piece in to give it more width. As I finished the top of the triangle by hand, my mind went over what Mrs. James had said. She’d made it clear. I was to go to the Lafayette sisters, masters of all things Margaret Moffette Lea, and get the lowdown on what still needed to be done before Bliss’s big night. Despite their Hatfield and McCoy feud over the changing of the guard, they were the only ones she trusted to get all of the details right. Event planning fell well outside my realm of expertise, but Mrs. James was paying me to take over for her—in case she was arrested—and the Margaret Moffette Lea Pageant and Ball must go on, with or without its chairwoman.
I had to believe Mrs. James was innocent. And I did. No matter the rift she and my grandmother might have had, or her sharp personality, I liked the woman.
Which meant a powwow with Fern and Trudy Lafayette.
Meemaw’s old Ford chugged down State Street, a stream of black exhaust in its wake. I peered in the rearview mirror at my contribution to poor air quality, then at the stickers in the lower left corner of the windshield. Both the registration and inspections were up to date, which was miraculous. I suspected that next time around— eight months from now—the truck might not be so lucky and I’d be back to walking. Which wouldn’t be a bad thing. I’d spent years hoofing my way around Manhattan, which also served to keep my weight down, but since I’d been back home and the walking had tapered off, I’d plumped up a tiny bit. Not so anyone but me would notice, but still.
I dropped off the skirt I’d finished altering before heading to the south side of town. The houses were sturdy brick structures without much flair or character. Meemaw’s old farmhouse oozed charm, but the Lafayette sisters’ pink brick box sat on the corner of the street looking like a bottle of Pepto-Bismol had been poured over it. Birds- of-paradise and rounded boxwoods adorned the half-moon planters on either corner of the driveway, though the narrow strips of dirt alongside the walkway to the door sat unplanted.
“I’m sure they won’t want to talk to me,” I’d told Mrs. James about Fern and Trudy Lafayette, not wanting to face the dethroned queens of the Margarets. They’d had their hands in the pageant since they’d first moved from West Texas and participated in it sixty-some-odd years ago. They’d been Margarets first, and then, when it became clear to them that getting married and having their own daughters was not in their futures, they’d taken over the pageant. Every Bliss debutante became their daughter by default. They’d been in charge of the whole kit and caboodle, from the planning to the dressmaking—until this year when Trudy’s headaches had become almost debilitating. Everyone said she seemed better, but the festival committee had stepped in and suggested Zinnia James take over this year’s pageant. Now me? I didn’t think they’d welcome me with open arms.
“Those two old mockingbirds are harmless,” she’d said, brushing away my concern.
I wasn’t so sure. I’d taken three commissions from them this pageant season—four, if you counted Gracie— which I’d heard had ruffled their feathers pretty good. And after the blow of the Margaret Society stripping them of their control—ageism existed, even in Texas—I was pretty sure they weren’t going to want to talk to me.
After my third pass of their house, there was nothing to do but buck up and park. I’d worn coral capris, a funky patterned T-shirt with a flower design that looked a lot like one of the birds-of-paradise in the yard, and wedge sandals—none of which I’d made. Better not to flaunt my dressmaking skills. I needed the Lafayette sisters to make sure the pageant happened as scheduled. Alienation wouldn’t be a good thing.
But as I walked up the plain cement walkway, a prickly sensation crept up the back of my neck—like I was being watched. As if on cue, the lace curtains in the window to the right of the front door fluttered and I caught a glimpse of a face withdrawing. I raised my hand to knock, my knuckles just barely touching the fake wood door when it swung inward, nearly knocking me off my feet.
“Honey, I’m so sorry ’bout that,” a low-pitched voice said. “I sure didn’t mean to catch you off guard.”
“It’s okay. No problem.” I straightened up to my full height and smiled—right into the eyes of the most Southern-looking woman I’d seen in a good, long while. More Southern, even, than Mrs. James. She was eighty if she was a day, but she carried her years well. She had perfect posture, her shoulders down and back, as if she practiced walking around with a book balanced on the top of her head. A strand of pearls perfectly accented her long, elegant neck. Despite the weight of the sticky July heat, she wore a lightweight, pale pink cardigan that complemented a floral skirt that hit midshin. The look was topped off with practical beige rubber-soled shoes.
While she wasn’t dainty, not by any stretch of the imagination, she wasn’t overly sturdy, either. Her short Jamie Lee Curtis hair intensified her stern demeanor. I could see how she might’ve intimidated men and why she’d never snagged herself a husband. As the thought circled around me, an image passed through my mind, like a blip from the future. She was… me… in forty or fifty years.
“Fern,” another voice, this one a bit higher pitched, called, “who’s that at the door?”
“She hasn’t given her name yet, Trudy,” the woman in front of me said over her shoulder. She turned back to me, giving me a good once-over. “You don’t look like you’re selling nothin’.” Like any good Southerner, she dropped the “g” off the end of the word—something I’d worked hard to stop doing while living in New York.
“No, ma’am, I’m not.”
The other Lafayette sister shuffled up behind the first. She wore her hair in an elaborate updo, had thick spidery eyelashes that had to be fake, wore a pair of jeggings with a long teal and black tunic, and had the same face as her sister, although hers was preserved quite a bit better. More moisturizer as a young woman, or wider- brimmed sun hats. “Let the girl in, why don’t you?” Trudy said.
I liked that idea. Preferably before they figured out who I was and shooed me off their property for jumping into their seamstress territory.
Fern held the door open for me and I passed through, following Trudy down the entry hall and into the linoleum-floored, Formica-countered kitchen. “Can I offer you some sweet tea?”
I accepted and a minute later they’d ushered me to one of the strange modular lounge sofas in the living room. Just like the sisters, the couches were a matching set. They were upholstered in pink silk, the curved and tufted pieces fitting together with a round occasional table situated between them. Hers and hers. I remembered the sisters around town when I was a child, but couldn’t remember ever seeing them up close and personal. They were one of a kind—the sisters, and the furniture. I sat on one sofa, crossing my legs. They sat side by side opposite me, looking like silver-haired, aged Barbie dolls.
“I guess I should introduce myself,” I began. “I’m Harlow Cassidy.”
Their reaction was instantaneous and synchronized. Sharply inhaled gasps, a pointed look at each other, and chins angling toward me. Trudy recovered her smile before Fern did. “Well now. Isn’t this somethin’, having you right here. We knew your great-grandmother, of course,” she said, her drawl as thick as a pot of baked beans.
“I think everyone in town knew Loretta Mae,” I offered, relieved they hadn’t hauled me off my feet and kicked me to the curb. That wouldn’t have been very Southern of them, but I’d feared it could happen just the same.
“What can we do for you?” Fern asked. Her voice didn’t have the same lightness her sister’s did. The fact that they were twins did not mean they had the same perspective or experiences.
I shifted on the furniture, uncrossing then recrossing my legs in the other direction. “Mrs. James… Zinnia James… said I should come speak with you.”Once again, their reaction was simultaneous, but this time it was Fern who spoke, and her anger was clear. “Did she, now?”
“Yes, ma’am. She asked me to… to help her with the pageant. I know how important it is—”
Their expressions softened like butter that’s been sitting out for a spell. I clasped my hands together and continued. “Go see the Lafayette sisters, Mrs. James told me. They know everything there is to know about the pageant and ball. She’s just so… busy,” I added, praying that Mrs. James was passing in and out of the sheriff’s office and not staying for an extended visit. “So here I am.”
The laugh lines around Trudy’s eyes grew even softer, but Fern’s tightened. “Zinnia said that?” they both asked at the same time, but oddly, the emphasis was completely different. Trudy was surprised and sounded pleased with the possibility that Mrs. James had sent me their way, but Fern wasn’t so willing to let bygones be bygones.
I nodded. “She did. She said she’s really sorry you haven’t been involved in the pageant. She said that was a mistake.” I made up that part, but figured it was true on some level, and I knew it was what the Lafayette sisters needed to hear.
They both sat, waiting, so I continued. “I have a few questions. Do you mind?” I took a button-adorned lavender clothbound journal from my purse and flipped it open. “The stage is set—”
“I heard tell that it was a runway,” Fern snapped, “not a stage.”
“It