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Vision in White (Bride Quartet #1)(14)

By:Nora Roberts


She picked up the pretty coffeepot, strolled to the doorway to wait for him. He had to skirt around the coffee table and, she noted, barely missed rapping his shin on it.

"Rest of the team can handle it from here," she told him. "Your sister figures since you're big brother, and standing in for the groom, she needs your input. Which, I also figure, she'll kick to the curb if it doesn't jibe with what she wants."

"Okay," he said as they walked back to the kitchen. "Can I just close my eyes and put my finger on the menu here, be done with it?"

"You could. But what you should do is tell her you think Number Three works best."

"Number Three." He laid the binder on the kitchen counter, adjusted his glasses, then read the description. "Why, particularly?"



       
         
       
        

"Because while it's very inclusive-and I get the sense she wants somebody else to deal with the fine details-it leaves room for upgrading, and gives her a number of options inside the package. You should also tell her to pick the buffet over the plated meal in that package. Because," she said before he could ask, "it's more informal, gives more opportunity for mixing. It suits her. Then, down the road-when you're out of it, she'll meet with Laurel about the cake-flavors, design, size, and all that, and Emma about the flowers. Parker handles the rest, and believe me when I tell you she handles. Right now it's all so big. Once she nails the package, seeing as she's already got the dress, the venue, me, and so on, she'll be able to think about the rest of it."

"Okay." He nodded. "Okay, so I tell her go with Number Three. It covers a lot of the details, has room for upgrading. It has a lot of options included. And she should take the buffet because it's friendlier, and encourages mixing."

"You're good."

"Absorbing facts and text is easy. If she asks me to help her decide on bouquets, I'm bolting."

"I respect that." She handed him the coffeepot. "They don't need me at this point. Take this back, say your piece. And remind her to let me know what dates work for the engagement portrait."

"You're not coming back with me?"

He looked a little panicked. She gave him a quick pat on the cheek. "Bright side. One less woman in the mix. I'll see you around, Carter."

He stood where he was a moment as she walked out, and left him with the coffee and the binder.





CHAPTER THREE



SKIPPING OUT A LITTLE EARLY GAVE MAC ENOUGH TIME TO answer calls, log in appointments, then add a selection of the latest photos to the website. Since the rest of the afternoon-what was left of it-was free, she decided to spend it doing a last pass of the New Year's Eve wedding shots.

The phone annoyed her, but she reminded herself business was business and picked up. "Mac Photography at Vows."

"Mackensie."

Mac instantly closed her eyes, mimed stabbing herself in the head. Why didn't she learn to check the readout, even on the business line? "Mom."

"You haven't answered any of my calls."

"I've been working. I told you I'd be swamped this week. Mom, I've asked you not to call on the business line."

"You answered, didn't you? Which is more than you did the other three times I called."

"Sorry." Just roll with it, Mac told herself. Rolling with it might get it over with quicker since there was no point in telling her mother she didn't have time to chat during work hours. 

"So, how was your New Year's?" she asked her mother.

There was a single catchy breath that warned Mac a storm was coming.

"I broke up with Martin, which I'd have told you if you'd bothered to answer my calls. It was a horrible night. Horrible, Mac." The catchy breath became thick with tears. "I've been devastated for days."

Martin, Martin . . . She wasn't sure she could conjure a clear picture of the current ex-boyfriend. "I'm sorry to hear that. Holiday breakups are tough, but I guess you could look at it as starting the new year with a fresh slate."

"How? You know how I loved Martin! I'm forty-two years old, alone and completely shattered."

Forty-seven, Mac corrected. But what was five years between mother and daughter? At her desk, Mac rubbed her temple. "You broke up with him, right?"

"What difference does it make? It's over. It's over, and I was crazy about him. Now I'm alone again. We had a terrible fight, and he was unreasonable and mean. He called me selfish. And overly emotional, and oh, other awful things. What else could I do but break it off? He wasn't the man I thought he was."