‘I’m leaving. You’ve done it. You should be able to recognise the signs.’
Theo wrenched open the door so hard the bell jangled on its chain and came loose, dangling down into Callie’s face. She slammed the door behind him and reached up to drop the sneck, tossing the bell from her cheek like a recalcitrant fly, only for it to swing straight back and hit her in the nose. She flapped her hand at it again but it returned to give her a sharp and painful blow on the temple.
Her eyes smarted with tears as Theo rolled his eyes at her through the glass and marched off to his battered old Saab.
Callie hesitated, staring at the screen of her iPhone before selecting Scarlet’s number. However, she knew her friend and colleague would understand.
‘Are you sure you can manage without me, Scarlet?’
‘I’m not totally useless, you know, Callie. After all, haven’t I had the most fantastic mentor a fledgling fashion designer could wish for these last three years? If you need to stay on in Yorkshire for a couple of weeks to sort out your aunt’s shop, then do it. The decision on Lilac’s wedding gown is out of our hands; there’s nothing more you can do. Anyway, I’ve got Flora, although she’s as much use as a shop-window mannequin, and there’s Lizzie.’
‘You will ring me tomorrow as soon as you hear anything, won’t you?’
‘It’s a promise. Pinky swear. Now do what you have to do. Actually, the break will do you good. You’ve just had the most devastating shock, and on top of the hours you’ve been putting in for the last three months it’s enough to drive anyone to the edge of their sanity. And, hey, I’m loving the broad Yorkshire accent, by the way, Callie. How long have you been back up there? You sound like you’ve just stepped off the set of Emmerdale!’
Callie smiled. ‘Thanks, Scarlet. You are the best friend ever. I owe you.’
‘Well, I might just extract a promise that you’ll take me along to every one of Lilac Verbois’s fittings as well as the wedding ceremony. That should repay the debt!’
‘Scarlet! We haven’t won yet.’
‘We will.’
***
Tossing back the embroidered cotton sheet and ancient woollen blankets her aunt had favoured, Callie flicked the sides of her ebony bob behind each ear and dragged her sluggish bones to the bathroom to jump-start her senses. She felt as though she had been flayed by a dominatrix’s whip.
Her heart leaden, she was aware that today held her fate in its grasp. But misery had enveloped any trace of excitement at the pending announcement, sorrow extinguishing any hopefulness. Every crevice of the tiny flat above Gingerberry Yarns where she was staying resonated with her aunt’s presence, her laughter, her jovial personality. The whole day stretched into the distance as she waited for her future path to be sealed.
Nerves tingled their insistence at her empty stomach. The only sustenance she had managed to provide it with the previous evening after her decision to stay on in Allthorpe had been a mug of Earl Grey tea; anything more solid and it would have screamed its objection. As she sagged over the kitchen table staring out of the steam-covered window, she wondered when the director of her destiny would grant her asylum from grief.
She ran her eyes over that morning’s newspaper story speculating on the identity of the designer. It listed the bookmakers’ favourite, even though the final choice would not be made public until Lilac Verbois walked down the aisle. The article displayed a selection of photographs from each of the finalists’ previous work. It was an impressive spread. The paper was obviously keen to give its readers their daily fix of the celebrity wedding fiasco that was sweeping the nation.
Everyone and their granny was talking about it. Astute in their understanding that their special day would inevitably be a media circus whether they liked it or not, Lilac and Finn had decided to embrace this fact by inviting the public’s engagement rather than railing against the offensive intrusion of their privacy. They had made themselves available for interviews, photo shoots and had even run a competition for fifty of Finn’s lucky fans to win tickets to his concert in Paris a month after the wedding.
On that crisp, clear morning, Callie did spare a thought for the other designers and their supporting teams. Today someone’s life would change for ever, if not that of their whole entourage. Of course she hoped it would be her team, but she empathised with the fact that, whoever won, it would mean others who had slogged their hearts out just as she had would be left reeling.
By four o’clock she could bear it no longer. She grabbed her iPhone and, with her hand trembling, called Scarlet.
‘Any news?’
‘Nothing.’
‘Oh, God, that means we haven’t won.’
‘There’s still another couple of hours…’
Callie’s stomach felt like it had contracted around a pineapple. Tears, always so ready to breach the surface, pressed up from the back of her throat to her eyelids, but she managed to gulp them down.
‘We worked so hard, Scarlet – all of us: you, Flora, Lizzie. But you know what? I can honestly say that was the best wedding gown design of my career so far. I couldn’t have produced anything better. So if we didn’t win, so be it. It’s back to the drawing board and I intend to work even harder to reach the pinnacle of bridal couture.’ She cursed the audible wobble that had crept into her voice. ‘I’m watching the TV as we speak and they’ve just shown Lilac’s PA, Nikki Coates, and her wedding planner, Tish Marshall, climbing into a limousine outside her house in Kensington. Don’t you think they would have called the winner before they left?’
‘Maybe you’re right, Callie. Oh, God, I’m devastated. I really thought we were going to win.’
***
‘Nikki, you’re going to have to break it to Lilac that she needs to choose another dress.’
‘No way – that’s your job. You’re the wedding planner, Tish.’
‘But you’ve been her PA for years. She’s going to take the bad news better from you.’
‘Are you absolutely sure there was no documentation with the gown she selected? Nothing at all?’
‘Certain.’
‘What kind of high-end bridal designer goes to the trouble of painstakingly creating such an exquisite sculpture of silk and pearls only to submit their masterpiece without their contact details?’
‘And what kind of actress just has to pick their dream dress from one of the gowns their wedding planner can’t supply?’
‘What do you mean “one of the gowns”? There was more than one?’
‘Two of the twenty that were submitted had no paperwork and the documents of one were illegible.’
Nikki watched from her desk as Tish, kneeling at the coffee table, shoved the scattered papers into a box file and cringed at the girl’s lack of orderliness. Whilst her haphazard attention to detail was unlikely to have been the cause of their current predicament, she still despaired of the wedding arrangements being perfect. Tish’s chaotic approach to life also extended to her appearance, yet Nikki had to admit she suited the tousled, just-got-out-of-bed blonde curls and not-quite-perfectly-applied blue eyeliner.
‘What about asking Lilac to go with her second choice?’