Pleating for Mercy

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Pleating for Mercy Page 17

by Melissa Bourbon


  Until now.

  I’d kept Meemaw’s full-length mirror when I’d moved my things into her room. The buttercup walls and dormer windows made the room bright and warm, but that didn’t banish the feeling that this wasn’t really my room. And even though Orphie had never worn the little black dress, I still felt like it belonged to her, not me.

  I looked at my reflection, remembering the hours and hours I’d spent on the beadwork tracing the deep V neckline. The inch-wide strip of black, silver, and gold iridescent beads caught the light as I turned. I’d used ruching on the bodice, a technique that brought the eye inward, slimming the body. Of course, the Spanx I wore underneath didn’t hurt in that department, either. When I paired the dress with transparent black tights patterned with tiny dots, I had to admit I was pleased as punch with it.

  “It needs something, though,” I mumbled as I pulled my corkscrew hair up in back, securing it with a few bobby pins in an artfully messy bun.

  The closet door slid open with a bang. I gasped. “Meemaw! You’re going to give me a heart attack!” I had accepted that she was still here with me, but dang if it didn’t still catch me by surprise every time she made her presence known. I padded toward the crammed closet and peered into the depths. I waited, but nothing happened. Maybe Meemaw was just bored.

  But as I took a step back, my foot landed on something hard. I looked down. Lying on the floor, where it hadn’t been a few seconds ago, was a beaded cuff. The perfect accessory for my little black dress.

  As I bent to pick it up, a warm pocket of lavenderscented air moved around me. My head snapped up. “Meemaw?” I held up the bracelet. “Thank you.” Who knew where it had come from, but I didn’t care. I just wanted to see her. To hear her voice. To hug her.

  The closet door slowly slid closed behind me. I turned, my gaze drawn to a pair of black suede pumps I’d bought more than a year ago at one of Maximilian’s accessory sales. Even with the employee discount, they’d been pricey, but the edgy zipper detailing at the toe and heel had been such an unexpected twist that I’d splurged. “I forgot about these,” I murmured, slipping them on.

  I suddenly knew just how Cinderella had felt after her fairy godmother had chanted, “Bibbity bobbity boo” and done her magic. I felt bathed in love and warmth.

  The lingering floral scent was fading. “Are you still here?” I spun around, hoping to see the swirling air or her ghostly form, but I was alone.

  Meemaw’s rocking chair sat in the corner next to the oval mirror. My dresser held photos of Orphie and me during Fashion Week in front of the fountain at Lincoln Center’s Damrosch Park, Nana surrounded by goats nipping at her pockets, and Mama and Meemaw, the spitting image of each other right down to the blond streak in their hair, on the front porch of this house. I picked up the frame. Mama’s smile didn’t quite reach her eyes. I’d never noticed that before. Meemaw gazed right at the camera, her head tilted toward Mama, her smile genuine and complete as she stood there with her granddaughter. It was all about family for Meemaw. It always had been. I suddenly understood how brokenhearted she must have been when I’d left Bliss.

  My gaze went back to my mother, and I felt a little piece of my own heart fold in on itself. I’d been well into my twenties when it finally hit me that not only had my father left my brother and me, but Mama’s husband had walked out on her. The sadness was right there in plain sight. I’d have seen it if I’d only been looking.

  A knock on the door downstairs snapped me back to reality. The clock read six thirty on the dot. Madelyn was punctual.

  I headed down the stairs, my heels clicking against the hardwood.

  “The OPEN sign was still out and the door was unlocked,” she called, “so I came in.”

  “Of course—” I broke off, stopping short as she came into view. She was covered from head to toe in beige. Beige skirt. Beige blouse. Nude stockings. Even a beige clutch. My left eye twitched and my pulse skittered. Beige, beige, beige. She was too young to look so matronly. She was like a flavorless biscuit, plain and bland. Where was the style? The personality? The sparkle I’d seen when she talked about magic and ghosts and that wacky paranormal society?

  It was all buried under clothes the color of oatmeal.

  I snapped my jaw closed, hoping she couldn’t read my expression. Then I noticed her staring at me with a wondrous look on her face. “No wonder you’re a designer,” she said, utter reverence in her voice. “If I looked like that, Bill would never pass up another gala event in favor of a department meeting.”

  “Pshaw. That has nothing to do with it. He loves you.” At least I assumed he did.

  “Well, of course he does. But he’s not here, is he?”

  “And you wish he were.”

  She pursed her lips in true British style. “Oh, I’m sorry. I didn’t mean . . . That came out wrong—”

  I waved away her apology. “Stop! I know what you meant. If I had a husband, I’d want him by my side, too.”

  She looked me up and down, heaving a deep, sorrowful sigh; then she slowly fluttered her hand in front of her body as if she could shoo the dreariness away. “This is just horrifically drab.”

  That was all the encouragement I needed to propel me into action. I was going to help her find her effervescence again or I had no right to call myself a fashion designer. I hurried down the last few steps, grabbed her arm, and yanked her into the workroom. “It’s your lucky day, Mrs. Brighton. We’re going to vanquish the drab. You game?”

  Her lips quivered nervously, but she nodded. Already there was color in her cheeks and a glint of excitement in her eyes. “Work your magic, Ms. Cassidy,” she said.

  And I did.

  Chapter 32

  As Madelyn and I started across the arched stone bridge, we passed a gorgeous pond and waterway directly below us. The castle. Gracie Flores was right on the money about this place. I’d forgotten how ostentatious it was.

  With each step, I felt like Alice in Wonderland slipping further through the rabbit hole, slowly growing smaller and smaller, landing in a place where I just didn’t belong. The Kincaids were out of my league. I’d come from goat farmers and bandits, not oil and . . . oil. The last time I’d been here, they’d made it perfectly clear that the two did not mix.

  And to top it off, a dressmaker did not a detective make. My chest felt heavy, like one of the Kincaids’ oil derricks sat right on top of it, a drill bit steadily boring a hole straight through to my pounding heart. What was I thinking? Miss Marple. Ha.

  Madelyn stopped at the summit of the bridge. “Are you okay?”

  A couple sauntered up one side of the bridge. I waited until they passed, then whispered, “I . . . I don’t know if I can go in there.” Somebody had killed Nell. This was no game. I certainly didn’t want to be the next victim. And I was having flashbacks to my brief, and less than pleasant, stint as Derek Kincaid’s girlfriend. “I shouldn’t be here.”

  Back at Buttons & Bows, I’d taken control and reoutfitted Madelyn. I’d had no choice but to stick with her camel-colored skirt, but I’d paired it with a sheer black blouse from the rack of clothes in the front room. Two rows of white-trimmed vertical ruffles ran up the center of the blouse and around the neck, the same ruffles mirrored on the edges of the extralong sleeves. It was a little snug on Madelyn, but with the right body shaper underneath, she pulled it off.

  The practical pumps were another story. “What size shoe do you wear?” I’d asked.

  “Six,” she said.

  “I’m an eight and a half.” She’d walk right out of my shoes. I’d tapped my finger against my cheek, thinking. There had to be something.

  The floorboards had creaked right next to us. We both whipped our heads around. No one was there. When I leaned against the cutting table, thinking and gripping the edge with my hands, the scent of lavender wafted past. A pocket of warm air suddenly hovered around us.

  Madelyn’s brows pulled together like she thought something was off, but she couldn’t put he
r finger on what it was. When the heel of my right hand brushed against something soft and plush, I knew without looking that Meemaw had come to the rescue. Bows. Of course!

  “Give me your shoes,” I said after I’d heated up the glue gun. A minute later, lovely velvet bows had transformed her pumps from plain Jane to chic. I pulled back one lock of her hair, securing it with a subtle bow. “Voilà!”

  But that was then, and this was now.

  “What you’re doing,” she said, her confidence bolstered, “is helping your friend clear her name.”

  She was right, of course, but I didn’t want to hear it. “I don’t even know where to start.”

  “Let’s just go in and check things out. Maybe you’ll find something helpful or maybe you won’t. You’ll figure it out as you go.” This time she grabbed my arm, pulling me over the bridge and through the front door.

  The second I crossed the threshold, someone thrust a drink in my hand. Heavy crystal stemware filled with red wine. I closed my eyes and took a sip, letting the warmth of the alcohol ease my mind. A few seconds later, I looked up. “Holy mother of . . .” We’d been transported to a fancy Fashion Week reception in New York, Texas style. The men wore blazers, dark jeans, big silver belt buckles, and boots, and the women had bling on their fingers, wrists, necks, and anywhere else they could get away with it.

  Madelyn whipped her camera out and started snapping pictures. One minute she was by my side, the next minute she’d been swallowed by the crowd. And I was left to . . . to see if I could learn anything at all about Nell and Nate and Josie and the whole sordid mess.

  I took another bolstering sip of my drink and moved through the crowd. After ten minutes, I was clear about one thing. I had no idea where, or how, to begin.

  “My future daughter-in-law’s dress must be done if you’re here,” a voice said from behind me.

  I turned and smiled at Lori Kincaid. She was perfectly coiffed, from her hair—expertly ratted, molded, and sprayed into place—to her halter-topped shimmery dress. I was pretty sure the word “understated” was not in her vocabulary. “Not quite,” I said, “but I’m getting there.”

  “I’m glad to hear that,” she said. “It is a surprise to see you here.”

  She hadn’t actually asked a question, but it was implied. Why, exactly, was I here?

  “A friend asked if I’d like to come with her.” I had no intention of getting said friend in trouble for bringing an uninvited guest, so I zipped my lips, not giving Madelyn’s name.

  I felt Mrs. Kincaid’s scrutiny as she took in every detail of my attire. I must have passed because finally her lips curved up. If she was worried about Nate and Josie having been questioned by the sheriff that morning, I sure couldn’t tell. Her smile seemed as genuine as could be. She didn’t seem to be harboring any ill will toward me from my past with her elder son, either. I breathed a little easier.

  “I’m sure Josie will be glad to see you. We’re so blessed to have someone with your talent right here in Bliss. And the timing was perfect,” she said.

  I bristled. Yes, Meemaw’s death had come at the right time, allowing me to move back home and set up shop just in time to make Josie’s dress. I forced a smile, managing not to point out that I’d rather never sew another stitch in my life if I could only have Meemaw back.

  “Keith, dear,” she said to the man by her side, “do you remember Harlow Cassidy? Harlow, my husband.” She waved her hand between us with the introduction, the sparkle on her ring finger almost blinding me. That was no artificial bling. Just another perk of the oil business. Whereas I had rhinestones—not even cubic zirconia—Lori Kincaid had the real thing.

  Keith Kincaid, who couldn’t have been more than five feet ten inches, pushed six feet with his taupe suede cowboy hat on. He had his own bling on the ring finger of his right hand—a two-pound Texas A&M ring. Even his turquoise inlaid belt buckle screamed money.

  Minus the bling, he and Nate were clearly cut from the same cloth. Same dirty blond hair. Same chin dimple. Same height. The only difference was the good-ol’-boy attitude Keith exuded, from his biscuits-and-gravy accent to the pat on the behind I caught him giving Lori. Her flinch was barely noticeable, but enough to show she didn’t relish the public show of affection. I didn’t blame her.

  “Pleasure to meetcha,” he said, shaking my hand with a firm, double-handed grip, his beefy palm dwarfing mine. A sudden look of understanding crossed his weathered face. “Ah, wait just a sec. Harlow Cassidy. Derek’s old . . .”

  “The dressmaker, dear,” his wife interrupted.

  He gave a slow nod, releasing me from his clammy grip. “Where Josie’s friend was . . .” He trailed off, scratching his head like he didn’t quite know how to put it.

  I nodded, shifting uncomfortably. Nell was going to be the maid of honor in their son’s wedding. Did the Kincaids even know her name?

  He found his way. “Quite a sad story. Poor girl. Does the sheriff have any suspects?”

  I wanted to say, You mean aside from your son and future daughter-in-law, who I’m sure, by the way, is innocent, but I’m not so sure about the fruit of your loins? I’d been uncomfortable since Madelyn’s car had rolled onto the property, but now my head swam. If I had any hand in proving Nate guilty, I’d be betraying the oldest friend I had in Bliss.

  Not that I would have a hand in it. I was a dressmaker, not a detective. I gave a small shrug of my shoulders. “They don’t keep me updated.”

  “No, no, I guess they wouldn’t,” he said thoughtfully.

  “Keith, dear,” Mrs. Kincaid said, “now’s not the—”

  “Right,” he said with a curt nod. “But the details have been sketchy. Did she have money? Assets? Enemies?”

  Lori’s jaw clenched as she gritted her teeth. Keith reminded me of Meemaw. It seemed that whatever he wanted, he got, even if his wife put her foot down. “I only met her for the first time the day she died,” I said.

  Lori Kincaid glanced around, then lowered her voice to a gossipy whisper. If you can’t beat ’em, join’em. “I heard that she bought that little bead shop a few months ago. What I’m curious about is where she got the capital.”

  I dove in with both feet. If Mrs. Kincaid could gossip, so could I. “I heard she made a will.”

  Mrs. Kincaid nodded her head approvingly. “Good for her. So her heirs will get her money, not the government.”

  “Oh, yes, but I got the feeling she didn’t have any family.” Unless you counted the baby she was carrying.

  I experienced another wave of profound gratitude that I was back in Bliss, near Mama and my grandparents, and Red and his family. I’d moved away, pretended like it was what I wanted, but when a door opened to come back, I’d run through it. Nell hadn’t had that choice. She’d had no one and no place to go home to. There’d been no open door for her.

  “Such a tragedy,” Mrs. Kincaid continued a moment later, “and so close to the wedding.”

  “Maybe it should be postponed,” I suggested. That was one surefire way to ensure that Josie wouldn’t marry a killer.

  Mrs. Kincaid set her lips in a thin, unwavering line. “Impossible. With Keith’s travel schedule and all the guests coming in, we have to make the best of it and go forward.”

  Make the best of having a member of the wedding party murdered. How exactly did you do that?

  “Don’t you agree, dear?” she asked her husband.

  Mr. Kincaid, looking a little jet-lagged, with dark, puffy circles under his eyes, had been surveying his guests. “ ’Course. Right,” he said absently, but Lori had moved ahead to another conversation, answering a question nobody had asked.

  “Miriam is going to step in as maid of honor,” she said.

  “Really?” So maybe Gracie’s theory about why Miriam wasn’t in the wedding was all wrong. “Does Josie know?”

  “Of course she knows. Goodness, it’s her wedding. She’s quite an agreeable girl—”

  Like a Stepford daughter-in-law?
/>   “—and Miriam couldn’t be more pleased.”

  All I could think about was poor Nell, followed by a fleeting thought of how easily we could all be replaced. I raised my glass to take a sip.

  “Miriam will be by your shop in the morning for her fitting,” Mrs. Kincaid said.

  My hand jerked and I gasped. All the wine left in my glass poured into my mouth. My throat spasmed and I choked. Stifling a cough only forced the wine down my windpipe. I slapped my hand over my mouth and nose, using every bit of gumption I possessed to swallow so I wouldn’t spew it all over Mrs. Kincaid’s fancy silk gown.

  When I could breathe again, I said, “She’ll be by where? For her what?”

  “Buttons and Bows for her fitting, of course. Shall we say ten o’clock?”

  She reached up and patted her husband’s shoulder. He started, bringing his distant gaze back to her. He’d been far more interested in the goings-on in the room than in the rotating maid-of-honor situation. “Yes, yes. Do what you like,” he said to her, giving her another thump on her rump.

  She lurched forward from it, her neck straining. “Keith,” she warned, but her admonishment fell on deaf ears.

  “Unfortunate about Josie’s friend,” he twanged, “but I’m glad not to miss the nuptials.”

  I smiled stiffly and nodded, but my mind whirled. Now I needed to add a dress for Miriam Kincaid to my already packed sewing schedule. A completely crazy thought shot through my mind. Could Mrs. Kincaid have killed Nell just to open up a spot for her daughter in the wedding?

  Everything was about appearances to them, right? I gave her a good once-over. Tasteful hyacinth blue gown skimming over a well-maintained figure, diamond choker to match the rock on her finger, perfectly applied makeup, immobile hair.

 

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