“Less than two weeks?” I repeated when I’d found my voice again.
Josie nodded, frowning. “Have you heard of the Bridal Outlet?”
Her friends, as if on cue, all groaned.
The Bridal Outlet. It didn’t ring a bell. “No,” I said.
“
Ruthann grimaced. “Highway robbery.”
Nell had turned her attention to the knot on her blouse. She’d undone it, and was rolling up the excess fabric, tying it again. “Lying lowlifes,” she muttered.
“It’s a bridal shop in Fort Worth—”
“Was,” Nell corrected, her eyes still cast downward.
“Right,” Josie said. “Was.”
I put one and one together and deduced that the Bridal Outlet had done a number on Josie. “Let me guess. It went out of business?”
Josie stared. “How’d you know?”
“Just a hunch,” I said, not telling her that it was far more common than people realized. Small businesses started up and failed in less time than it took to stock up on supplies at the nearest warehouse store. Bridal shops were particularly vulnerable since the bridal industry was seasonal.
Karen snapped her fingers. “It happened just like that. One day they were there, and the next day they were gone. It’s so unfair.”
So Josie probably needed me to finish up the alterations on her wedding gown. A small job, after all.
“I’m getting married in twelve days,” Josie said, her voice rising to near hysteria, “and I don’t have a dress!”
My thoughts came to a screeching halt. “What do you mean you don’t have a dress?”
“No bridal gown, no bridesmaid dresses, no nothing!” Josie clutched at the arm of the sofa. She breathed in and out through her nose. “See?” she said when she’d calmed down. “It’s like I jinxed myself when I told Loretta Mae about the wedding and said I wished you were here, but now you
They all stared expectantly at me. It felt like we were playing connect the dots, it was my turn, and a number was missing from the picture. I leaned forward. “Do
Josie grabbed my hand and angled her head toward her bridesmaids. “Make our dresses,” she said. “I’ve been all over tarnation and there isn’t a single gown that’ll work. It all has to be just perfect.” She took my hand in hers and met my eyes. “You know,” she added, “I’m marrying Nate Kincaid. Of the Hood County Kincaids?”
A lightbulb went off in my head. “Ah,” I said. And suddenly I understood perfectly.
Chapter 3
I never would have put Nate Kincaid and Josie Sandoval together as a couple. The Kincaids of Hood County were one of the oldest families in Bliss and Josie was from the wrong side of the tracks, an unfortunate fact I could relate to. I’d dated Derek Kincaid, Nate’s older brother. The breakup had been ugly.
“Show her the ring,” Ruthann said, nudging Josie’s arm.
Josie’s rosy cheeks brightened. She held her arm out, dangling her hand.
It was a platinum band with a single princess-cut diamond. Light seemed to bounce up through the cut, highlighting its brilliance. “It’s perfect.”
“Isn’t it?” Karen gazed at it from over Josie’s shoulder. “It was Nate’s grandmother’s.”
“So much better than the first one,” Nell said.
“The first one?”
Josie’s blush deepened. “Nate was trying to impress me.”
Nell tilted her head to the side. “He got this amazing diamond and had a ring made for her. Spectacular. Huge radiant-cut rock and a bunch of little diamonds in a channel setting. That ring was gorgeous—”
“But Josie didn’t like it,” Karen said, shaking her head like she still couldn’t believe it. “That diamond . . . What was it, like three carats?”
Josie looked like she wanted to disappear. “It wasn’t
“You’re just a small-town girl,” Ruthann said with a laugh. “You sure you should marry a Kincaid?”
“Very funny,” Josie said. “Of course I’m sure. Nate totally understood. His dad took it back and said not to worry.”
“This one is absolutely you,” Ruthann finished, holding up Josie’s left hand. The ring was simple, but brilliant and sparkling. Size, it turned out, didn’t matter.
The next hour passed in a blur. Three women who were out for a stroll around the town square and had heard about Buttons & Bows blew into the shop. I excused myself from Josie and her entourage to answer a slew of questions from them.
I answered as best I could, listening to each group with one ear until Lori Kincaid, Josie’s soon-to-be mother- in-law, waltzed in, another woman by her side. She turned and waved out the door, a signal to her driver that she’d be a little while, no doubt. Then she put her arm through Josie’s. They chatted quietly, and I heard her say, “Are you sure about this?”
Josie’s expression clouded. “Of course I’m sure. Harlow’s all set—”
“There’s a bridal show in Fort Worth this weekend,” Mrs. Kincaid said, interrupting her. “It might be fun to go, don’t you think? And you might find something you adore.” She turned to the bridesmaids. “Nell, dear, are you available Saturday?”
Nell stared, lips parted. She seemed at a loss for words, but finally found her voice. “Um, no. Sorry. I have plans on Saturday.”
Mrs. Kincaid gave an encouraging smile. “But we can make a day of it,” she nudged. “We could have lunch at Reata in Sundance Square. Karen, Ruthann, have you been there?”
Ruthann piped up. “I have.”
“Not me,” Karen said, “but my husband’s been plenty of times for work. He loves it.”
“Nell?” Mrs. Kincaid asked.
Nell had started riffling through the rack of ready-to-wear separates. “Don’t think so,” she said over her shoulder. “Mrs. Abernathy, what do you think of this?” she called to Mrs. Kincaid’s friend.
The woman wrinkled her nose. “Pardon me?” she said, as if she could hardly stand to utter two words to Nell.
Nell held out a dress I’d created using Escher as inspiration. It was an architectural design with an optical illusion effect. Black and white and a definite mixed bag of textiles and textures.
Mrs. Abernathy coughed, scoffed, and turned her back on Nell.
“Really, Nell,” Mrs. Kincaid scolded. She looked her up and down and frowned. “It takes time and effort to maintain an image. It’s like a house of cards. One bent corner, and the whole thing comes toppling down. Helen Abernathy is
Nell’s nostrils flared like a bull facing a matador, but Josie stepped in before anybody charged. “We can go to lunch at Reata sometime, Lori,” she said hurriedly, “but there just isn’t time before the wedding. Harlow will need us all around for fittings—”
“Fine.” Lori Kincaid’s expression turned to stone. With a stiff spine, she glided over to study the pictures on the display wall. I’d used a rectangular sheet of galvanized steel and trimmed it with a length of spectacular black beaded cording I’d found in Meemaw’s collection. Photographs of models wearing my designs, or ones I’d worked on, were held in place on the wall by tiny magnetic dots.
Mrs. Kincaid seemed to be taking in every last detail of my work, from my construction and technique to my creative flair, comparing it all to whatever high-priced Dallas designer she favored. I suddenly realized she needed to give her blessing before I could go forward with the dresses.
She turned to me a moment later, smiling. “These are quite lovely.”