Avril Tremayne

Here Comes the Bridesmaid


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too much.

      With a repressed shudder he brought his mind back to the present and ran his eyes down the list.

      Budget

      Wedding Party

      Master of Ceremonies

      Venue

      Menu

      Alcohol

      Guest List

      Invitations

      Flowers

      Lighting

      Music

      Cake

      Clothing

      Shoes

      Hair and Make-up

      What the hell...? Why did that need a subheading?

      Gift Registry

      Photographer

      Videographer

      Wedding Favours

      Order of Proceedings

      Toasts and Speeches

      Printing

      Seating Plan

      Each item was bullet-pointed with a little box that could be ticked, and accompanied by questions, comments and suggestions.

      Good thing she wasn’t into lists!

      Sunshine must have noticed the stunned look on Leo’s face, because she asked, ‘Have I screwed it up?’

      ‘This is...’ he started, but words actually failed him.

      ‘Exciting?’ Sunshine suggested, looking as if she were about to celebrate Christmas, her birthday and the wedding all at once.

      ‘Comprehensive,’ Leo corrected. He ran a hand across his scalp. Her eyes followed his hand. She was frowning suddenly. He wondered what was going through her mind.

      She opened her mouth. Closed it. Opened it. Closed it. Sighed.

      Then, ‘So!’ she said. ‘The venue is the first thing. Because it’s bound to be tricky, securing somewhere wonderful with only two months’ notice.’

      ‘It may have escaped your notice, but I am a restaurateur,’ Leo said. ‘I have venues. I am venues. And menus. And booze.’

      Sunshine seemed startled. ‘Oh. I just assumed we’d be too late to get a large group booked into one of your places. That’s why I’ve suggested somewhere like the hotel on—’

      ‘My brother is not celebrating his marriage in a hotel.’

      ‘Okay. Well, there’s that lovely place that used to be a stately home in—’

      ‘Or in an old house.’

      ‘Then perhaps the new convention space—which is not as tragic as it sounds. In fact it has a—’

      He slammed his hand on the table. ‘No!’ He stopped, reined in the spurt of annoyance. ‘No.’ Better. Calmer. ‘We have a perfectly...’ Reaching, reaching... ‘Perfectly perfect...’ hmm, thesaurus required ‘...private room in this restaurant.’

      The only sign that Sunshine had noted his ill-tempered hand-banging incoherence was a tiny twitch at one side of her mouth. He feared—he really feared—she was trying not to laugh.

      ‘Which seats...?’ she asked, her head on one side like a bird, with every indication of deep interest.

      ‘Seats?’

      ‘How many people does the private room seat?’

      ‘Twenty-five.’

      Sunshine crossed her arms—seemingly unaware of how she was framing her rather spectacular breasts—and looked at him, apologetic. ‘See? Me and lists! I got the order wrong. “Guest List” should have come before “Venue”. So! Let’s take a step back. I have Jon’s invitation list. Do you have Caleb’s?’

      ‘It’s coming today some time.’

      ‘Because there are seventy-five people on our side.’

      He stared. ‘You are not serious.’

      ‘I assure you, I am. And that’s with a savage cull.’ She shuddered theatrically as she uncrossed her arms. ‘Savage.’

      ‘Caleb wants an intimate dinner.’

      ‘That’s not my understanding, but I’ll tell you what—you check with Caleb overnight, and we can reconvene tomorrow.’

      His eyes narrowed. ‘I hate it when people try to soothe me.’

      Sunshine bit her lip. ‘Oh, dear, and I was trying to sound like I was keeping an open mind. But...okay. I’ll tell you straight out, if you prefer: there is no way this is going to be a dinner for twenty-five people. And there’s no use getting in a snit about it—it’s just the way it is.’

      ‘I’m not in a snit.’

      ‘If you say so.’

      ‘I do. Say so.’

      ‘All right.’

      ‘I’m not.’

      ‘All right.’

      Another mouth-twitch. She was definitely trying not to laugh.

      And Leo had had enough. ‘I have to go,’ he said, despite not being needed in the kitchen for fifteen minutes.

      ‘Yes, I can see everything’s getting under way here. I love the buzz of restaurants. Jon and I used to try a new restaurant every other week. I miss him. He’s so...so important to me.’ Her voice wobbled the merest fraction as she added the last bit.

      Uh-oh, tears. Leo didn’t do tears. He felt himself shrink back. Wanted to run.

      But her face morphed into something tortured, right before his eyes, and he froze. It was as if a layer had been ripped off her in one half-second. Her eyes were strained and yet also vacant, as if she were seeing...emptiness. Her lips trembled. Her skin looked ashen. Every trace of happiness was obliterated. The contrast with her normal exuberance was dramatic—almost painful to see.

      All this because her best friend had moved overseas and she missed him?

      Huh?

      Leo wanted to touch her. Pat her hand or...something. Say...something. He who never touched, never comforted, because he didn’t know how. His hands fisted uselessly.

      Then Sunshine blinked. Shook her head—tiny, tiny movement. And in another half-second everything clicked back to normal and Leo breathed a silent sigh of relief.

      ‘Um...’ he said. Yep, he was super-articulate today.

      But she was smiling blindingly, as though that moment had never happened, so he did the sensible thing and shut up.

      ‘We haven’t got far down the list,’ she said. ‘What about if I shortcircuit a few things? You know, invitations, et cetera.’

      ‘What do you mean, “shortcircuit”? And “et cetera”?’ he asked, still a little shaken. Everything about her was throwing him off kilter.

      ‘I’ll get some options together for us to look over tomorrow. Nothing scary!’

      She was completely back to normal. Full-strength perky. Better than the tragic facemask she’d freaked him out with—but only marginally. Leo didn’t like perky. And if he were being made to board Sunshine Smart’s good ship Lollipop for this wedding he would be the one at the tiller.

      ‘I thought we’d be emailing the invitations,’ he said.

      She gave him what could only be termed a pitying smile. ‘Did you?’

      That