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    Landry 02 Pearl in the Mist

    Page 22
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      stairway and be a love sentry."

      I was about to protest, when Beau thanked her.

      He closed the door softly and came to sit beside me on

      the bed and put his arm around my shoulders. "My poor Ruby. You don't deserve this." He

      kissed my cheek. Then he looked around my room

      and smiled. "I remember being in here once before . .

      when you tried some of Gisselle's pot, remember?" "Don't remind me," I said, smiling for the first

      time in a long time. "Except I do remember you were

      a gentleman and you did worry about me."

      "I'll always worry about you," he said. He

      kissed my neck and then the tip of my chin before

      bringing his lips to mine.

      "Oh Beau, don't. I feel so confused and troubled

      right now. I want you to kiss me, to touch me, but I

      keep thinking about why I am here, the tragedy that

      has brought me back."

      He nodded. "I understand. It's just that I can't

      keep my lips off you when I'm this close," he said. "We'll be together again and soon. If you don't

      get up to Greenwood during the next two weeks, I'll

      see you when we return for the holidays."

      "Yes, that's true;" he said, still holding me close

      to him. "Wait until you see what I'm getting you for

      Christmas. We'll have great fun, and we'll celebrate

      New Year's together and--"

      Suddenly the door was thrust open and Daphne

      stood there, glaring in at us.

      "I thought so," she said. "Get out," she told

      Beau, holding up her arm and pointing.

      "Daphne, I. . ."

      "Don't give me any stories or any excuses. You

      don't belong up here and you know it.

      "And as for you," she said, spinning her gaze at

      me, "this is how you mourn the death of your father?

      By entertaining your boyfriend in your room? Have

      you no sense of decency, no self-control? Or does that

      wild Cajun blood run so hot and heavy in your veins,

      you can't resist temptation, even with your father

      lying in his coffin right below you?"

      "We weren't doing anything!" I cried. "We--" "Please, spare me," she said, holding up her

      hand and closing her eyes. "Beau, get out. I used to

      think a great deal more of you, but obviously you're

      just like any other young man.. . . You can't pass up

      the promise of a good time, no matter what the

      circumstances."

      "That's not so. We were just talking, making

      plans."

      She smiled icily. "I wouldn't make any plans

      that included my daughter," she said. "You know how

      your parents feel about your being with her anyway,

      and when they hear about this . . ."

      "But we didn't do anything," he insisted. "You're lucky I didn't wait a few more

      moments. She might have had you with your clothes

      off, pretending to be drawing you again," she said.

      Beau flushed so crimson I thought he would have a

      nosebleed.

      "Just go, Beau. Please," I begged him. He

      looked at me and then started for the door. Daphne

      stepped aside to let him pass. He turned to look back

      once more and then shook his head and hurried away

      and down the stairs. Then Daphne turned back to me. "And you almost broke my heart down there

      before, pleading to have me let you attend the wake . .

      . like you really cared," she added, and closed the

      door between us, the click sounding like a gunshot

      and making my heart stop. Then it started to pound

      and was still pounding when Gisselle opened the door

      a few moments later.

      "Sorry," she said. "I just turned my back for a

      moment to get something, and the next thing I knew,

      she was charging up the stairs and past me." I stared at her. It was on the tip of my tongue to

      ask if the truth wasn't that she really had made herself

      quite visible so Daphne would know she and Beau

      had come up, but it didn't matter. The damage was

      done, and if Gisselle was responsible or not, the result

      was the same. The distance between Beau and me had

      been stretched a little farther by my stepmother, who

      seemed to exist for one thing: to make my life

      miserable.

      Daddy's funeral was as big as any funeral I had

      ever seen, and the day seemed divinely designed for

      it: low gray clouds hovering above, the breeze warm

      but strong enough to make the limbs of the sycamores

      and oaks, willows and magnolias wave and bow along

      the route. It was as if the whole world wanted to pay

      its last respects to a fallen prince. Expensive cars lined

      the streets in front of the church for blocks, and there

      were droves of people, many forced to stand in the

      doorway and on the church portico. Despite my anger

      at Daphne, I couldn't help but be a little in awe of her,

      of the elegant way she looked, of the manner in which

      she carried herself and guided Gisselle and me through the ceremony, from the house to the church to

      the cemetery.

      I wanted so much to feel something intimate at

      the funeral, to sense Daddy's presence, but with

      Daphne's eyes on me constantly and with the

      mourners staring at us as if we were some royal

      family obligated to maintain the proper dignity and

      perform according to their expectations, I found it

      hard to think of Daddy in that shiny, expensive coffin.

      At times, even I felt as if I were attending some sort of

      elaborate state show, a public ceremony devoid of any

      feeling.

      When I did cry, I think I cried as much for

      myself and for what my world and life would now be

      without the father Grandmere Catherine had brought

      back to me with her final revelations. This precious

      gift of happiness and promise had been snatched away

      by jealous Death, who always lingered about us,

      watching and waiting for an opportunity to wrench us

      away from all that made him realize how miserable

      his own destiny was eternally to be. That was what

      Grandmere Catherine had taught me about Death, and

      that was what I now so firmly believed.

      Daphne shed no tears in public. She seemed to

      falter only twice: once in the church, when Father McDermott mentioned that he had been the one to marry her and Daddy; and then at the cemetery, just before Daddy's body was interred in what people from New Orleans called an oven. Because of the high water table, graves weren't dug into the ground, as they were in other places. People were buried above ground in cement vaults, many with their family crests

      embossed on the door.

      Instead of sobbing, Daphne brought her silk

      handkerchief to her face and held it against her mouth.

      Her eyes remained focused on her own thoughts, her

      gaze downward. She took Gisselle's and my hand

      when it was time to leave the church, and once again

      when it was time to leave the cemetery. She held our

      hands for only a moment or two, a gesture I felt was

      committed more for the benefit of the mourners than

      for us.

      Throughout the ceremony, Beau remained back

      with his parents. We barely exchanged glances.

      Relatives from Daphne's side of the
    family stayed

      closely clumped together, barely raising their voices

      above a whisper, their eyes glued to our every move.

      Whenever anyone approached Daphne to offer his or

      her final condolences, she took his hands and softly

      said "Merci beaucoup." These people would then turn to us. Gisselle imitated Daphne perfectly, even to the point of intoning the same French accent and holding their hands not a split second longer or shorter than

      Daphne had. I simply said "Thank you," in English. As if she expected either Gisselle or me to say

      or do something that would embarrass her, Daphne

      observed us through the corner of her eye and listened

      with half an ear, especially when Beau and his parents

      approached us. I did hold onto Beau's hand longer

      than I held onto anyone else's, despite feeling as if

      Daphne's eyes were burning holes in my neck and

      head. I was sure Gisselle's behavior pleased her more

      than mine did, but I wasn't there to please Daphne; I

      was there to say my last goodbye to Daddy and thank

      the people who really cared, just as Daddy would

      have wanted me to thank them: warmly, without

      pretension.

      Bruce Bristow remained very close by,

      occasionally whispering to Daphne and getting some

      order from her. When we had arrived at the church, he

      offered to take my place and wheel Gisselle down the

      church aisle. He was there to wheel her out and help

      get her into the limousine and out of it at the

      cemetery. Of course, Gisselle enjoyed the extra

      attention and the tender loving care, glancing up at me

      occasionally with that self-satisfied grin on her lips. The highlight of the funeral came at the very

      end, just as we were approaching the limousine for

      our ride home. I turned to my right and saw my half

      brother, Paul, hurrying across the cemetery. He broke

      into a trot to reach us before we got into the car. "Paul!" I cried. I couldn't contain my surprise

      and delight at the sight of him. Daphne pulled herself

      back from the doorway of the limousine and glared

      angrily at me. Others nearby turned as well. Bruce

      Bristow, who was preparing to transfer Gisselle from

      her chair into the car, paused to look up when Gisselle

      spoke.

      "Well, look who's come at the last moment,"

      she said.

      Even though it had only been months, it seemed

      ages since Paul and I had seen each other. He looked

      so much more mature, his face firmer. In his dark blue

      suit and tie, he appeared taller and wider in the

      shoulders. The resemblances in Paul's, Gisselle's, and

      my face could be seen in his nose and cerulean eyes,

      but his hair, a mixture of blond and brown--what the

      Cajuns called chatin--was thinner and very long. He

      brushed back the strands that had fallen over his

      forehead when he broke into a trot to reach me before

      I got into the limousine.

      Without saying a word, he seized me and

      embraced me.

      "Who is this?" Daphne demanded. The final

      mourners who were leaving the cemetery turned to

      watch and listen, too.

      "It's Paul," I said quickly. "Paul Tate." Daphne knew about our half brother, but she

      refused to acknowledge him or ever make any

      reference to him. She had no interest in hearing about

      him the one time he had come to see us in New

      Orleans. Now she twisted her mouth into an ugly

      grimace.

      "I am sorry for your sorrow, madame," he said.

      "I came as quickly as I could," he added, turning back

      to me when she didn't respond. "I didn't find out until

      I called the school to speak with you and one of the

      girls in your dorm told me. I got into my car right

      away and drove straight to the house. The butler gave

      me directions to the cemetery."

      "I'm glad you've come, Paul," I said.

      "Can we all get into the car and go home,"

      Daphne complained, "or do you intend to stand in a

      cemetery and talk all day?"

      "Follow us to the house," I told him, joining Gisselle. "He looks very handsome," she whispered after we were seated. Daphne just glared at the two of

      us.

      "I don't want any more visitors in the house

      today," Daphne declared when we turned into the

      Garden District. "Visit with your half brother outside

      and make it short. I want the two of you to start

      packing your things to return to school tomorrow." "Tomorrow?" Gisselle cried.

      "Of course, tomorrow."

      "But that's too soon. We should stay home at

      least another week out of respect for Daddy." Daphne smiled wryly. "And what would you do

      with this week? Would you sit and meditate, pray and

      read? Or would you be on the telephone with your

      friends, having them come over daily?"

      "Well, we don't have to turn into nuns because

      Daddy died," Gisselle retorted.

      "Precisely. You'll go back to Greenwood

      tomorrow and resume your studies. I've already made

      the arrangements," Daphne said.

      Gisselle folded her arms under her breasts and

      sat back in a sulk. "We should run away," she

      muttered. "That's what we should do."

      Daphne overheard and smiled. "And where would you run to, Princess Gisselle? To your halfwitted uncle Jean in the institution?" she asked, glancing at me. "Or would you join your sister and return to the paradise in the swamps, to live with

      people who have crawfish shells stuck in their teeth?" Gisselle turned away and gazed out the

      window. For the first time all day, tears flowed from

      her eyes. I wished I could think it was because she

      really missed Daddy now, but I knew she was crying

      simply because she was frustrated with the prospect of

      returning to Greenwood and having her visit with her

      old friends cut short.

      When we arrived at the house, she was too

      depressed even to visit with Paul. She let Bruce put

      her into the chair and take her in without saying

      another word to me or to Daphne. Daphne gazed back

      at me from the doorway when Paul drove in behind

      us.

      "Make this short," she ordered. "I'm not fond of

      all sorts of Cajuns coming to the house." She turned

      her back on me and went inside before I could

      respond.

      I went to Paul as soon as he emerged from his

      vehicle and threw myself into his comforting arms.

      Suddenly, all the sorrow and misery I had been containing within the confines of my battered heart broke free. I sobbed freely, my shoulders shaking, my face buried in his shoulder. He stroked my hair and kissed my forehead and whispered words of consolation. Finally I caught my breath and pulled back. He had a handkerchief ready and waiting to

      wipe my cheeks, and he let me blow my nose. "I'm sorry," I said. "I couldn't help it, but I

      haven't really been able to cry for Daddy since I came

      home from school. Daphne's made things so hard for

      all of us. Poor Paul," I said, smiling through my tearsoaked eyes. "You have to be the one to endure my

      flood of tears."

      "No. I'm glad I was here to bring you any

      comfort. It must have been horrible. I remember your

      father well. He
    was so young and vibrant when I last

      saw him, and he was very kind to me, a real Creole

      gentleman. He was a man with class. I understood

      why our mother would have fallen in love with him so

      deeply."

      "Yes. So did I." I took his hand and smiled. "Oh

      Paul, it's so good to see you." I looked at the front

      door and then turned back to him. "My stepmother

      won't let me have visitors in the house," I said,

      leading him to a bench over which was an arch of roses. "She's sending us back to Greenwood

      tomorrow," I told him after we had sat down. "So soon?"

      "Not soon enough for her," I said bitterly. I took

      a deep breath. "But don't let me focus only on myself.

      Tell me about home, about your sisters, everyone." I sat back and listened as he spoke, permitting

      myself to fall back through time. When I lived in the

      bayou, life was harder and far poorer, but because of

      Grandmere Catherine, it was much happier. Also, I

      couldn't help but miss the swamp, the flowers and the

      birds, even the snakes and alligators. There were

      scents and sounds, places and events I recalled with

      pleasure, not the least of which was the memory of

      drifting in a pirogue toward twilight, with nothing in

      my heart but mellow contentment. How I wished I

      was back there now.

      "Mrs. Livaudais and Mrs. Thirbodeaux are still

      going strong," he said. "I know they miss your

      grandmere." He laughed. It sounded so good to my

      ears. "They know I've kept in contact with you,

      although they don't come right out and say so. Usually

      they wonder aloud in my presence about Catherine

      Landry's Ruby."

      "I miss them. I miss everyone."

      "Your grandpere Jack is still living in the house

      and still, whenever he gets drunk, which is often,

      digging holes and looking for the treasure he thinks

      your grandmere buried to keep from him. I swear, I

      don't know how he stays alive. My father says he's

      part snake. His skin does look like he's been through a

      tannery, and he comes slithering out of shadows and

      bushes when you least expect him."

      "I almost ran away and returned to the bayou," I

      confessed.

      "If you ever do . . . I'll be there to help you,"

      Paul said. "I'm working as a manager in our canning

      factory now," he added proudly. "I make a good

      salary, and I'm thinking of building my own house." "Oh Paul, really?" He nodded. "Have you met

     


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