Bride Quartet Collection

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Bride Quartet Collection Page 91

by Nora Roberts


  “I don’t know why I spend any time on the Internet, when I can just plug in to you.”

  “If you had, I’d’ve told you Mac’s mother had a flirt with the bride’s daddy between wives two and three.”

  “Linda? Not a surprise.”

  “Well, we can all be grateful it didn’t take. I like the girl’s pictures,” she added as they rolled the cart toward the parlor.

  “You’ve seen them?”

  Mrs. Grady winked. “You’re not the only one who knows how to use the Internet. There’s the bell. Go on. Snag us another client.”

  “That’s the plan.”

  Parker’s first thought was the bride looked like the Hollywood version of a fantasy artist with her waist-length tumble of gilded red hair and almond-shaped green eyes. Her second was what a beautiful bride Deeanne would make, and on the heels of it, just how much she wanted a part of that.

  “Good morning.Welcome to Vows. I’m Parker.”

  “Brown, right?” Wyatt shot out a hand. “I just want to say I don’t know who designed your landscape, but they’re a genius. And I wish it had been me.”

  “Thank you so much. Please come in.”

  “My mother, Patricia Ferrell. Deeanne’s mom, Karen Bliss.”

  “It’s lovely to meet all of you.” Parker took stock quickly.Wyatt took charge, but genially—and all three women let him. “Why don’t we have a seat in the parlor for a few minutes and get acquainted.”

  But Deeanne was already wandering the spacious foyer, scanning the elegant staircase. “I thought it would be stuffy. I thought it would feel stuffy.” She turned back, her pretty summer skirt swaying.“I studied your website. Everything looked perfect, looked beautiful. But I thought, no, too perfect. I’m still not convinced it’s not too perfect, but it’s not stuffy. Not in the least.”

  “What my daughter might’ve said in many fewer words, Ms. Brown, is you have a lovely home.”

  “Parker,” she said, “and thank you, Mrs. Bliss. Coffee?” she invited. “Or iced sun tea?”

  “Could we just look around first?” Deeanne asked her.“Especially outside, as Wyatt and I want an outdoor wedding.”

  “Why don’t we start outside, then circle back through.You’re looking at next September,” Parker continued as she moved to the door leading to the side terrace.

  “A year from now.That’s why we’re looking at this time, so we can see how the landscape, the gardens, the light all work.”

  “We have several areas that can be utilized for outdoor weddings. The most popular, especially for larger events is the west terrace and pergola. But . . .”

  “But?”Wyatt echoed as they strolled around the house.

  “When I see the two of you, I picture something a little different. Something we do now and then. The pond,” she said as they rounded to the back.“The willows, the roll of the lawns. I see a flower-strewn arbor and white runners flowing like a river between the rows of chairs—white again, strung with flowers. All of that reflected in the water of the pond. Banquets of flowers everywhere—but not formal, more natural arrangements. Cottage garden flowers, but in mad abundance. My partner and our floral designer Emmaline is an artist.”

  Deeanne’s eyes took on a gleam. “I loved what I saw of her work on the website.”

  “You can speak with her directly if you decide to have your wedding with us, or even if you’re just considering it. I also see fairy lights glittering, candles flickering. Everything natural, organic—but sumptuous, sparkling. Titania’s bower. You’ll wear something flowing,” she said to Deeanne.“Something fairylike, with your hair down. No veil, but flowers in your hair.”

  “Yes.You’re very good, aren’t you?”

  “It’s what we do here.Tailor the day to reflect what you want most, what you are, individually and to each other. You don’t want formal, but soft and dreamy. Neither contemporary nor old-fashioned. You want you, and a bluegrass trio playing you down the aisle.”

  “‘Never Ending Love,’” Wyatt supplied with a grin. “We’ve already picked it.Will your artist of a florist work with us, not only on the wedding landscape, but the bouquets and all that?”

  “Every step of the way. It’s entirely about you, and creating the perfect—even too-perfect—day for you,” she said with a smile for Deeanne.

  “I love the pond,” Deeanne murmured as they stood on the terrace looking out. “I love the image you’ve just painted in my head.”

  “Because the image is you, baby.” Karen Bliss took her daughter’s hand. “It’s absolutely you.”

  “Dancing on the lawn?” Wyatt’s mother glanced over. “I checked out the website, too, and I know you have a gorgeous ballroom. But maybe they could have dancing out here.”

  “Absolutely. Either, both, however you want it done. If you’re interested we can set up a full consult, with my partners, discuss those areas, and more details.”

  “What do you say we take a look at the rest.” Wyatt leaned down to kiss Deeanne’s temple.

  AT FOUR THIRTY, PARKER WAS BACK AT HER DESK REFINING SPREADSHEETS, charts, schedules. In concession to the end of the day’s appointments, her suit jacket hung on the back of her chair, and her shoes sat under the desk.

  She calculated another hour’s paperwork, and considered the day a blissfully light one.The rest of the week promised to be insanely jammed, but with any luck, by six she’d be able to change into casual clothes and treat herself to a glass of wine and actually sit down to a meal.

  She went hmm? at the rap on her doorjamb.

  “Got a minute?” Mac asked.

  “I happen to have several on me. You can have one.” Parker swiveled in her chair as Mac hauled in two shopping bags. “I missed you in the gym this morning, but I see you’ve continued your weight lifting.”

  Grinning, Mac flexed. “Pretty good, huh?”

  “You’re ripped, Elliot.You’ll have showstopping arms on Wedding Day.”

  Mac dropped into a chair.“I have to do justice to the dress you found me. Listen, I’ve sworn not to become Mad Bride or Weepy Bride or other various aspects of Annoying Bride, but it’s getting close and I just need assurances from the goddess of all wedding planners.”

  “It’s going to be perfect, and exactly right.”

  “I changed my mind on the first dance again.”

  “It doesn’t matter.You can change it up until the countdown.”

  “But it’s symptomatic, Parks. I can’t seem to stick to a basic item like a damn song.”

  “It’s an important song.”

  “Is Carter taking dance lessons?”

  Parker widened her eyes. “Why would you ask me?”

  “I knew it! God, that’s so sweet.You got Carter to take dance lessons so he won’t step on my feet during our first dance.”

  “Carter asked me to arrange it—as a surprise. So don’t spoil it.”

  “It makes me gooey.” Her shoulders lifted and fell with her happy sigh.“Maybe I can’t stick because I keep going gooey. Anyway, I had that off-site engagement shoot this afternoon.”

  “How’d it go?”

  “Aces.They’re so damn cute I wanted to marry both of them. Then I did something stupid on the way home. I stopped by the shoe department at Nordstrom.”

  “Which I have already cleverly deduced by the shopping bags.”

  “I bought ten pair. I’m taking most of them back, but—”

  “Why?”

  Mac narrowed her green eyes. “Don’t encourage the lunatic. I couldn’t stick, again. I already bought my wedding shoes, right? Didn’t we all agree they’re perfect?”

  “Stunning and perfect.”

  “Exactly, so why did I buy four alternate pair?”

  “I thought you said ten.”

  “The other six are for the honeymoon—well, four of them, then I really needed a new pair of work shoes and they were so cute I got one pair in copper and another in this wild green. But that’s not important.”

  “
Let me see them.”

  “The wedding shoes first, and don’t say anything until I line them all up.” Mac held up both hands. “Total poker face. No expression, no sound.”

  “I’ll turn around, work on this spreadsheet.”

  “Better you than me,” Mac muttered, then got to work.

  Parker ignored the rustling, the sighs, until Mac gave her the go-ahead.

  Turning, Parker scanned the shoes lined up on a work counter. Rose, crossed over, scanned again. She kept her face blank, said nothing as she picked up a shoe, examined it, set it back, moved to the next.

  “You’re killing me,” Mac told her.

  “Quiet.” She walked away to take out a folder, slipping out the photo taken of Mac in her wedding dress. She took it back to the selection of shoes, nodded.

  “Yes. Definitely.” She picked up a pair. “You’d be a lunatic not to wear these.”

  “Really!” Mac slapped her hands together. “Really? Because those were the ones.The. Ones. But I kept waffling back and forth and sideways. Oooh, look at them.The heels, they’re all sparkly, and the ankle strap’s so sexy—but not too sexy. Right?”

  “The perfect blend of sparkly, sexy, and sophisticated. I’ll take the others back.”

  “But—”

  “I’ll return them because you’ve found the ultimate wedding shoe and need to stick.You have to remove the others from your sight and stay out of the shoe department until after the wedding.”

  “You’re so wise.”

  Parker inclined her head. “I am indeed wise. And as such, I do believe this pair may very well be Emma’s wedding shoe. I’ll exchange it for her size, and we’ll see.”

  “Oh, oh, again, wise points.” Mac picked up the pair Parker indicated. “More romantic, more princessy. This is great. I’m exhausted.”

  “Leave the wedding shoes—all of them—with me. Take the others. Oh, and check your calendar when you get home. I added in consults.”

  “How many?”

  “Out of the five tours I did today, we have three full consults, one need to talk it over with Daddy—who’s footing the bill—and one who’s still shopping around.”

  “Three out of five?” Mac did a double fist pump. “Woo-hoo.”

  “I’m betting four out of five, because Daddy’s girl wants us, and wants us bad.The fifth? The bride just isn’t ready to decide. Her mother wants us, which my instincts tell me is a strike against us in this case.We’ll see.”

  “Well, I’m psyched. Three fulls and I’ve bagged the perfect wedding shoes. I’m going home to give my guy a big wet kiss, and he won’t know it’s because he’s taking dance lessons. Thanks, Parks. See you later.”

  Parker sat, studied the shoes on the counter. She thought of Mac rushing home to Carter.Thought of Laurel greeting Del when he came home after a two-day business conference in Chicago. And Emma maybe sitting out on her little patio having wine with Jack and dreaming of her own wedding flowers.

  She swiveled around to stare at the spreadsheet on the screen. She had her work, she reminded herself. Work she loved. And that’s what mattered right now.

  Her BlackBerry signaled, and a glance at the readout told her another bride needed to talk.

  “I’ve always got you,” she murmured, then answered. “Hi, Brenna.What can I do for you?”

  CHAPTER TWO

  PARKER DEALT WITH THE SHOES, AND BECAUSE SHE WAS ON A tight schedule, she only indulged in one pair for herself. She met a bride, the bride’s favorite aunt—who would give her away—and the bride’s maid of honor for lunch to discuss wedding favors, music, and—coincidentally—shoes.

  She swung by the bridal boutique where, at the request of another bride, she assisted in the finalization of the gowns for the wedding party, gave her input on underpinnings and headdresses, met yet another bride and entourage to pore over linen choices. Then she dashed to Coffee Talk for a quick meeting with Sherry Maguire, Carter’s delightful sister, whose wedding was imminent.

  “Diane’s being a poop,” Sherry announced and pouted with her chin on her fist.

  “The wedding’s not about your sister.”

  “I know, I know, but she’s still being a poop. A total downer. A kill-all-the-joy bitchfestia.”

  “Sherry, in less than two weeks you’re marrying the man you love. Correct?”

  The light sparked in Sherry’s summer blue eyes. “Oh yeah.”

  “Everything about the day has been designed to make you happy, to celebrate that love. Correct?”

  “God. God. It really has.You, all of you, have been amazing.”

  “Then be happy. Celebrate. And if your sister’s cranky about it,I have to say that’s her problem.”

  “That’s exactly what Nick says.” Sherry tossed up her hands, then shoved them through her sunny blond hair.“And my mother. But . . . she says she’s not coming to the rehearsal or the rehearsal dinner.”

  The poop, Parker thought, but showed only light sympathy. “I’m sorry.Why not?”

  “She’s not in the wedding, she says. Well, she didn’t want to be. I asked her to be the matron of honor, but she didn’t want that. Didn’t see why she should have to go through all that fuss, why I wanted a matron and a maid of honor.”

  “Your sister and your oldest, closest friend.”

  “Exactly.” Sherry thumped a fist on the table, then jabbed a spoon in the whipped cream on her fancy coffee. “So now, she doesn’t see why she should get a sitter and come to the dinner. I said the kids were invited, too, but then it’s how she’s not going to ride herd on them all night at a rehearsal dinner, then turn around and ride herd on them at the wedding.Too much stimulation for them, she says, too exhausting for her. So I said we’d pay for the damn sitter then so she and Sam could have the night out. And she got huffy about that. I can’t win.”

  “Stop trying to.”

  “But she’s my sister, Parker. It’s my wedding.” Tears sparkled as emotion trembled in Sherry’s voice.

  And this, Parker thought, had been throughout the entire process, the most cheerful, delightful, and flexible of brides.

  Damn if she’d see a moment of it spoiled for her.

  “I’ll speak with her.”

  “But—”

  “Sherry.” Parker laid a hand over hers. “Trust me.”

  “Okay.” Sherry sucked in a breath, blew it out as she blinked back the tears. “Sorry. I’m an idiot.”

  “You’re not.” To emphasize it, Parker gave Sherry’s hand a quick, firm squeeze. “Let me say, because I know a lot of idiots, you just don’t make the cut. So, do me a favor and put this out of your mind for now. Just put it aside and concentrate on how good things are, and how wonderful they will be.”

  “You’re right. I knew you’d make me feel better.”

  “That’s what I’m here for.” Under the table, Parker turned her wrist to check the time. She could spare another ten minutes.

  “So, you’re all set on your spa and salon dates, your final fittings?”

  The ten eked to nearly fifteen, but she’d built time in to cushion the trip back home for the early-evening consult. Even the rain that splattered as she walked back to the car didn’t worry her.

  She had plenty of time to drive home, freshen up, grab the files, check on the refreshments, and run through the client data with her partners. But to save time, she plugged in her phone and used the voice controls to contact Laurel.

  “Icing at Vows.”

  “Hey, I’m on my way in. Are we set?”

  “Coffee, tea, champagne, simple yet fabulous hors d’oeuvres, chocolates. Emma’s already switched the flowers.We all have—or will have—our sample albums. Wow, is that thunder?”

  “Yeah, it just opened up.” Parker shot a glance to the angry boil of clouds. “I’ll be home in about twenty. Bye.”

  The storm roared through, wild and vicious, and she thought just how much she’d have enjoyed it if she’d been inside. Soon would be, she thought, but adjusted her sp
eed cautiously as rain hurled against the windshield.

  She rolled along the road toward home, going over details about the new clients in her head.

  It happened fast, all in a rain-washed blur.

  The dog—deer?—raced across the road. The oncoming car swerved to avoid it, fishtailed. Parker eased off the gas, tapped her brakes, even as her heart leveled again when the animal cleared the road.

  But the oncoming car fishtailed again, straight at her.

  Once again her heart flipped. With no choice, she cut the wheel hard to avoid the collision. Her car skidded, bucked onto the shoulder of the road. Her rear end shimmied around while the car jolted side to side.The oncoming car nipped by her.

  And just kept going.

  She sat, her hands glued to the wheel, her knees shaking, and her heart a drumbeat in her ears.

  “Okay,” she breathed. “I’m okay. Not hurt. I’m not hurt.”

  Since she wanted to stay that way, she ordered herself to steer the car fully onto the shoulder until the shaking stopped. Someone else could come along and broadside her.

  The best she could manage was a thumping limp.

  Flat tire, she thought and closed her eyes. Perfect.

  Grabbing her fold-up umbrella from the glove box, she got out to survey the damage.

  “Oh, not a flat,” she muttered. “A flat’s just not good enough. Two. Two goddamn shredded tires.” She rolled her eyes to the heavens, which, she noted bitterly, were already clearing.

  She found the faint shimmer of a rainbow arching in a miserly glint of sun personally insulting under the circumstances.

  She would, almost certainly, be late for the consult, but she wouldn’t arrive soaking wet.

  Bright side.

  She climbed back in, called for roadside assistance. Because her hands still shook, she opted to wait another few minutes before calling home.

  She’d just say she had a flat, she decided, and was waiting for the guy to come change it. She could damn well have changed a flat tire if she’d had to, she mused. But she only had one spare.

 

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