Chapter One
I have seen two brides trip and fall down the aisle;
one topple into a reflection pool; one whose violent sneeze
catapulted her tiara into the front row during vows, gashing
the eye of the father-in-law to be. I have witnessed one
groom run from the altar, one bride run from the altar,
one father of the bride fall asleep, and one flower girl
whose nose bled the entire length of the ceremony. That's
not including several fistfights, a half-dozen drunken
and slightly insulting toasts from best men, and one collapsing
tent in the middle of a seven-course dinner reception.
I am a wedding consultant, which means that despite all
of my firsthand knowledge, I'm expected to reassure you
that everything about your wedding will be absolutely
perfect. And although you might not believe me, I'll tell
you that usually, despite little snags (ahem), everything
typically does work out all right at the end of the day.
Most of the time.
And, let's face it, that's why I do it. You can't help
but get a heady little rush when you see two people, obviously
in love and happy, stand up before all their friends and
family and pledge to make a go of it in a world where
most people are divorced twice before they see grandkids.
And just because I've heard the wedding march somewhere
in the neighborhood of 324 times (four times on bagpipes)
doesn't mean that I still don't get goose bumps when I
hear it, just a little bit, because, well, I think in
some sense it symbolizes hope and happiness, and, of course,
love, if you'll pardon the string of sappy clichés.
(I mean, we are talking about weddings, for goodness'
sakes. Sappy clichés come with the territory.)
In my experience, during every wedding, even the ones
involving catastrophic blunders of the fainting kind,
there's a moment, or even two, when everything bad in
the world is suspended and you see pure, unadulterated
goodwill. That's what keeps me coming back like a junkie,
really, knowing that I had a hand in creating that second
or two of perfect harmony.
Although, to be fair, I probably should say that for
a rather small minority, a second or two of harmony simply
isn't enough. It's odd, really, that so many people who
don't strive for perfection in any other arena of their
lives (professional or personal) have no qualms about
demanding a flawless, magical ceremony celebrating (more
often than not) a rather imperfect union, witnessed by
two less than functional families. (It's a universal truth
that relatives will not be on their best behavior just
because you've spent ten thousand dollars on food. If
that were the case, then psychologists would prescribe
surf and turf instead of Prozac.) At a wedding, the smallest
thing (a misplaced step, a bit too much wine, the appearance
of a long-lost, estranged relative) can turn everything
into a drunken, humiliating mess.
Weddings, by their nature, are fraught with peril.
This is why you need me.
Because I worry and fret for you. I troubleshoot, problem-solve,
and (on occasion) work miracles (I intercept the drunken
maid of honor before she blurts out her undying love for
the groom or separate bickering divorced parents). I straighten
that errant bridal train, shore up the leaning third tier
of the cake, and fix that broken heel.
Being a wedding planner requires far more than just a
flare for planning a shindig with champagne. I don't mean
to sound snooty or anything, but I believe it takes a
certain kind of person to be a wedding planner. Organized,
yes. Patient, certainly. But a planner must also possess
an unnamed quality: the ability to laugh in the face of
a looming crisis.
I won't go so far as to say I possess all that, but I
do strive for those qualities.
But then again, my ex-husband always said I had a flare
for melodrama. Oh yes, I'm divorced. Did I mention that?
Separated a year ago this month, and divorced officially
six months ago (not that I'm counting or even paying attention,
mind you, I just happen to know that it's been exactly
182 days and six hours since I signed the divorce papers).
Speaking of once-in-a-lifetime occasions, no one ever
thinks about divorce in that way (you definitely don't
have to worry about whether or not your slip is showing
when you sign those papers). I certainly didn't pay a
photographer $350 an hour to come and take my picture
at the courthouse. If I had, I would've been immortalized
forever as a red-nosed, blubbering, pathetic loser, because
I was a bit unhinged at that particular moment. I suspect
I even had a bit of H?agen-Dazs fudge on my chin, since
I ate nothing but pints and pints of the stuff the weeks
leading into the finalization of the divorce.
Not that I was sorry that I divorced Brad. (I'm not in
the least bit sorry!)
I was sad more for the fact that marriage had not turned
out the way it was supposed to (or the way I hoped it
would). It didn't help that my parents had been married
thirty-three years, and my mother took every opportunity
to remind me that no one in our family except her cousin
Louise in Houston (a notorious flirt) and I ever got divorced.
Of course, my parents are absolutely miserable, so it's
not like I had a great relationship model there. Somehow,
I resisted the very pessimistic idea that in order for
a marriage to succeed one had to be completely wretched.
Can you blame me for holding out hope for a fairy-tale
ending? I mean, for goodness' sakes, I'm a wedding planner,
so you know I've got a bit of the romantic in me (that
or I very much like a high level of stress and abuse,
but I prefer to think of myself as a romantic optimist).
I should say that perhaps I was a bit hasty to marry
Brad (and that's as far as I'll go to admitting fault
on my part). But, you have to understand, I was attending
a wedding a week, and the brides seemed to get younger
and younger, and, well, I just kept thinking more and
more: Why not me? I was twenty-six (in my head, I was
closing in on thirty), and my mother had begun hinting
that she'd like some grandkids soon, and Brad seemed to
be willing (at least with a lot of forceful persuasion
on my part; that, too, I admit perhaps was wrong of me,
but for the very first time in my life I really, really
wanted to be married).
And, had I not been required to actually live, talk,
or interact with Brad, marriage would've worked out just
fine.
I suppose I should have been suspicious of his spending
habits from the first. But when we were dating I thought
it refreshing that he had expensive taste and took care
in the way he dressed. Now, I realize that as a general
rule you should always question a man who has more shoes
in his closet than you do. But I was "in love,"
or thought I was, and he was incredibly handsome, or at
the very least very stylish, and what he lacked in brainpower
he certainly made up for in smoothness. Without a doubt,
he was a charmer.
It just so happened that he didn't like to work so much,
or pay bills, or do anything except borrow my MasterCard
and go to the mall. He had a particular affinity for all
things Kenneth Cole, especially when they were frightfully
expensive and magnificently impractical. He owned no fewer
than three leather jackets, although it's common knowledge
that here, in Austin, Texas, winter temperatures rarely
get below 40 degrees, and you're never more than two weeks
away from a 75-degree day even in the middle of January.
It didn't help our relationship, according to him, that
I was such a detail-oriented and organized person. (So
sue me if my idea of bill paying includes actually sending
the payment in on time.) Then there's the little issue
of the house payment, as in, I paid it. All of it. Every
single month. Brad would do charming things like forget
to pay the phone bill (the one responsibility I hadn't
taken away from him), and then act outraged when the phone
company shut down our line. He also held the infuriating
belief that credit-card statements were simply suggested
payments and not actual bills. "Minimum Payment"
to him was nothing more than a polite, unbinding request
for money, like a solicitation from the March of Dimes.
So, you can understand that I was glad when he finally
moved out. Relieved, really. At least he stopped eating
all the food I bought, turning up the air-conditioning
I paid for, and sleeping in the house I owned.
So I wasn't sad to see him go, but I was very disappointed
in how the marriage thing had turned out (even if, admittedly,
I hadn't been the best judge of character). Any wrong
I did, I've more than paid for it, believe me. Shattered
dreams and the fifteen thousand dollars I spent on the
ceremony and reception aside, there's the daily occurrence
of a client or an acquaintance learning that I'm divorced,
and then the inevitable exclamation: "But, you're
so young!" As if bad judgment and horrible marriages
are reserved for people aged thirty-five and over. It's
not like I worked all my life to be part of the exclusive
"Divorced Under Thirty" club. (Trust me, the
dues are way overpriced and the perks are lousy.)
You might assume I'm a bit bitter, but I like to think
I'm a bigger person than all that. Just because Brad monopolized
the three years of my life that I could actually squeeze
into a size 6 doesn't mean I can't let bygones be bygones.
I won't say it has been easy to hold back telling young,
nervous brides and terrified grooms to run for the door
while they still have their dignity, but I have managed,
so far. My boss, Gennifer Douglas, who owns the consulting
company I work for (Forever Wedding), has her own doubts
(has actually had nothing but doubts since she hired me
three years ago, given that she thinks that anybody under
the age of forty must by default be an idiot).
So. I'm sure you're curious. About my job, that is. My
"office," if you want to be so generous as to
call it that, is situated in the small breakfast room
of an old antique house. As I mentioned, our business
is located in Austin, perhaps not nearly so glamorous
or sophisticated a place as, say, New York, but a city
where women take their weddings very seriously. ("We
don't do just any weddings," G likes to say, "we
do Southern weddings.") Our office sits on an old
residential street that's slowly been converted to law
offices and shops. We're located about a half a mile from
the University of Texas campus and two miles from the
heart of downtown. On clear days, you can see an unobstructed
view of the campus tower, which is often lit up in burnt
orange (the university's unfortunate color). I once did
a wedding for a couple who were very loyal alumni, so
much so that the bride insisted her bridesmaids wear burnt
orange (this is a color, mind you, that was never fashionable,
except perhaps in the seventies). The pictures, as you
can imagine, didn't turn out very well, as the bridesmaids
all looked particularly disgruntled. Not that I blame
them.
G's office sits upstairs in what used to be the master
bedroom, which is almost but not quite out of earshot
of my little corner. G prefers bellowing down the stairs
when she needs me. We have phones, you know, but she doesn't
use them. My personal theory is that the Transfer and
Hold buttons intimidate her.
Anyhow, back to my cubbyhole. I sit behind a little writing
desk, wedged into the corner, and wispy curtains filter
the sunlight, which is actually quite bright in the mornings.
I have a computer (albeit an ancient one...predating the
invention of Windows of any kind), which isn't good for
much except making me crazy. I keep a huge appointment
book (one must if one is to keep up with a number of clients)
and a color-coded file system under which I systematically
divide our clients by color choice, season, and, of course,
name.
I did tell you I'm a bit of an organizational nazi, didn't
I? You have to be in my line of work, but I know what
you're thinking, of course. I'm one of those neat freaks,
the iron-my-pajamas, match-my-underwear-with-my-shoes
types. The kind of person who spends Saturday nights on
her knees in the bathroom, scrubbing tile with a toothbrush.
(For the record, I only did that once and you wouldn't
believe the grout buildup. I had to do it.) You're thinking
that I am probably impossible to live with, that it's
no wonder I'm divorced at twenty-nine. I mean, what did
I expect? A husband who leaves the toilet seat down? Who
doesn't drape his dirty black tube socks across the couch
and coffee table? (It so happens that Brad did leave his
dirty pairs of briefs in various corners of our apartment,
but that's not really why things didn't work out. Really.)
And for the record, it was a mutual parting. He didn't
want to go on living with me and I didn't want to go on
supporting his Tommy Hilfiger habit, and that was that.
Just because the man happened to be the last one to ever
see me in a bikini on a public beach doesn't mean I'm
bitter. Or at least, not that bitter.
What was I talking about again? Oh, yes. Neatness. I'm
not that bad, really. Honestly, I'm not. I am organized,
yes. I am neat, that's true. My closet right now is color-coded
and divided by season. My bed is made, with a chorus of
matching pillows and shams piled high. I own a handheld
carpet cleaner (and I don't even own an animal that might
poo on the carpet, making such an appliance necessary).
I admit that it bothers me when people put the toilet
paper on the roll with the sheet facing inward, and I
will fix that hanger that is hung up backward, against
the grain of all the other hangers in the department store.
But these are things I simply can't help, and I try not
to inflict them upon perfect strangers. I am not the kind
of person who will honk at you if you throw a cigarette
butt out your window. I do not think neat people are in
any way better than messy, disorganized people. I don't
pass judgment on the woman at the grocery store checkout
counter, the one pulling out crumpled coupons from her
fat, torn, overstuffed wallet.
I prefer to see my borderline obsession with neatness
as a small neurosis that can actually be a positive thing
for busy people who hire me to try to instill order in
their messy lives. Besides, being neat is really a necessity
working where I do. If I misplace a single invoice, G
is likely to make me pay for the catered salmon dinner
for five hundred. That's probably half of what I earn
in a year, since G is a little stingy with the money I
earn her. I put her annual income at somewhere in the
comfortable six figures, while mine barely has a toehold
in five. But, to be fair, she has been in this business
for twenty years and has had to survive close to three
thousand psychotic and semipsychotic brides, so she probably
deserves it (this won't stop me, however, from complaining
loudly and often).
But, I digress. And there is a point to all this, so
I'd better get back on track.
On a recent rainy and extremely humid Friday morning
I was sitting at my desk, in my tiny cubbyhole, cursing
at my computer, since it had crashed again for the third
time that morning, taking with it all the files and schedules
I had yet to save.
G took this moment to yell down the stairs something
I couldn't quite understand, forcing me to get up and
trudge up the stairs to her office. Now, G has an expansive
office with plush ivory carpet, dark blue velvet curtains,
and an old mahogany desk whose chair is so large it could
pass for a loveseat. On this gigantic desk of hers sat
one new laptop (why, I don't know, as she never takes
it anywhere or even turns it on as far as I know) and
three stacks of papers (her profits for the year, her
bridal magazines, and her pile of Cat Fancy). G looked
like a cartoon villain, complete with a white shock of
spiky hair, bloodred Revlon lips, and big, gaudy rings
on her fingers. She even owned a suitably evil white Persian
cat, Whiskers (original, I know), who loved to perch on
one of the loveseat's plump arms, lazily swinging her
fluffy tail back and forth. Whiskers and I do not get
along, as said animal has a habit of pooping underneath
my desk when she's let loose to run about the house. On
seeing me, Whiskers leapt down from her lofty perch and
slinked purposefully from the room. I resisted the urge
to step on one or another of her paws as she passed me.
"Lauren, dear," G began, and I knew I was in
trouble, because G never called me "dear" unless
there was a very ugly job to be done. "I need a favor
from you. A very old and very close friend of mine has
a daughter who is getting married in three months, and
I'm afraid their old consultant made rather a mess of
things and they need someone to help them sort things
out."
A wedding in three months?! Impossible.
G apparently didn't think so. She seemed perfectly calm
about the whole thing -- naturally, since she wouldn't
be doing any of the real work.
G continued.
"My friend is coming in an hour and I want you to
meet her. And for goodness' sakes, girl, do something
about that hair of yours!"
My hand went up to my head, where I could feel the dark
strands hanging loose from the clip I had naively thought
would hold the Medusa-like mess atop my head. I smiled
uneasily and began tugging and poking at the thick wavy
wires as I backed slowly from her office.
At that moment, the corner of the door jumped up from
nowhere and slammed into my elbow. I yelped. G only clucked
at me, raised her eyes heavenward, and shook her head.
G always had a knack for making me feel like a fourteen-year-old
with her jeans pockets stuffed with shoplifted lipsticks,
and as a result, I always bumped into things when she
watched me. It must be her critical scrutiny that makes
me so uncomfortable. I'm not usually so clumsy.
I padded down the hall rubbing my elbow (it really did
hurt) and ducked into the master bath to fix my hair.
G could hardly expect me to do so in the tiny little half
bath near my cubbyhole, now, could she?
The master bath had the best lighting, but unfortunately
also had six mirrors in a semicircle, which enabled me
to see my entire butt all at once (not exactly a sight
anyone wants or needs to see, let me assure you). I wasn't
sure how G stood the glass shrine of self-doubt (as I
liked to call it), being slightly plump in the hips, even
for a healthy fifty-five-year-old. I assumed her incredible
powers of self-actualization made such petty self-esteem
issues moot. I wished I had more of a talent for self-delusion.
But then, I haven't told you what I look like, so you
don't know. I suppose I could lie to you. Tell you that
I'm a younger, shapelier Cindy Crawford. But I'm afraid
I simply wouldn't be able to pull off that ridiculous
lie. I mean, if my life story were ever turned into a
made-for-TV movie, it's not like there would be a host
of A-list stars lining up to play me, if you know what
I mean. The best I could hope for would be Shannen Doherty.
Diane, one of my best friends, says Minnie Driver or Andie
MacDowell would be better fits, but I think she's just
being nice and lying like good friends are supposed to
do.
I'm of average height, dark-haired (jet black, really),
and very white-skinned. It's appalling how little I actually
tan (I consider wearing shorts a danger to society, since
my stark white legs have been known to blind passing motorists).
I've got big brown eyes and thick eyelashes, admittedly
my best features, a nondescript, forgettable nose, an
average mouth that's neither pouty and sexy nor sleek
and thin. I have straight teeth, thanks to two sets of
braces in adolescence that probably did more harm to my
self-esteem than a slight overbite ever would. I am, I
guess, reasonably average in weight, but not thin by any
means. I have one of those bodies that simply failed to
respond to exercise of any kind. I'm convinced I could
run a marathon and still weigh exactly the same. My muscles,
if I do have them (and that's a fact in serious contention),
don't understand the concept of self-improvement. They
staunchly refuse to tighten up, grow stronger, do anything
but sit there, all soft and formless, craving potato chips
and French fries.
And then there's my hair. My own mother called it a bird's
nest all the while I grew up, partly because she couldn't
get a comb through it despite all her best efforts. If
a bird had taken up residence there, I'm sure I wouldn't
have been able to find it, as my hair is so thick and
curly that shampooing it effectively takes an hour. Using
clips or pins is a losing battle, but one that I never
really had the heart to stop fighting.
I looked into one of the six mirrors and assessed the
hair situation. It had sprung free of the new assortment
of clips I had used to clamp it down, and was hanging
in curly handfuls here, there, and everywhere. These weren't
pretty, perfectly formed curls, mind you; these were straggly,
frizzy, half-dead snakes. I looked like a member of Poison
after a night of debauchery. I sighed, shook my hair free,
wrestled it back into a knot at the back of my neck, and
barely managed to contain it with a rubber band. "Stay,"
I told it sternly, though it never listened to me, no
matter how often I threatened to cut it all off.
Back at my desk, I found Whiskers had left me one of
her presents, a particularly large and gruesome specimen,
and I only just managed to get it cleaned up before G's
friend arrived.
Her name was Missy Davenport. I am surprised to say that
I liked her almost immediately, but not for any of the
reasons one should like a person. Ms. Davenport was abrupt,
bossy, and, technically, rude. And she wore fur, for goodness'
sakes. (Ludicrous on two counts: 1. It was June and 95
degrees outside, and 2. Hadn't wearing fur pelts long
since gone the way of leg warmers and frizzy perms?)
I didn't think anybody remotely with a conscience wore
fur, but then again, I also couldn't imagine anyone finding
the courage to douse this old lady bulldog in red paint.
She looked just like the sort who ate Greenpeacers for
breakfast.
Ms. Davenport was taller than me, stouter for sure, and
had an amber-colored, shellacked helmet atop her head,
which I figured must be hair. Her face, stern, wrinkled,
and absent of humor, reminded me strongly of the football
coach from my high school, and at any moment I thought
she might tell me to drop and do fifty.
Instead, she barked, "You must be Lauren."
"Ur, yes -- " I began, but she cut me off.
"Quit babbling, girl," she huffed, impatiently
whipping her mink stole around her large and, I must say,
manly neck. "I don't have time for empty-headed remarks."
Empty-headed? I was shocked and prepared to dislike her
immensely, when Whiskers ran into the room, catching her
eye.
"You again," she said, turning to the animal.
"I haven't forgotten what you've done to my Persian
rug you little ninny." Ms. Davenport stomped her
foot hard against the floorboards near where the cat was
standing. Whiskers let out a frightened hiss and burst
from the room as if she'd been electrocuted.
"Thanks," I said, smiling. "You probably
saved my desk from another desecration."
Ms. Davenport grunted in what I thought might have been
amusement, and then bellowed up the stairs: "When
are you going to get rid of that filthy thing, G?"
When no answer came, Ms. Davenport yelled again.
"G? Where are you? Get down here!"
G poked her head around the corner at the top of the
stairs and smiled.
"Missy! How good to see you."
"Stuff the nonsense, G. I really can't take any
more today."
I admit that what I liked most about Ms. Davenport was
how she put G and Whiskers in their respective places.
It's terrible, I know, but I have such few pleasures at
work, you must allow me this one.
"How's your daughter?" G said, changing the
subject. "Is she looking forward to her wedding?"
"Daughter? Wedding?" Ms. Davenport looked baffled
for an instant, then recovered. "G, you've got it
all mixed up again. It's not Jenna who's having the problems;
it's Darla, my niece, who's had the wedding from hell.
Lord, G, I don't know how you ever got this agency off
the ground with you mixing up everything like you do."
G flushed slightly, and Ms. Davenport let out a gruff
laugh. I thought she might lean over and punch G good-naturedly
in the shoulder, like Coach Sanders would, but she didn't.
"I'd say you're losing your memory faster than any
of us, if you had a memory to lose!"
I understood immediately that G realized it had been
a mistake to have Ms. Davenport here in my presence. It
went a long way toward undermining G's authority. G managed
to amble on uncomfortably, sending me out of the room
whenever she could, to fetch coffee or albums or some
other such nonsense, so I only managed to hear bits and
pieces of the conversation.
The problem, as Ms. Davenport explained it, was the world
was full of idiots, her niece and niece's fiancé
included. I don't know exactly why she thought they were
idiots, because I was sent out of the room to find an
old photo album, but I do know that they had hired and
fired one wedding consultant so far, for reasons I didn't
get to hear. I became suddenly wary, because people who
have a habit of firing wedding consultants aren't exactly
the ideal clients, especially if they're related to an
old and dear friend of one's boss. Needless to say, I
had a very bad feeling about the whole situation.
By the end of Ms. Davenport's visit, it was decided by
G that I would call the niece and set up lunch with her
within the week, tomorrow if possible, as time was running
out, if we were to bring about a wedding in three months.
Meanwhile, at the mention of lunch, Ms. Davenport declared
that she wanted an early one. As it was 10:30 in the morning,
I couldn't imagine where they might find a restaurant
open, but with the will of the two ladies, I was confident
they would succeed in bullying some poor waiter into tossing
them a salad.
Left alone, I decided it would be best to make the dreaded
call to Ms. Davenport's niece, Darla Tendaski. Darla,
according to Ms. Davenport, might be an idiot, but she
was a successful and very wealthy idiot, being the founder
of her own public-relations firm, one of the youngest
such executives in the nation at twenty-eight. A graduate
of Harvard, Darla came from a successful family, her father
being a U.S. senator and her mother a famous philanthropist
who had been profiled in Vanity Fair. I tried very hard
not to hate her on principle.
"Ms. Tendaski's office, how may I help you?"
A deep male voice answered her number. She had a male
secretary? I stomped down another tiny surge of envy.
I imagined him looking like a Hugo Boss model: broad chest,
tight black T-shirt, dark hair, chiseled chin, sexy tortoiseshell
glasses.
"I'm Lauren Crandell, from Forever Wedding. Ms.
Davenport suggested I call..." I didn't get to finish.
"Yes, Ms. Crandell, Ms. Tendaski has been expecting
your call. She would like to have lunch with you today,
if your schedule allows."
"Well..." I hesitated. G would be furious if
she was left out of the meeting.
"Ms. Tendaski has quite a busy week this week and
next. We have a major promotional campaign with Dell to
finish by next Friday, and I'm afraid today is the only
time she'll be able to meet with you."
"In that case..." What choice did I have? "Where
would she like to meet?"
"The Four Seasons at noon."
I pulled into the Four Seasons' driveway downtown, and
stepped out of my tiny Honda hatchback, sheepishly handing
the keys over to the valet, a clean-cut college student
who probably made more in tips in one Friday night than
I made in one week picking through bridal veils. I sighed.
Inside, the lobby was impressively intimidating, with
thick marble tables and pretty tiled floor, and it smelled
like rich-people smell, all leather and cinnamon. The
only things that made it bearable were the design attempts
at being rustic and Texan -- the chandelier made of steer
bones, the longhorn orange leather couch in the foyer.
It's impossible for the rich to be snobby while sitting
on a couch with deer antlers for feet, I decided, and
felt better about the whole place.
The hostess in the dining area smiled at me, recognizing
one of her own, I thought, as she had hair almost as wild
as mine, except hers was red with icy blond, Farrah Fawcett
streaks. I smiled back. "I'm here to meet someone,
a Ms. Tendaski."
"Oh, you mean Darla!" The hostess beamed. "Follow
me."
Hmmm. The bride-to-be was on a first-name basis with
the hostess at the Four Seasons? I didn't know what to
think about that.
The hostess led me to a table outside, in a shady part
of the patio, with a nice view of Town Lake and the perfectly
manicured lawn of the hotel.
Darla Tendaski sat with one slim, tan leg crossed over
the other, with a cell phone pressed against one ear and
her Executive Palm Pilot on her lap. I knew before I saw
her that she had to be pretty, because incredibly successful
and wealthy people are almost always better-looking than
average, but Darla was more than pretty, she was beautiful,
the kind of tall, thin, enormous-cornflower-blue-eyes
beautiful that put Gwyneth Paltrow to shame.
"The thing of it is," she was saying into her
cell phone, "is that we just can't wait that long
on the proofs, Joel." She motioned for me to sit
down, then ran a hand through her ridiculously shiny and
bouncy blond hair. She looks like she could be in the
middle of a shampoo ad, I thought bitterly.
"I'd consider it an enormous favor, Joel, if you
could get the proofs to me this afternoon," she continued,
oozing charm from every syllable. I could feel Joel melting
on the other end of the line. She broke into a warm smile
that I'm sure Joel could feel through the phone. "I
knew you could come through for me, Joel. You're the best!"
She flipped her phone closed and turned her full attention
to me, studying me without distraction for the first time.
I squirmed under the scrutiny, imagining my hair poking
out in all directions and the pallid complexion of my
skin looking wan and washed-out in the sunlight. She,
of course, wore a healthy, golden tan.
"Lauren," she said sweetly. "It's nice
to meet you. I've heard good things about you."
She extended a well-manicured hand, and shook mine firmly
and with confidence.
I smiled, feeling tongue-tied and awkward. Good-looking
people always made me think I was back in high school,
sitting at the band table in the cafeteria with the other
clarinet players, hoping no one would throw food at me.
"I heard you've had some troubles with the wedding
planning," I blurted without much grace. God, where
did that come from? If G were here, she would be rolling
her eyes at me, stumbling over herself to apologize to
Darla.
Darla, however, laughed. "Have I ever!" she
said, leaning forward. "Let me tell you one time..."
Before she could finish, her lap started ringing. I thought
it was her cell phone. It was her electronic organizer.
"Oh! I forgot about my twelve-thirty," Darla
said, peering at the tiny screen. "This thing has
saved me more times than I can remember!"
I didn't have a Palm Pilot. Not because I didn't want
one. I knew, as an organization freak, that I really ought
to have one. G, however, didn't pay me enough to buy brand-name
cereals, much less the latest gadgets.
"Basically, Lauren," Darla said, leaning forward,
"my fiancé and I need help. We've already
bungled one ceremony and, well, we need someone who will
just make things happen."
"Bungled?"
"Botched," Darla said, whipping her shiny blond
bangs from her eyes. "If I had more time I'd tell
you the whole story, but it would take a half hour alone."
I found myself staring at the perfect eyeliner line across
the top of her eyelids. How did she keep it from smudging
like everybody else? By the end of the day, I always found
dark smudges in the crease of my eyelid, and sometimes,
on a particularly humid afternoon, it would seep and run
out the corners, slipping into the laugh lines or underneath
the bottom fringe of my eyelashes.
"Do you think you can help us?" Darla said,
blinking her two perfectly lined lids.
"Of course," I said, with the sure confidence
of someone who doesn't really know any of the details.
Darla reached down below her chair and pulled out a filled-to-bursting
portable accordion file and dumped it with a clang on
the glass-top table.
"If you really think you can do this," she
said, "take a look at these files and they'll bring
you up to speed on where we are with planning. The new
date of our ceremony is June twenty-eight."
I did a quick calculation. Five weeks? Was that right?
There was no possible way I could pull this together in
little more than a month!
Darla just looked at me.
"Is that going to be a problem?" she challenged.
"Er, no. No," I said, smiling feebly. It was
so going to be a problem.
"Is there anything special...?" I trailed off,
not really sure what I was asking, and I was distracted
by the disorganized and crumpled papers seeping out of
the file. I couldn't stand to see the wrinkled corners
sticking this way and that. The urge to open the case
and start rearranging the papers right there at the lunch
table was almost overpowering.
"Oh, sure, it's all in the file. The last consultant
working on this made quite the report on my likes and
dislikes, right down to shoes the flower girl should wear."
Darla's lap rang again, but this time it was her cell
phone. "Don't say it, Joel," Darla said. "Don't
tell me what I think you're going to tell me. Stop right
there. Joel? Joel! I said stop talking. I'm coming over."
Darla snapped her cell phone shut and let out a deep
sigh. "I'm going to have to go, everything's gone
to hell. Doug, my assistant, can help you with anything
you need. Oh, and Lauren..." She paused. "Good
luck."
Why did I suddenly feel like I would very much need it?
Copyright © 2003 by Cara Lockwood
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