“I don’t want to drip all over your shop,” the woman said.
“No worries,” I said. “Here, I’ll take the bag and your coat.”
She handed me the dripping bag and shrugged out of her coat, freeing one arm at a time as if afraid to let go of her hatbox. I hung her coat and the bag on our coatrack by the door. Usually we kept it in the back room, but so many people had been coming in with wet coats that we’d moved it out front for the interminable rainfest we had going.
I hurried after them as Viv led the woman over to the counter, where Fee and Harrison were watching the happenings with curious expressions.
“Ariana, is that you?” Harrison asked. He looked delighted to see the young woman, and I felt the prick of something sharp, like the spiny point of jealousy, stab me in the backside.
She looked up at him in surprise and then laughed. “Harrison, fancy meeting you here!”
He stepped around the counter and swept her into a friendly embrace. “I wondered why Stephen asked me about this place. Was it for you?”
This place? I turned to exchange a dark look with Viv, but neither she nor Fee was looking in my direction. Did they not see that Harrison had just insulted our shop?
“Yes, I knew you did the books for a hat shop on Portobello and was so hoping it was the same one, and then Stephen said that you bragged that it was the best in the city and that the girls who owned were—”
“Yes, well.” Harrison interrupted her by coughing loudly into his fist.
He glanced at me and I narrowed my eyes at him. What had he said about us? I opened my mouth to demand to hear it when Viv spoke first.
“Do you know what year your mother purchased the hat?” Viv asked Ariana.
“I do. It was 1983, in fact,” she said. “The hat was a bridal hat for her wedding.”
“Oh, 1983 was a very good hat year. John Boyd was designing for Princess Diana. I loved the turquoise hat he made for her first foreign tour to Australia. It was a cap framed by matching ropes of silk with a net over the top and a matching flower at the back. I tried to re-create it during my apprenticeship but I could never match his artistry.”
“He is a genius,” Fee agreed. “I adore the red boater that she wore perched to the side with the matching jacket.”
“None of us were even born in 1983,” I said. “How is it you know what the hats looked like back then?”
“Every milliner studies John Boyd and Princess Diana,” Fee said.
“That and I did an apprenticeship in his Knightsbridge shop,” Viv said. “Mim loved his work. They were friends, you know.”
I didn’t, but I didn’t say as much, mostly because I was too embarrassed to admit that although the name “John Boyd” sounded familiar, I wasn’t really up to speed on his work. The truth was I didn’t know much about the millinery business. I had studied the hospitality industry in college and my gift was more with people, which brought my attention back to the woman in our shop.
“I’m sorry, Ariana, I didn’t catch your last name,” I said. I glanced meaningfully at Harrison but he didn’t look embarrassed in the least.
“Oh, of course, forgive me,” he said. “Ariana Jackson, these are the owners of Mim’s Whims—Scarlett Parker and Vivian Tremont—and their apprentice, Fiona Felton.”
“Ariana, what a pretty name,” I said. I gave her my most winning smile. “It suits you. Do you and Harrison go a long way back?”
Harry raised his eyebrows, no doubt surprised that I hadn’t used his nickname. Well, just like he didn’t know that I liked the name “Ginger,” he also didn’t know that I considered “Harry” my personal name for him and I really didn’t want to share it.
“Not at all, just a few rugby seasons,” Ariana said. She and Harrison exchanged a smile. “My fiancé, Stephen, plays on the same league team, and when I said I wanted to get my mother’s hat fixed for our wedding, Stephen asked Harrison about Mim’s Whims. I was thrilled to find out you’re still here.”
She put the old hatbox on the counter. “I was hoping you might be able to help me. My mother’s hat needs some refurbishing and since it originally came from this shop . . .”
“Let’s see what we’ve got here,” Viv said. She gestured to the box. “May I?”
Ariana gave her a quick nod and Viv eagerly pried the lid off. Nested amid layers of pale tissue paper was a wide-brimmed white confection. Viv carefully reached into the box and gently pulled the hat free.
I gasped. It was beautiful: a wide-brimmed, white silk hat swathed in tulle with a large silk bow and a lush organza rose nestled in the center. As Viv lifted it, a long organza train fell down from beneath the bow and spilled over the brim. Fee reached out and pulled the train free—it was long and delicate with embroidered edges. Even I could see our grandmother’s handiwork all over it.
“Oh, Mim,” Viv said. Her voice sounded wistful and I knew just how she felt. To hold something our grandmother had made over thirty years ago brought her right back to us.
The sweet scent of lily of the valley filled my nose. I glanced at Viv at the same moment she glanced at me. Mim. It was the distinct scent Mim had always worn. I glanced around the shop as if expecting her to appear, but of course she didn’t. Still, she was here, or the essence of her was here. I was sure of it just as I was sure she wanted Viv to restore the hat.
“I’d be happy to try and fix the hat,” Viv said. “No, I’d be honored.”
Chapter 2
“Are you certain?” Ariana asked. “There’s been some damage.”
Viv examined the hat. A vee formed in between her eyes as she examined the fabric of the hat.
“Dupioni silk?” Fee asked.
“Yes,” Viv said. She ran her fingers over the silk, examining the stitches.
“How is that different from other silk?” Harrison asked. I could have hugged him for asking what I wanted to know but hadn’t asked because I didn’t want to look dumb.
“Dupioni silk is a crisp type of silk,” Viv said. “They use a fine silk in the warp and uneven thread from two different cocoons, sometimes in different colors, in the weft.”
“And here I thought I’d understand what you were talking about,” Harrison said with a shake of his head. “Please excuse me, ladies, while I go play with numbers, which make much more sense to me. Ariana, give my best to Stephen and tell him I’ll see him on the pitch.”
“I will,” Ariana promised.
Harrison turned and strolled to the workroom in the back of the shop. As I watched him walk away, I admired the broad shape of his shoulders under his sweater and the way his dark brown hair curled at the nape of his neck. He was an annoyingly handsome man.
“All right, Scarlett?” Fee asked.
I glanced away from Harrison to find all three of them looking at me.
“Absolutely. Why?” I asked.
“You sighed,” Viv said. Then she grinned and added, “Longingly.”
“Really?” I asked. I ignored the heat I could feel warming my face. “I must be hungry.”
“But not for food, yeah?” Fee asked and then laughed. Viv joined her but Ariana gave us all a confused look.
“Ignore them,” I said to her. I rolled my eyes. “They’re just teasing me. I mean Harrison, really?”
“I don’t know,” Ariana said. “I may be getting married to his teammate in a month but even I can see he is quite dishy.”
Now my face was flaming hot. Subject change now.
I forced a smile. “So you’re getting married? Congratulations. Is that why you want the hat refurbished?”
Ariana’s face grew somber. “Partly. You see, my mother passed away when I was in school. My father’s new wife”—she paused and made a pained face—“gave away my mother’s wedding dress to charity when she was clearing out her things, so this is all that I have of hers and I was
really hoping to wear it at my own wedding.”
A glance at Viv and Fee and I knew from their sympathetic expressions that they felt Ariana’s sadness as deeply as I did.
Viv turned the hat around in her hands. “There are some tears and discoloring in the silk. In order to fix it, I may have to remove large sections of the original material.”
“But you think it can be done?” Ariana asked.
Her hopeful expression had me holding my breath as I waited for Viv’s answer. I so wanted Ariana to have her mother’s hat on her special day.
“Yes,” Viv said. She gave a decisive nod. “I can do it.”
“Oh, that’s wonderful!” Ariana cried, and she clapped her hands together. Then her face fell. “I am on a bit of a budget, however.”
“Not to worry,” Viv said. “Before I do any of the work, I’ll get you an estimate. We’ll make it work within your budget.”
“Thank you,” Ariana said. She glanced at the watch on her wrist and her eyes widened. “Oh, I have to go. I work for a solicitor in Kensington, Mr. Anthony Russo. He’ll throw a wobbler if I’m late getting back.”
“Here, give us your phone number and we can text you the estimate,” I said. She was looking anxiously at the door and I didn’t want to hold her up longer than necessary.
She quickly jotted down her number and I walked her to the door. I retrieved her coat from the rack and held it open for her.
“Thank you,” she said. She glanced back at Vivian and the hat and asked, “You’ll mind it well, won’t you?”
“As if it were my very own wedding hat,” Viv promised with a smile.
Ariana puffed a sigh of relief, cried her thanks one more time, and hurried back out into the lead-bottomed day. As the door shut behind her, a draft of cold and wet snuck in and splashed against my black tights. My black ankle-high boots and purple knit dress were no defense against the damp, and I hurriedly closed the door after her.
“She’s going to make a lovely bride with this hat on, yeah?” Fee asked.
“I wonder what her gown looks like,” I said.
I love weddings. I love everything about them: the brides, gowns, tiaras, flowers and all that goes with them, well, all except for the groom. As I mentioned, I was off men for at least a year and thoughts of men in tuxedos were not helpful, so I found it better just to focus on the bridal portion of things. Luckily, at Mim’s Whims, we were mostly about the bride.
“We’ll have to ask,” Viv said. She was considering the hat, turning it over in her hands.
“Maybe she’ll order all of her bridesmaid’s hats through us,” Fee said. She gave us a hopeful look as she left the front of the shop and headed back to the workroom to finish her latest project.
“Assuming she hires us to fix the hat,” Viv said. She was still examining the inside, running her fingers over the stitching. She glanced up at me. Her smile was wistful. “I hope she hires us. I love the idea of restoring one of Mim’s hats to its original glory.”
I glanced down at the beautiful silk and organza and ran my fingertip over the same stitches Viv had.
“I get the feeling Mim wants you to,” I said in a soft voice.
“Me, too,” she whispered back. “No matter how much Ariana can afford, I think we need to make this happen.”
“Agreed,” I said.
Of course, everything seems like a great idea when you have no idea what you’re getting yourself into.
Chapter 3
“It’s the third message I’ve left for her this week,” I said. “If the wedding is in a month, she needs to give you time to get the work on the hat done.”
It had been several days since Ariana had been in with her mother’s hat. Viv had done the estimate right away and I had called Ariana at the number she’d given us but hadn’t gotten a call back. Viv had instructed me to be flexible with the cost, but since I hadn’t heard from her, I hadn’t even had the opportunity to haggle.
“Maybe she’s caught up in so much wedding stuff, she hasn’t had time,” Viv said. “You know how brides are.”
It was true. We did a lot of wedding hats, from the bride’s veil to the bridesmaids’ hats, the mothers and the guests. It was very lucrative. And yes, we had dealt with our share of hysterical brides. Ariana hadn’t seemed like that, though.
“I’m locking up,” Viv cried over her shoulder as she crossed the shop to the front door.
“Excellent,” I said. “We have to be over at Andre and Nick’s before the show starts. Nick said he’s feeling inspired.”
“I can’t believe they have us watching The Great British Bake Off,” Viv said as she came back. “Between us we can barely boil water.”
“I think Nick is smitten with Mary Berry,” I said. “Besides I am crushing ridiculously on the chef from Devon, what’s his name—Trevor, no, Trey, no . . .”
“Travis,” Viv supplied. “Travis Manfred.”
“What?” a voice squawked from behind me. I turned to see Harrison standing in the doorway to the workroom. “Ginger, you’re crushing on that mangy git? I wouldn’t let him fry me an egg.”
I smiled. I couldn’t help it. I got a perverse pleasure in riling Harrison. I tossed my hair over my shoulder and tried to look nonchalant.
“I can’t help it if he has the dreamiest blue eyes,” I said. “Don’t you think so, Viv?”
“Oh, no, you’re daft if you think I’m getting in the midst of this,” she said. She turned and narrowed her eyes at Harrison. “Correct me if I’m wrong, however, didn’t you say you were only joining us because you thought the dark-haired girl was quite fit.”
I frowned. I might be from the States, but even I know that when a British man calls a girl “fit,” he is not talking about her exercise capacity; rather, he thinks she’s hot.
“How very shallow of you, Harry,” I said.
“Bloody double standard you’re working there, Ginger,” Harrison said.
I ignored him. I’m very good at that, just like I can pretty much tune out any words I don’t want to hear or not see things I’d rather not. Probably that’s why my last relationship was a CATASTROPHE, in all caps.
All joking aside, I was in no shape to date anyone possibly forever. No, it was much better to drool over an amateur chef as he baked his way into fame and fortune.
“Come on, you two,” Viv called from the workroom. “We’re going to be late!”
* * *
Our friends, Nick Carroll and Andre Eisel, lived several shops down Portobello Road from our hat shop. The lower half of their place housed Andre’s photography studio and they lived in the two floors above much like Viv and me, except Nick and Andre are a couple instead of cousins. Oh, and Nick’s a dentist.
Lucky for us, they love to entertain, because Viv and I do not. So it was understood that we would bring the wine and dessert when they invited us to dinner, which happened about once a week and usually on Great British Bake Off night.
It helped that Nick thought of himself as a great undiscovered chef, and in all fairness, he really was skilled. It goes without saying that he was the one who liked to watch the show the most. I half expected him to enter the running every time the applications were open.
The way he yelled at the bakers, “Bloody hell, use the whisk! The whisk!” or “By all that is holy, how can you call that a reduction? It’s reducing me to tears, I tell you,” it was more fun watching him than it was the show.
“What did you pick up for dessert?” I asked Harrison as we walked down the street.
He was carrying a large bakery box, and just the sight of it made my stomach growl.
“Pecan tarts from Paul Rhodes Bakery,” he said. “They are amazing.”
“Hmm. Are you sure you don’t want me to taste test one, Harry? It would be bad form to show up with a marginal dessert.”
“I’m
quite sure, thanks,” he said. “And it’s Harrison.”
I gave him my best grumpy look. He did not appear swayed in the least.
“Do we know what Nick is cooking tonight?” I asked Viv.
“No, which is why you are carrying red wine and I am carrying white,” she said. We passed the main entrance to the studio and stopped in front of a small side door. Viv turned the handle and it opened. Harrison held the door and waited for us to enter first.
“Hello? Anyone home?” I called up the stairs.
“Scarlett, is that you?” Andre’s head appeared over the banister above. His smile was a white slash against his cocoa-colored skin. He was wearing a form-fitting periwinkle silk shirt, and the diamond stud he wore in one ear winked at me in the overhead light.
“Yes, it’s me and I found two strangers and invited them to join us,” I teased. “Is that all right?”
“Did they bring dessert?” he asked.
“And wine,” I replied.
“By all means, show them up,” he said. “Oh, and lock the door behind you, would you?”
“Done,” Harrison called from behind me.
The three of us trudged up the stairs just in time to hear Nick in the kitchen.
“Three cups of broth? I only have two! Dinner is ruined!”
“Sounds like there’s a drama happening in the kitchen,” Andre said. “Make yourselves at home and I’ll see if I can use my sous chef magic to calm him down.”
We put the wine and the bakery box on the side table in the dining room and made our way to the living room, where the stereo was on and playing David Gray.
I glanced out the large windows onto the street below and noted that it was raining again. I followed the path of a raindrop down the window with my finger. I felt as if I hadn’t seen the sun in forever.
“Why so glum, Ginger?” Harrison asked as he moved to stand beside me.
“I honestly don’t think I can take much more of this rain,” I said.
At the Drop of a Hat Page 2