw. “I haven’t heard from Antoine.”
“You’re sure? Not a quick phone call, nothing?”
Why would he ask her these questions when he’d been with her all weekend? “No, Jack. How about you?”
He held his breath. She saw him. And his grip on Amelia tightened. “What is it? What’s wrong?” she asked, forgetting the child.
“Not a thing,” he told her, but the slight shake of his head was a warning to be careful what she said.
Celina sat quite still. She watched for some hint of what was really on his mind, but his expression had closed again.
“Ι need to go out,” he said. “Stay with Amelia and Tilly, okay?”
“Ι want to go and talk to Cyrus.”
“Have him come here. I’ll call him.”
She gripped the arms of the chair. Something was very, very wrong. And it related to the telephone call that summoned him away earlier. He’d looked grim afterward, grimly angry. When he’d come back he’d managed to cover his true feelings with the playful greeting of Amelia. Then he’d used his announcement about his marriage to Celina as a temporary diversion—for himself as well as for Celina and Amelia. Now he couldn’t hide his agitation
any longer.
“Don’t call Cyrus,” she told him. Jack could not be master of all he saw. “I’ll speak to him myself.”
“Good enough. Tell Celina all about us, squirt. Tell her about your school and your grandmother. And what you do each day—your tap lessons.”
He kissed Amelia’s hair again and got up. At first Celina thought he would walk out without as much as saying a word to her, but at the door he turned back and held out a hand to her. When she got up, he met her in the middle of the room and touched his lips lightly to hers. She wondered if he knew that the sweetness of that touch was a powerful weapon. It stunned her.
“Talk about being a family,” he told her, and glanced down at her stomach. “Families are good things if you trust enough to be honest.”
She should tell him about Rose, and what she had shown her.
“Daddy,” Amelia said. “Can I come with you?”
“You and Celina have a lot of talking to do. See you later, squirt.”
Even when his footsteps had faded and he’d left the house, Celina continued to face the door. She wasn’t going to “obey” him. That he’d assumed she would astounded her. If they were to go ahead with the marriage, the time to establish rules was now. The first rule would be that neither party issued orders to the other, or expected their desires would come first.
“Amelia, will you forgive me if we don’t talk now, darlin’?” She turned around. “I have a brother, Cyrus. He’s a priest and he’s staying with me at the moment. I need to go and see him.”
Amelia had left the bed. She stood at the window.
Celina smiled and walked to join the child. “Watching your daddy?”
“He’s gone now.” Such a controlled voice for one so young.
“But that ghost was looking at my room again. It went away when it saw me.”
It might be a good idea for Jack to dream up some stories that didn’t stir visions of ghosts and goblins.
Twenty-five
Artistic Fool. Cyrus glanced from the name of the shop to its windows. Exotic clothing, just as advertised. And spangled and feathered masks in Rumors. He hadn’t window-shopped along Royal Street for years, and he wouldn’t be doing so today if he weren’t walking slowly, reluctant to keep his appointment with Sally Lamar.
At Toulouse Street he made a turn toward Bourbon and his steps slowed even more.
He’d agreed to meet Sally in the courtyard at the Hôtel Maison de Ville at three. The prospect of being alone with her concerned him, but he must not allow his personal reticence to stand in the way of helping the woman if he could.
A small hotel, the Maison de Ville was one of the city’s best. Bypassing reception, Cyrus made his way to the brick courtyard, where a tiered fountain cascaded and flowers bloomed among banana trees.
At first he didn’t see Sally. Then he realized with surprise that she was dressed in a long, shapeless black dress with a black scarf over her coppery hair, and dark glasses. She sat on a bench looking directly at him.
When Cyrus waved, she didn’t wave back. And when he walked toward her, she got up and hurried toward an entrance into the hotel.
He wanted to call out for her to stop, but the stiff set of her body, her hurried, almost scrambling walk, made him look around instead and start to follow her. There were no obvious onlookers, no signs of an ominous presence that might have frightened her.
Sally didn’t slow, except to look back and make sure Cyrus was behind her. He followed her all the way to a guest room, where she opened the door and beckoned frantically for him to come in.
Cyrus hesitated, but only for a moment. If he couldn’t deal with one woman, he was less than a man. The thought brought a grimace. He wasn’t less than a man in any respect, though he sometimes wished he were.
Once he was inside, Sally closed and locked the door and put her ear to a panel. She held up a hand for him to be silent, and listened.
A brief glance showed a room where the bed was untouched and there was no sign of luggage. Antique furniture, a glimpse into a bathroom at a marble basin with brass and ceramic fittings, the place was rich and quiet.
“I’ve got to be careful,” Sally said, backing away from the door. She turned to him and took off the glasses. “Please sit down.”
Being there with her couldn’t be considered a good idea. He looked at her pale face and got another surprise. She wore little makeup and seemed younger. He was forcibly reminded of the Sally he took to the high school prom. “I thought we were going to talk in the courtyard.”
“We might be seen.”
“Why would that be a problem?”
Her eyes slid away from his. “Someone might make something of it. They might wonder what I was doing meeting a man who isn’t my husband.”
“We’re old friends, and I’m a priest.”
She laughed self-consciously. “I’m going to sit down anyway.” Two Empire fauteuils with elegant gilt arms and legs flanked a Queen Anne—style demilune table. Sally sat in one of the chairs.
Taking a thin book from the inside pocket of his black jacket, Cyrus sat in the other chair. “I brought this for you. C. S. Lewis. There are plenty more when you’ve finished this one. If you like it.”
“Thank you.” She didn’t pick up the book, didn’t look at it. Rather, she fiddled with her shapeless dress. It was made of some material that was slightly shiny and pleated all over, although the pleats looked as if they’d been wrung out when wet and left to dry but not ironed.
“Sally, a lot of time has passed since you and I were in high school. Yet you said you felt you wanted me to help you spiritually. I’m a stranger.”
“You don’t feel like a stranger to me. I couldn’t try to talk to a stranger. You were always different, kind. It never bothered you that you were on your own so much. It never bothered you that other kids picked on you.”
He smiled. “They tried to pick on me. It isn’t easy to pick on someone who doesn’t react.”
“That was your defense, wasn’t it?” she said, looking sideways at him with her lovely golden-brown eyes. “Passive aggression, that’s what they call it.”
“Lack of interest is what I would have called it. I’m not proud of it now, but they didn’t bother me. I didn’t care about them one way or the other. And there wasn’t much they could do to me physically unless…well. I wasn’t afraid of that either.”
She kept on looking at him. “Because you were always the tallest and the fittest.”
“I was the tallest, and I could run,” he told her, grinning “Good combination for a man of peace in hostile situations.”
Pulling slowly at one end, she removed the scarf and shook her hair. “You were always different from the others. That’s why I couldn’t stop thinking about you.”
This wasn’t totally unfamiliar ground. From time to time a lonely or a bored woman decided she was attracted to him. “How long ago did you leave the Church?”
“I was never really there. I went because my parents made me, then because the other Catholic kids I knew went. Ι was confirmed only because Guy Wilder went through the instruction at the same time and I had a thing for him. Ι need something to hang on to, Cyrus. Something strong. I need faith.”
“You’re very honest.”
“You’d see straight through me if I wasn’t. Will you help me?”
He took note of his shoes. They were too old. He’d have to break down and get a new pair. “I already said I’d help you for as long as I’m in New Orleans.”
“There are other things. Other things than the Church. I’m in big trouble, Cyrus, and there’s nobody but you I’d dare to ask for advice.”
“Why me?” he asked. “You don’t really know me that well.”
She rolled in her lips and shook her head. “Why would you understand? You wouldn’t understand a woman loving you the way a woman loves a man, but I love you that way.”
She told him calmly, so calmly he might have missed the impact of her wor
ds entirely if he’d been distracted. He wasn’t distracted.
“Don’t look like that,” she told him. “So shocked. I don’t expect you to reciprocate, but I wanted to be honest with you. I haven’t been honest with many people in my life, but I’d like you to think well of me. Loving someone isn’t something you can choose—not usually. I didn’t choose. And when I had a chance to be with you, I blew it by behaving like a tramp.”
“The prom? That was a very long time ago.”
“I’ve never forgotten the shame.”
He rested an elbow on the table and braced a finger and thumb against his temple. “Forget it now. It’s over and it was very unimportant.”
“I’ll read the book.” She picked it up and flipped through the pages. “At least it’s short. It surely looks dull.”
“It isn’t. It’s humorous. A sly pointing of the finger at the frailty of mankind. A way to recognize ourselves and laugh. We shouldn’t be here long, Sally.”
“Wilson wants Celina.”
He blinked and frowned, and didn’t answer at once.
“Did you hear what I said, Cyrus?”
“I heard. Our parents mentioned that he’d like her to be an aide. To have her travel with him—and oversee the PR stuff.”
The book slapped back down on the table. “And she wants that too, doesn’t she?”
Was this what it was all about? Sally felt threatened by Celina and wanted Cyrus to help make sure his sister never got too close to Wilson. “You are wrong, Sally,” he told her, twisting in his chair to face her. “Celina has no interest in politics anymore. When she worked part-time for Wilson, it was because she was in a phase when she wanted to do her bit to help. She believed she could and should help. Then she seemed to get to a point when she lost her optimism. She doesn’t want any part of it anymore. All she wants now is to make sure Errol Petrie’s work continues.” And that she could bring her baby safely into the world and care for it.
“I think there’s more than that,” Sally said stubbornly. She stood up and trailed about the room. Even the shapeless dress couldn’t disguise her lush curves. Cyrus had the disturbing thought that Sally covered from neck to toe was more seductive than Sally hardly covered at all.
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