My only desire is to completely give myself up into the hands of God without any idea of turning back or of fear of what may happen.

JEANNE GUYON

CHAPTER FIFTY-EIGHT

Jenna

I POST MY blog just before leaving. I pack up my laptop, close the suitcase, and lift it from the bed to the floor. I wheel it to the door of the suite and open the door. I slip out and close the door, careful not to make any noise. Then I wheel my suitcase down the hallway, holding my breath as I pass Brigitte's rooms. I head for the elevator, certain that any sound I make is lost in the deep pile of the plush carpet. I reach the elevator and push the button and wait for the—

"Where do you think you're going?"

I jump. Every nerve in my body comes to attention. I take a deep breath, square my shoulders, then turn to face her in the dark hallway. "I'm leaving. I won't sign your agreement. I won't stay here."

She takes a step toward me, and my heart hammers.

But I don't back away.

"Who do you think you are? You're nothing! Nothing! Without me!" She spits her words at me, and droplets of her saliva spray my face. In that moment, a new realization becomes clear: not only is she battering me with her words, but she is also attacking the Spirit who lives within me.

Roiling anger bubbles within.

I take a step toward her and see her hesitate. "No, Brigitte. No. I am nothing without God and I will no longer allow you to stand in the way of His purposes for me. I'm leaving. You can't stop me." There is a calm control to my voice that I know is not my own.

As I turn to step into the elevator, she grabs my arm, her nails digging through my wool sweater. She raises her hand to slap me, but I dodge her and yank my arm out of her grasp. Rage is scrawled across her red face.

"I'll ruin you! And your family!"

There is no point in arguing with her. Now the game is officially over.

And, probably for the first time ever, she has lost.

But she won't accept defeat.

I turn, pull my suitcase into the elevator, and push the button to close the door. As I do, I see her reach for a vase. She lifts it above her head and, just as the elevator closes, I hear a shattering against the door.

When the door opens on the bottom floor, I hear her footsteps on the stairs above, her rant continues. I pull the suitcase out and head down the hallway leading to the garage. I walk out the door, punch the button to open the garage door, and then head to the back of the Range Rover Sport—Gerard's car. He bought it for himself. It's paid for—and now it's mine. I open the back latch, lift my suitcase inside, and then slam it closed. As I head for the driver's side, the door between the garage and the house opens.

Hannah stands there. "Go! Go!" she hisses at me.

Stunned, I stare at her. She turns back and looks at Brigitte charging down the hallway behind her and then blocks her from entering the garage.

"Go!" She hisses again over her shoulder.

I get into the car, shut the door, and turn the key in the ignition. And then I back out of the garage. My heart pounds in my chest and I struggle to catch my breath. My hands shake on the steering wheel.

I'm at peace, my body just doesn't know that yet.

I am following Him.

When I catch my breath, I press the button on the steering column that activates the phone and give it a voice command: "Call Bill Durand."

When my dad answers the phone, my sense of relief gives way to a fresh onslaught of tears.

"Bill Durand. Hello?"

". . . Dad . . ."

"Jen?"

I gulp back tears and take a deep breath.

"Jen? What's wrong? Where are you?"

"Dad, I'm . . . coming home. I'm . . . leaving. I want to come home."

My dad is quiet for a moment and then his sigh whispers through the phone line. "It's about time. Does Brigitte know?"

"Yes."

"Where are you?"

The concern in his voice brings new tears. "I'm still in the city. I'm . . . I'm just leaving. Dad, I . . . need to talk to you, and to Jason, tonight. Is Jason there?"

"He's here. We had a late meeting this evening and he decided to stay over."

"Okay. I need to make a quick stop and then I'll head that way."

"Jen, take it slow. Drive careful."

"I will. And Daddy . . . pray. Just . . . pray."

"I already am. See you soon, baby."

I click the button, hanging up the phone, and lean back in my seat. It's been a dozen years or more since my dad's called me baby. Our relationship changed after I married Gerard. I got caught in Brigitte's web, and hiding the truth from my dad and Jason took more energy than I had. So I detached. Not completely, but more than I care to consider.

But my dad will welcome me home with open arms. He will understand, I know. I just pray he will also understand the choice I made and its ramifications for Azul. As I have all evening, I place it in God's hands again.

I make my way to the Golden Gate Bridge, cross it, and head for Marin County. Before I turn off and head for Napa, I pull off the freeway and pull into the parking lot of a drug store.

I dash inside, searching the aisles until I find what I need. I take it to the register, pay, and then ask for directions to the restroom. I need to confirm what I already know to be true. I take the bag with the pregnancy test in it and head in the direction the cashier pointed. As I do, I count backwards in my mind to the last night Gerard and I spent together at the chateau.

I smile.

Afterward, as I walk back to the car, I have my first moment of doubt since leaving. I'm walking away from a vast fortune—from lifelong provision for my child. But then, I consider the alternative—raising my child under Brigitte's roof and rule.

No.

Oh, no.

This amazing gift, in God's perfect timing, is yet another affirmation.

Anticipation and awe fill my soul. Oh, Lord, thank You. Thank You. Tears slip down my cheeks as I climb back into the car. He will walk with me. And He will provide—not only for me, but also my dad and Jason.

And my unborn child.

IT'S JUST AFTER 11:00 p.m. when I turn onto the gravel driveway that leads to the house. A full moon shines above a bank of clouds, casting shadows on the vines along one side of the driveway. I recall my sense that a season of pruning was ahead.

It has arrived.

God is pruning away all I've known and in its place He offers Himself.

When I pull up to the house of my childhood, the front door opens and my dad and Jason meet me at the car. Jason opens my door for me and as I get out, my dad wraps me in a hug.

"Welcome home, Jen."

Jason reaches over and kisses my cheek. "Do you have a bag?"

"It's in the back."

As Jason unloads my suitcase, I walk with my dad into the low-slung ranch house and feel the pangs of loss. I can't imagine my dad anywhere else. Or without Azul to run. Yet, I trust God has a plan.

I follow my dad into the living room and Jason follows behind us, leaving my suitcase in the entry hall. Dad and Jason spread out on the sofa and I take the easy chair across from them—the chair that used to be my mother's. I look at my dad and brother and realize they both look as tired as I feel.

"Sorry to keep you up late . . ."

Jason looks at my dad. "We'd have been up anyway, Jen." He hesitates. "It's been a long day here. So tell us what happened."

I lean forward in the chair. "I . . . it . . . well . . ." Then I sigh. "I don't know where to begin." Then I remember and I smile. "I'm pregnant."

My dad's and Jason's eyebrows rise in unison, and I laugh. "Not what you expected to hear?"

"I'll say!" My dad gets off the sofa and comes over and gives me another hug. "Wow! Jen, that's great." He shakes his head in disbelief and smiles. Then he runs his hand through his hair and even through his smile, I see his fatigue.

"So I'm going to be an uncle . . . finally!"

I nod. "Finally."

"Congratulations, Jen. I'm so happy for you. I wish Gerard . . ."

"I know. Me too."

My dad studies me. "How have you felt?"

"Horrible." I smile again. "But I never suspected . . . I thought maybe it was the infection, then a virus, or just the trauma of Gerard's death, or maybe depression. Everything but this." I smile. "But this afternoon"—I shrug—"God made it clear and I confirmed it with a test."

My dad sits back down on the sofa and leans his elbows on his knees. "You know we're here for whatever you need."

"I know, Dad. Thank you." I hesitate. "Well, that's the good news . . ."

My dad and Jason grow serious again, and Jason says, "Okay, tell us the rest of it."

I sigh and begin with the meeting in Max's office regarding the trust and then tell them about the agreement Brigitte wanted me to sign. My dad shakes his head as he listens. Then he interrupts.

"I hope you told her in no uncertain terms that—"

I hold up my hand. "Wait. There's more."

He shakes his head again and anger etches his features.

Jason reaches over and pats him on the back. "Let her finish, Dad."

I start again. "I did finally tell Brigitte I wouldn't sign it. But that won't be the end of it." I pause and look at my dad and Jason. I feel my courage waiver. Oh Lord, help me . . .

"Dad . . . Brigitte says she purchased a demand note for Azul. She showed it to me. She said it was for a loan you took out twenty-six years ago and never repaid." I take a deep breath. "She said that if I didn't sign the agreement, she'd demand that you pay the note, plus interest and whatever she paid for it."

My dad and Jason look at each other.

"Well, that answers that question."

I look at Jason. "What question?"

My dad leans forward. "I told Jason about it this evening. We've been discussing it all night."

"It's true then?" My heart sinks.

"Well, yes . . . and no." He goes on to explain.

He tells me about Duke and the loan he offered my dad. And how he paid him back but Duke tore up the check and told him he'd tear up the note. He goes through what I'm sure he's already gone over with Jason many times. Then he tells me about Kelly Whitmore.

"I received a call from her attorney a couple of months back. Said Kelly had a note and was demanding payment." He shakes his head. "He wasn't interested in hearing the story of Duke saying he'd tear up the note. Anyway, I didn't want to burden you and Jason with all of it until I'd checked it out. So I gave Andee a call—"

"Andee?"

He nods. "Yeah, I sought her advice and she said she'd check into it for me. She called and spoke with Kelly Whitmore's attorney, but by the time she talked with him, she said they'd already sold the note."

"Did she know Kelly sold it to Brigitte?"

"No. She said she didn't know who they'd sold it to or what the buyer intended to do with it. She told me they could demand payment and that if I couldn't pay, then they could draw up an involuntary bankruptcy petition against Azul. And, well . . . that would be that." He runs his hand through his hair again and shakes his head. "I was going to tell both of you, but then Gerard . . ." He shrugs his shoulders. "It just didn't seem like the right time to burden you with more."

My mind reels back to Andee's e-mail—the one saying that she'd betrayed those closest to her. I assumed she meant she'd betrayed Jason by ending their relationship, but now I wonder if there was more. "Jason, would Andee have . . . ?"

Jason's shoulders slump. And then he gets up from the sofa and paces the length of the living room and back. "I don't know, Jen."

"What are you two implying?"

"Dad, could Andee have gone behind your back—sold you out to Brigitte?"

His gaze widens. It's not something he's considered. He looks to Jason, who just shrugs.

"I don't know, Dad, I think it's possible. I hate to think the worst of her, but . . ."

I hold up my hand. "Let's not make assumptions. Let me finish telling you what I did . . . or rather, didn't do."

"You better not have signed that agreement, Jen." Now it's my dad's turn to stand. He towers over me and I think of the massive trees in the park—the overstory trees—protecting the growth below. And then I know. I've had a protector all along provided by God. My dad would have stood up to Brigitte or anyone for that matter, if only he'd known the truth. He sensed it, but I never confirmed it.

I never spoke truth.

Condemnation woos me. But I turn away.

For good.

Tears fill my already swollen eyes. "No, Daddy, I didn't sign it. At first, after she told me about the demand note, I told her I would. I just gave up. But then . . . I just couldn't do it. I begged God to show me another way. To"—I wipe the tears slipping down my cheeks—"to rescue me. I finally surrendered and told Him I'd follow Him, no matter what happened." I stand up next to my dad. "I lost myself to Brigitte. I cease to exist when I'm with her. I lose sight of God's purpose. I knew I had to leave—to walk away. I had to follow God." I place my hand on my abdomen. "Especially now."

My daddy's tears match my own. He wraps his arms around me again. "Azul has special meaning to us, but Jen, it's just a business. That's all it is. It isn't worth losing yourself. It isn't."

When my dad lets me go, I look at Jason and read the fury in his features. "How could she? How could she stoop so low?" He shakes his head. "Jen, I'm so glad you're out from under her. You made the right choice."

"She will do what she's threatened, Jason. She will. I have no doubt." Fatigue pushes me back down into the chair. "There's more too." I sigh. "I have a friend—he's my spiritual director—I've been seeing him for a few months. You met him and his wife at Gerard's service, Matthew and Tess MacGregor?"

Both Jason and my dad nod.

"We've had a special . . . connection. From the beginning"—I slump in the chair, exhausted—"I felt it. Like God knit us together. It's spiritual. Nothing . . . nothing more. But Brigitte's accused me of having an affair with Matthew. She said she'll publicly humiliate us. And now . . . I'm pregnant . . . Gerard's gone. It may look like . . . and what will Matthew's wife think? And what will that do to his career? It isn't true. Matthew's led me to God. He's shown me truth. But Brigitte says she has evidence. She has to be bluffing, but I don't doubt she'll produce whatever she needs to humiliate us. I'm not worried about myself, but . . . Matthew . . ."

I cover my hands with my face.

Then I feel a hand on my shoulder. I look up and my dad stands next to my chair. He looks over to Jason. "Son, pull up a couple of chairs. It's time we commit this to God. It's time we pray. We're embarking on a new adventure and we don't dare go it alone."

Jason brings two chairs in from the kitchen and sets them in front of the easy chair. Both he and my dad take a seat and hold out their hands. We sit in a small circle, the three of us, hands clasped, hearts surrendered to God.

And we pray.