SIXTEEN

Renee stared at her reflection in the mirror and thought she looked pretty damn good. She’d spent the morning at the hairdresser’s and she thought her new shorter hair well suited her round face. It hugged the sides of her cheeks, ending just below her ears, and Renee thought it flattering and youthful. Similarly, her new emerald-green lounging outfit was slimming and understated. Understatedly overpriced, she thought, pulling in her stomach, grateful that her new clothes made a concerted effort to disguise what needed to be hidden while accentuating her more positive attributes. The top of the outfit allowed for an admirable display of cleavage, and the fabric drew down from her bosom in lines that made her waist appear small and girlish. It was worth all the money she’d paid for it, she thought, checking the clock next to her bed, wondering whether Kathryn would be dressed by the time Philip was out of the shower and ready to go, wondering whether it had really been a good idea on Philip’s part to insist that Kathryn come with them to the party.

Kathryn wouldn’t know anyone, and she had confided to Renee a nagging feeling of guilt. It was too early after Arnie’s death to be going to parties, she had told Renee adamantly when Renee first suggested Kathryn accompany them. So Renee had been very surprised when Philip had been able to change her mind. Not that she should be surprised, she thought. She knew how persuasive Philip could be. Still, she sensed Kathryn’s unease and determined to stay close to her all night to make sure she had a good time. The only problem with staying at Kathryn’s side, however, was that it left Philip’s side dangerously empty. There would be too many women at tonight’s party willing to fill that space.

Renee fastened her heavy gold necklace around her throat, feeling it cold against her warm skin. She had to banish such thoughts. She had to learn to trust her husband or, as he had told her, there was surely no hope for their relationship. Tonight would mark a new beginning. She would show Philip that she could be everything he wanted, everything he needed. And she would show him this by leaving him alone, letting him wander, letting him engage in the mindless, meaningless flirtations that this kind of party inevitably encouraged. She would go her way and let him go his. When they met together at the end of the evening, it would be without the usual jealousies and recriminations she always inflicted on them. Tonight, she decided, she would fasten her energies on Kathryn.

There was a small knock on the bedroom door. “Kathryn?” Renee asked, knowing it could only be her sister, since Debbie was already out for the evening with friends.

“I can’t get the back of this thing done up,” Kathryn said, tiptoeing into the room on her bare feet and swiveling around to reveal a large, exposed triangle of skin in the middle of her dress.

“What back?” Renee asked good-naturedly.

“There. At the top.” Kathryn’s hand reached up behind her shoulders, but her fingers failed to reach the clasp. Renee quickly slipped the tiny loop around the appropriate button. “What do you think?” Kathryn executed a delicate spin, her hands holding out the sides of the calf-length white dress to better show off its full skirt.

“Pretty daring,” Renee said, taking note of how revealing the dress actually was, while appearing initially, especially from the front, to be quite modest and conservative. It was white, almost virginal, with its high neck and long skirt. It was only when Kathryn turned that one saw the deep plunge underneath each arm, revealing an exposed curve of breast, and the back of the dress was virtually nonexistent, except for the small clasp at the top of the spine. It dipped so low under the waist that Renee wondered momentarily whether Kathryn was wearing panties, but she thought better than to ask. Kathryn was self-conscious enough without adding to her worries.

In truth, the dress was lovely, and Renee realized that Kathryn could effortlessly afford to expose what she herself went to great lengths to hide. She also realized she was more than a touch envious, and she frowned.

“Not appropriate?”

“It’s lovely,” Renee told her truthfully. “Is it new?”

“I bought it with Debbie that day we all went to lunch. Remember?”

Renee nodded vaguely. She preferred not to think about that day. She stared into the mirror, saw Alicia Henderson flutter her fingers in her direction. Would she be at the party tonight?

“Listen,” Kathryn was saying, her voice so low it was almost a whisper, “I’ve been thinking again that maybe I shouldn’t go to this party tonight. I won’t know anyone, and I’ll only hold you and Philip back, keep you from having a good time.”

“Don’t be silly. After two minutes, you’ll know everyone as well as I do. Trust me,” she said, wondering why she was using that expression, “you’ll have a good time.”

“I don’t want to be an imposition.”

“You won’t be.”

“I’ve been enough of an inconvenience to you already.”

“Says who?”

“Nobody has to say anything. You’re all much too nice for that. That’s your problem. You end up getting stuck with people like me. But I’ve been here over a month, and you have your own lives to get on with.”

“Please don’t talk about leaving. Don’t even think about it. I want you to stay as long as you want to stay.” Renee was only now starting to realize how good it felt to have her sister around. Kathryn supplied a warmth that had been missing from her life for too long. Despite the added stress of Kathryn’s presence, Renee didn’t want her sister to leave.

“Wow!” came the masculine voice from the small hallway that joined the bedroom to its ensuite bathroom. Philip entered the bedroom wearing nothing but a large white towel wrapped expertly around his lower torso, rubbing another towel through his wet, dark hair. Both women turned expectantly toward him. “That’s quite a dress, Kathryn. Turn around and let me see.” Kathryn did a quick spin, her cheeks slightly flushed. “Great dress,” he said, looking toward Renee. Renee pushed back her shoulders, eagerly waiting her turn to be praised. “Renee, don’t you have a pair of earrings that would go great with Kathryn’s dress?” Renee looked toward the dresser, where she kept her jewelry box. “You know, the ivory-and-silver ones with the big loops. I think they’d be the perfect touch. Your ears are pierced, aren’t they?” He moved to Kathryn’s side and brushed her long hair away from her ears.

Renee opened the top dresser drawer, seeing Philip’s gun beside the jewelry case, quickly covering it with some silk scarves. She had moved the gun there after Debbie had revealed its former location. Had Kathryn seen it? she wondered, aware of her sister’s eyes on her hands as she opened the jewelry box and retrieved the earrings.

“Yes, sure, these will be perfect.” Philip took the earrings from Renee’s outstretched hand. “Here, try these on.” He handed them to Kathryn, then stood back and watched Kathryn fit them through her ears. “What did I tell you? Absolutely perfect.”

“What do you think, Renee?” Kathryn asked.

“They’re perfect,” Renee agreed, thinking that they were. “Philip is right again.”

“You don’t mind if I wear them?”

“Of course she doesn’t mind,” Philip answered for her.

“I really love them.” Kathryn studied her reflection carefully in the mirror, obviously delighted by what she saw.

“Now, we’ll just have to find something for you,” Philip said, smiling at Renee.

“What’s wrong with the ones I have on?” Renee fingered the heart-shaped pearl-and-gold earrings she had earlier selected.

“No pizzazz. Too conservative. How about these?” He reached into Renee’s jewel box and pulled out a dangling pair of black onyx and rhinestones.

“I thought that with the gold necklace …” Renee began.

“Take off the necklace. It’s not right with that outfit anyway. It makes you look too much like a dowager empress. You need a little bit of fun in your wardrobe, Renee. You’re turning into an old lady.” He said all this with a lilt of good humor, his smile never leaving his face. Then he turned back to Kathryn. “What shoes are you going to wear?”

“I thought a pair of white flats.”

“Perfect. And what’s that perfume you have on?” He lifted her hair away from her ear for the second time and buried his nose in her neck.

“I can’t remember the name.” Kathryn blushed. “It was a free sample.”

“It’s great. You should loan some to Renee.”

“I’m already wearing perfume,” Renee said before her sister could offer, hoping her voice didn’t betray the tears she felt hovering close by.

She had really thought she had chosen well this time, selecting an outfit she was sure Philip would like, trying to see herself through his eyes as she preened and fussed before the fitting-room mirror. She should have asked him to come with her. She knew what wonderful taste he had. He was always telling her he knew how to put her together better than she did, and it was true. Philip was the one in the family with the artistic eye. He knew instantly what would go well with what. He loved going into stores, watching her try things on. He enjoyed having a say in what she bought, helping her choose.

How many women had told her how lucky she was to have a husband who was interested in such things? What I wouldn’t give! they all said. She should have taken him along when she bought this outfit. Then he would have advised her against it before it was too late, before she purchased something that made her look like a dowager empress, that turned her into an old lady. “Do you think I should change?” she asked him after Kathryn had returned to her own room.

“Too late now,” he said, and disappeared into the walk-in closet to get ready for the party.

“Your sister is so beautiful,” someone was saying as Renee reached across the long buffet table for a second kiwi tart. “And so thin,” the voice continued as Renee popped the small tart into her mouth in its entirety. “I guess you have to be thin to wear a dress like that.”

Renee fought the urge to help herself to yet another dessert, feeling Philip’s disapproving eyes on her even though he was on the other side of the room and, when last she looked, totally absorbed in a conversation with her sister. She turned to face the woman who was speaking, recognizing her as her hostess, Melissa Lawless, a woman of approximately sixty years of age, whose husband was a respected cardiologist. “Yes, she is beautiful,” Renee agreed, locating her sister as she was about to step out onto the patio, Philip still at her side.

“I always wanted to be thin like that,” Melissa Lawless continued. “Thin but round, if you know what I mean. I could never understand how girls as thin as your sister got to have such full bosoms. I had the full bosom,” she said, taking note of Renee’s similar attribute, “but I was just as full everywhere else, if you know what I mean.”

“You have a beautiful house,” Renee told her, wishing to leave the full-figured discussions to Jane Russell.

“We like it,” came the automatic reply. “I’m so glad you were able to talk your sister into joining us tonight. I understand she’s had some recent tragedy in her life.”

Renee was caught off guard by the woman’s assertion. Who had told her anything about Kathryn’s problems? Surely not Philip, she thought, knowing it could hardly have been anyone else. “Yes,” Renee answered, formulating her words carefully. “Her husband died.” Of course her hostess must be referring to Arnie’s death.

“I understood that she tried to kill herself,” Melissa Lawless continued as pleasantly as if she had just said that she understood it was going to be sunny the next day.

Renee felt her breath catch in her throat. Her voice, when it finally emerged, was constricted and strange, as if it belonged to someone else. “Yes,” she said. “Her husband’s death was an awful shock. It took her a while to start seeing things clearly again. She’s fine now.” How could Philip have confided anything so personal to this woman? And why had he found it necessary to say anything at all? Surely, he simply could have asked if he could bring his wife’s sister to the party without providing his hosts with a résumé of her past? Why would Philip, who was trained, even obligated, to keep confidences, have betrayed her sister’s so easily?

Renee took a deep breath, slowly releasing the air in her lungs as if she were exhaling smoke from a cigarette, and reminded herself that Kathryn was not Philip’s patient, that he was not bound by professional ethics to keep her secret. Not that it was a secret, she further reminded herself. Still, she felt hurt by Philip’s careless gossip, for how else could she describe it?

“I’m surprised Philip told you all this,” Renee surprised herself by saying.

“Oh, he didn’t say a word to me. Alicia Henderson is the one who told me. I happened to mention to her the other day that Philip would be bringing his sister-in-law to the party tonight …”

Renee was aware that the woman was still talking even after she stopped listening. When had Philip aired the family laundry in front of Ali Henderson? The afternoon they had all run into him at lunch? The lunch in which poor Mrs. Henderson was supposedly so distraught over her husband’s incipient schizophrenia that she couldn’t bring herself to go to Philip’s office? “Don’t worry, Ali,” she could almost hear Philip saying. “There’s a little craziness in everybody’s family. My wife’s sister, for example. Her husband died and three months later she tried to slit her wrists.” Or maybe not at lunch at all. Maybe at dinner. The dinner he had missed with her because he was busy saving a potential suicide. My, my, but the world was conveniently full of people who were eager to do themselves in. “Did I tell you about my wife’s sister?” she heard Philip ask again, this time picturing him, not in the darkness of a public restaurant, but in the warm confines of Alicia Henderson’s private bedroom. Why had he found it necessary to break Kathryn’s trust in this way? What had it gotten him?

Stop it, she told herself, stomping her foot. You’re doing it again. You’re blowing everything out of proportion. There are any number of ways Kathryn’s suicide attempt could have come up in conversation. Philip probably mentioned it quite innocently as a way of illustrating a point. She had to stop all these suspicions. Stop behaving like a prosecuting attorney, she told herself. Leave the lawyer at the office.

Renee looked around the room, her eyes focusing on the patio doorway. Philip was even now out there with Kathryn. He had been wonderful to her all night, staying close beside her, making sure that she was comfortable, that she had been introduced to everyone, that she was never alone and that her plate was always full. He had been doing his concerted best all evening to make Kathryn feel as if she were not some third wheel he was stuck with, but someone he genuinely wanted in his company, someone he cared about and wanted to have a good time. He was a determined escort, never allowing Kathryn the opportunity to sulk in a corner or to drift off by herself. Renee felt grateful to him for the kindness and sensitivity he was showing her sister. How could she subject him to her infantile ravings, even if they were all unspoken? She did him a disservice even with her thoughts.

“… Speak of the devil,” she heard her hostess exclaim, and Renee looked over to see Alicia Henderson approaching at a determined, if leisurely, pace.

“Alicia Henderson,” the tall redhead said, extending her hand and introducing herself to Renee as if this were their first encounter.

“Hello, Ali,” Renee replied, taking the woman up on her earlier offer. “We’ve met before,” she reminded her. Alicia Henderson looked surprised, then amused.

“Oh, that’s right. At Judy’s surprise party. I almost didn’t recognize you. Have you put on a little weight?”

“I was just remarking to Renee that her sister is so thin,” Melissa Lawless said, obviously delighted that her earlier observation could be worked into the conversation.

“How long is your sister going to be staying with you?” Alicia Henderson asked, adjusting the shoestring strap of her black leather dress.

“I have no idea,” Renee answered truthfully, seeing no reason to lie. Aside from the brief exchange she had had with her sister before the party, it was something that had never been discussed.

Alicia Henderson brushed her long red hair away from her face in an exotic sweeping gesture that Renee realized was fueled more by habit than necessity. Renee watched the hair immediately tumble back into place. “You have quite a full house then, what with Debbie there too,” Alicia Henderson said, casually dropping the name of Philip’s only child into the conversation.

“Debbie’s no trouble,” Renee lied.

“I would think she’s quite a handful. We went for lunch one day last week. Philip asked me if I wouldn’t mind taking her out, said that she spends a lot of time alone.” Alicia Henderson smiled broadly. “You know how hard it is to refuse Philip anything.”

Renee felt her mouth about to drop open and she resolutely held her lips firmly together, gritting her teeth. Why had Philip asked this woman to take his daughter out to lunch? And could she even ask him about it without risking a major confrontation?

“She seemed like quite a handful to me, but then I guess you’re used to handfuls,” Alicia Henderson continued obliquely.

“I beg your pardon?” Renee asked.

“Well, your sister, for one, what with trying to kill herself that way, and then, of course, there’s Philip …” Alicia Henderson’s voice got dangerously low.

“I beg your pardon?” Renee repeated, as if her voice were a recording, its needle stuck in a familiar groove.

“Excuse me,” Melissa Lawless chirped pleasantly, and was suddenly gone.

“Where is Philip tonight? I haven’t seen him.”

For the first time in the conversation, Renee felt her facial muscles relax and her mouth arrange itself into something close to a smile. There was something in Alicia Henderson’s last question that betrayed a certain anxiety. It was the voice of a woman who knows she is losing ground. So the affair had run its course, Renee thought, at least on Philip’s part. Renee instinctively relaxed her posture. Ali Henderson was no longer a threat to her, just an unpleasant reminder of Philip’s occasional lapse in taste. If Alicia Henderson hadn’t seen Philip, it was only because Philip hadn’t wanted to be seen.

“The last time I saw him he was heading for the patio.”

“Not alone, I’m sure.” Alicia Henderson’s voice was suddenly petulant, as if Renee were now an ally, and not a rival. Renee braced herself for the appalling possibility that this woman was about to confide the details of her affair with Philip.

“Never alone,” Renee replied evenly, telling the woman in two short words that she was not the first and probably not the last, but that they were all of the same minor importance, and an indulgence on her part as much as Philip’s. Alicia Henderson’s well-manicured fingers swept through her long red hair nervously and then she was gone.

A few minutes later, Philip walked back through the balcony doors, Kathryn still at his side. She had obviously been laughing, and looked happier than Renee had seen her since her arrival. Renee’s small grin grew wider and more pronounced as Philip hurried past Alicia Henderson with scarcely a nod in her direction. Renee had seen that look before. He was definitely through with her. By the time Philip was at her side, Renee was smiling from ear to ear, her heart full of gratitude and love. Her husband had come home again.

“How’s the most beautiful woman at the party?” he asked, his arms encircling Renee’s waist, spinning her around playfully. “Having a good time?”

“A terrific time,” Renee told him, and realized it was true.

“Would you mind if we made a fairly early exit? I thought we might have a smaller party of our own.” He leaned forward, and Renee felt his tongue licking her ear.

“I’m ready anytime,” she said, feeling her body start to tingle, eager for him as she always was.

“Then let’s go,” he said, his arms around both Renee and her sister as he led them toward the front door. “Some guys have all the luck,” he said, and both women laughed.