Mother of the Bride

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Mother of the Bride Page 1

by Lynn Michaels




  “You’ve forgotten what it’s like to be young and in lust.”

  “Bebe and Aldo are in love,” Cydney said hotly, glaring at Angus. “I’m not sure you know the difference.”

  “Between love and lust? Sure I do. I can prove it right here.”

  “Can you?” She raised an eyebrow. “I’d like to see that.”

  “Then keep your eyes open,” he said, and kissed her.

  Hard and swift, like he’d been aching to all night, expecting her to push him away and ready to release her the second she did, but her lips parted—stunning him and thrilling him—drawing him deep into the sweetness of her mouth. Gus groaned and lifted her, pressing himself between her legs, and swung her onto the counter….

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  An Ivy Book

  Published by The Random House Publishing Group

  Copyright © 2002 by Lynne Smith

  Excerpt from Star Struck by Lynn Michaels copyright © 2002 by

  Lynne Smith

  All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. Published in the United States by The Random House Publishing Group, a division of Random House, Inc., New York.

  Ivy Books and colophon are trademarks of Random House, Inc.

  www.ballantinebooks.com

  eISBN: 978-0-307-56602-7

  v3.0_r1

  Contents

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Chapter Twenty-One

  Chapter Twenty-Two

  Chapter Twenty-Three

  Chapter Twenty-Four

  Chapter Twenty-Five

  Chapter Twenty-Six

  Chapter Twenty-Seven

  Chapter Twenty-Eight

  Chapter Twenty-Nine

  Chapter Thirty

  Epilogue

  With love for John and Teri Lea Chandler Purcell,

  and Mother Jean Chandler

  chapter

  one

  The worst day of Cydney Parrish’s life was a Monday. The last Monday in October. It began when she woke with a start at 7:12 A.M. Her clock radio should have wakened her at six, but the alarm was set on P.M. instead of A.M. She’d forgotten to check it at 2 A.M. Sunday when she turned the clocks back an hour from daylight savings time.

  Cydney was particular about things like that. Obsessive, her sister Gwen said, but if the Kansas City Star said set your clocks at 2 A.M., Cydney set her clocks at 2 A.M. Who cares when you set the damn clock, Gwen argued, so long as you set it? Cydney cared, that’s who, and Cydney sprang forward and fell back exactly at 2 A.M. every April and October.

  When she saw how late it was, she wanted to fall back under the covers, but she sprang forward—into the shower, into her clothes, into her office to grab her briefcase, her portfolio and her camera case. She stopped just long enough to pound on her niece Bebe’s bedroom door and yell at her to get moving or she’d miss her first class.

  Cydney was late for her first appointment. She dropped into a chair in the lobby of Stellar Publications, one of her biggest and best accounts, breathless and annoyed. She was always on time, always. Unlike Gwen, whose tardiness on photo shoots was legendary.

  “They can’t start without me,” she’d say. “I’ve got the camera.”

  And an ego to match her genius with a 35mm Nikon in her hands. Gwen Parrish had two Pulitzer Prizes. Cydney had a mortgage and Bebe, Gwen’s nineteen-year-old daughter from her first marriage. And spider veins, she thought sourly, rubbing the thready little red spot she’d found on the back of her knee in the shower. She hoped it was just a bruise. Thirty-two was too young for spider veins.

  It was also too young to be hit on by Wendell Pickering, art director of Bloom and Bulb magazine, a lanky man with thinning hair and pale eyes. He made the pass once he finished nitpicking the six-page spread on perennial borders Cydney had stayed up until 3 A.M. to finish.

  “I’m afraid I can’t approve this,” he said. “I might be able to over dinner this evening if you think you can make the corrections by seven-thirty.”

  Then he smiled and laid his hand on her tush.

  It was now 2:30 in the afternoon. Cydney had a parking ticket in her purse, a headache and no Tylenol, a notebook computer with a blown graphics card that thought it was an Etch A Sketch, a roll of film a client had accidentally exposed and would have to be reshot, a broken heel on her best pumps, and now a man with a neck like a chicken who actually thought she’d go out with him to salvage a $2500 photo layout.

  “I’m busy tonight, Wendell,” Cydney said in her iciest voice. Sticking my head in the oven, she thought. “Now take your hand off me while you still can.”

  He did. Quicker than you can say “sexual harassment.”

  Cydney shoved the layout in her portfolio, told Pickering she’d deliver the corrections to his secretary in the morning and flapped out of Bloom and Bulb in the old pair of loafers she’d dug out of the back of her blue Jeep Cherokee when she broke her heel. The loose nail in the left sole scraped the sidewalk and made her teeth clench as she slid behind the wheel and slammed the door hard enough to rock the truck.

  Gwen was in Moscow interviewing Vladimir Putin for Newsweek. She was in Kansas City, Missouri, fending off Wendell Pickering. What was wrong with this picture?

  I’m glad you asked, said the little voice that occasionally made itself heard from the depths of her psyche. I’ve been waiting for years to tell you.

  “It’s a rhetorical question,” Cydney muttered, rubbing the throbbing bridge of her nose. “I love my life.”

  And she did. She really did. She loved her family and she was proud of Sunflower Photo, the freelance photography and graphics studio she’d built without any help from Gwen or their parents. It was a rotten day, that’s all. A thoroughly rotten day. Throwing in the towel wasn’t in Cydney’s nature, but she’d simply had enough. She dug her cell phone out of her briefcase, postponed her last two appointments of the day till Tuesday, and drove to the grocery store.

  In the produce aisle she slipped on a grape and wrenched her left ankle. She didn’t realize she was out of checks and had only twenty bucks in her wallet—and no credit or ATM cards—until the checker rang up $34.17. The people in line behind her shifted and muttered while she gave back fourteen dollars and seventeen cents’ worth of stuff.

  “I’m going home.” Cydney gritted her teeth as she limped the groceries out to her truck. “I’m going home and I’m going to scream.”

  And that’s exactly what she did, once she dumped the two paper sacks on the kitchen table, walked down the hall, opened Bebe’s door and saw her niece naked on the bed underneath a young man with long blond hair. Bebe screamed, too. So did the young man on top of her.


  Cydney slammed the door and went back to the kitchen, cheeks burning, hands shaking, brain reeling. She put the milk away, took a dozen eggs out of a sack and dropped them when Bebe came pelting through the doorway wrapped in the sheet that moments before had been tangled around her ankles. Her throat was flushed, her face shining as she thrust the diamond ring flashing on the third finger of her left hand in Cydney’s face.

  “Look, Uncle Cyd!” she squealed. “I’m engaged!”

  Egg yolk dripped into Cydney’s shoes. Dread dripped into her heart. Sweet little Bebe, who didn’t have sense enough to think her way halfway around a BB, was engaged.

  Her niece’s smile faded and she bit her lip. “You don’t look happy for me, Uncle Cyd.”

  “This isn’t a good time to call me Uncle Cyd,” Cydney warned. “This is a good time to call me long distance.”

  “Because you caught us in bed?” Bebe thrust her hands on her hips. Wisps of red hair worked loose from her long single braid and curled around her face. “Really, Aunt Cydney. Aldo and I are engaged! I called Mother in Moscow. She is delighted. She told us to celebrate our love!”

  “Of course she did! She’s ten thousand miles away! She doesn’t have to deal with this!” Cydney clapped her hand over her mouth and the frustrated “I do!” she wanted to shriek at Bebe. Instead she drew a breath and forced herself to smile. “I’m sorry, Bebe. I’ve had a bad day, that’s all.” She held out her arms. “C’mere, Red. I’m happy for you.”

  I think, Cydney thought, until an awful possibility struck her. “You don’t have to get married, do you?”

  “No, Uncle Cyd.” Bebe laughed and pulled out of her embrace. “We want to get married.”

  “For God’s sake, why?”

  “That’s what Grampa Fletch said.”

  “You called him, too?” Wonderful, Cydney thought. A long distance call to her father in Cannes to add to the one to Gwen in Moscow. “Did you call Gramma George?”

  Bebe bit her lip and lowered her big brown eyes. “Uh—no.”

  Of course not. Georgette Parrish, Cydney and Gwen’s mother and Fletcher Parrish’s first wife, was a local call.

  “I’ll do it,” Cydney said. As usual, she thought, lifting her right foot out of a pool of egg yolk. “I suggest you and— what’s his name?”

  “Aldo.” Bebe beamed. “Aldo Munroe.”

  “Right. Aldo.” The name Munroe rang a bell, but Cydney was too rattled to think why. She kicked off her loafer and made a face at the egg dripping off her stockinged toes. “You and Aldo get dressed and we’ll talk.”

  “Sure thing.” Bebe turned to leave, but spun back, her eyes wide. “Oh, I almost forgot! Guess what? Mother is getting married, too!”

  “I’ll call a press conference,” Cydney shot back, ripping a paper towel off the roll and stuffing it in her shoe.

  “That’s really sweet of you, Uncle Cyd, but Mother said she’d do it herself when she gets home from Moscow.”

  And away Bebe went, twirling out of the kitchen like a lithe young goddess. She had Gwen’s innate grace and her grandfather’s knack for looking drop-dead delicious in anything. Or nothing.

  On the inside of Bebe’s closet door hung a blowup of the seminude Playgirl centerfold that Cydney and Gwen’s father, Fletcher Parrish, New York Times best-selling author of umpteen-jillion spy novels, had posed for when Bebe was two years old. He’d done it as a birthday surprise for his Nymphet Wife Number Three. Gwen had taken the photo and given the poster to Bebe on her fourteenth birthday. Cydney thought Bebe hanging the poster in her room—even on the inside of the closet door—was creepy. Bebe thought it was a hoot.

  So why was she surprised, Cydney wondered, that she’d come home in the middle of the day and found Bebe in bed with a boy? Despite Gwen’s claim that she wanted a solid and stable upbringing for her daughter, she’d spent the last fifteen years that Bebe had been in Georgette and Cydney’s care undermining the values she said she wanted for her child. The poster, the birth control pills when Bebe was sixteen—for which Cydney was suddenly grateful—the red Mustang convertible, whirlwind shopping sprees to New York to buy designer school clothes.

  Why, indeed, was Cydney surprised? And why was she standing in a puddle of broken eggs watching the peppermint stick ice cream she’d bought melt through the bottom of the grocery sack and drip off the edge of the table?

  Because Gwen was getting married, that’s why—for the fifth time—and because Wendell Pickering was the best offer Cydney had had since the last time Gwen had called a press conference to tell the world she was getting married.

  “Gwen is so much like Fletch,” Georgette was fond of saying. “So focused and yet so carefree and impetuous. And what charisma!”

  What horse-hockey, Cydney’s little voice said, but she ignored it and shoved the half-melted ice cream into the freezer.

  Gwen and Fletcher Parrish were driven and ruthless— People magazine said so—their stunning successes and stellar careers nothing more than overcompensation for failed personal lives. Cydney had been so incensed by People’s Father’s Day cover story—”Like Father, Like Daughter”—that she’d canceled her subscription.

  She’d also sent a blistering letter to People’s mail column. She was Fletcher Parrish’s daughter, too, and she wasn’t a failed anything. She owned her own home and her own business, had lots of friends and a full social life. So what if she wasn’t rich and famous like her sister Gwen? What did wealth have to do with success?

  “Oh, nothing much, honey,” her father said to Cydney on the phone when he’d read her letter to the magazine. “Just everything.” And then he’d laughed.

  “How many times, Cydney,” Georgette said, “have I told you to look before you leap?”

  “If I’d known you felt so left out,” Gwen said, “I would have insisted that you be included in the article.”

  Well why wasn’t If her little voice had demanded, but not Cydney. She’d been too mortified to admit how hurt she’d felt at being left out. Bebe was included. After all, she was Gwen Parrish’s daughter. So was Georgette, who was Gwen’s mother and a nationally syndicated etiquette columnist ranked right up there with Miss Manners. People had even sent a photographer.

  The thing that hurt the most, besides the photographer asking Cydney to drive him to the airport, was that her family didn’t understand about the letter. Her point was that fame and money were only two tiny little inches on the ruler of success. There were lots of other inches, like self-reliance and self-respect, being a giver and not just a taker. Like being loved for your own sake, not for who or what you are.

  Cydney wiped the last of the eggshells off the floor and threw the paper towel away. While she washed her hands, she gazed out the window at the big maple tree shedding vivid red leaves over the brick patio.

  “I think I’ll go outside,” she said, “come back in and try that screaming thing again.”

  Go ahead, her little voice said, but it won’t change a thing.

  chapter

  two

  And it didn’t. Things were just as bad when Cydney went back into the house and found Bebe’s beloved on the white wall phone in the kitchen. Long distance, naturally, which Bebe indicated by slowly drawing her arms wide apart.

  She opened her mouth to try that screaming thing again, but snapped it shut when Aldo said: “C’mon, Uncle Angus. Cut me some slack.”

  The bell she’d heard earlier rang again in Cydney’s head. Clanged and banged and so did her heart. Uncle Angus couldn’t possibly be Angus Munroe, could he? World-famous mystery author, who Cydney wanted to be when she grew up? Once Bebe was through college and she finally had time to finish the book she’d been writing for—Gosh, how long was it? Three years?

  Five, her little voice said, but who’s keeping track?

  “Yes, I am old enough to know what I’m doing,” Aldo said hotly. “I turned twenty-one yesterday, Uncle Gus.”

  Surely there had to be another Angus Munroe in the wor
ld to be this long, tall drink of water’s Uncle Gus. And if Aldo was twenty-one, then Bebe was a rocket scientist. His hair was nearly as long as hers, too, a shoulder-length palomino mane. He made a face at whatever his Uncle Gus was saying, caught Cydney sizing him up and turned as red as the maple tree outside the window.

  “Twelve thousand dollars is not too much to spend on an engagement ring,” he said angrily. “Just wait till you meet Bebe. She’s worth her weight in diamonds.”

  Aldo caught Bebe’s left hand, where the rock under discussion— big enough to make Liz Taylor drool—flashed like a laser. He gave his intended a look so overbrimming with love that Cydney felt a lump swell in her throat—and any doubts she had about Bebe marrying this boy vanish.

  This was it. This was being loved for your own sake, not for who or what you are. Cydney couldn’t imagine what it must feel like to be the object of such open adoration. She just hoped she’d get a chance to find out in her lifetime.

  But not, her little voice said, with Wendell Pickering.

  “Amen,” Cydney agreed, unaware that she’d said it out loud until Bebe blinked at her and said, “What?”

  “I said—” Cydney thought fast, bent her left wrist and tapped the face of her watch “—ahem.”

  Bebe whispered in Aldo’s ear. In mid okay-okay nod, his jaw clenched and his face flamed again.

  “No, Uncle Gus. I will not listen to the benefit of your experience. Why not? Because you don’t have any! You’ve never been married and you haven’t stuck your nose out of Crooked Possum in ten years except to—” Aldo broke off and rolled his eyes. “Oh, pardon me. Eight years.”

 

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