Casa Dracula 3 - The Bride Of Casa Dracula (24 page)

BOOK: Casa Dracula 3 - The Bride Of Casa Dracula
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Once while we were at Sissy’s, waiting for the designer to finish a phone call, Nancy asked if my father would be giving me away.

“My father gave me away to my grandmother when I was a baby. He doesn’t need to do it again.” I was wearing my gown and holding my arms straight out so I wouldn’t be pricked by the pins Sissy had just placed for alterations.

“Don’t be Milacious. It won’t look right if you just walk down the aisle on your own.”

“We shouldn’t count on him. It’s likely my parents won’t even show up.”

“Of course they’ll show up. Your mother Regina will want to meet Orestes because he’s a plastic surgeon.”

“Oswald. Do you know that Cornelia, Ian’s sister, was visiting and she asked what ‘procedures’ I was going to have done before the wedding? The nerve.”

Nancy shrugged. “If I was marrying him, I’d have the works-except for my nose, which is perfect, and my boobies, which are wonderfully perky, don’t you think?”

I agreed that they were perky.

“Then there’s maintenance, not letting everything slide downward, and then your husband is off with one of his associates for business meetings and comes home looking too satisfied with himself.”

“Oswald might be expanding his firm. There’s a woman doctor who wants to join. Her name is Vidalia.”

“Like the onions?” Nancy blew her bangs out of her eyes. “I would be careful if I were you.”

“According to him, she wants to meet me. We’re having dinner as soon as I get all this stuff done here.”

“They always want to meet the wife or girlfriend. They like to suss out the competition and figure out their angle of attack.”

“Nancy, is everything okay with you and Todd?”

“Of course. Don’t forget I have a pre-nup guaranteeing my eternal bliss-in one form or another. What about you? Have you met with a lawyer yet?”

“I don’t own anything but your old pink sofa, Nancy.”

“You have the loft. You have your health and youth and you’ve allowed him exclusive access to your bodacious tatas and your fleshtastic booty. You’ve supported him in his career. I’ll give you the name of my attorney. You’ll totally heart her. She’s a barracuda in Armani.”

“Thanks, but no thanks.”

“I’ll give you her name anyway.”

“Nancy, I hope that Todd realizes how talented you are at this event-planning thing.”

“Toad doesn’t care what I do, which is fine by me.”

“I care what you do, and you’re doing a fabulous job.”

She was doing such a fabulous job that all I really had to worry about was the RSVPs, which Oswald was sending to me, and the hotel arrangements at the coastal resort town. We’d reserved a block of rooms and booked a restaurant for the Friday evening rehearsal dinner and Sunday brunch. When the hotel’s wedding coordinator called me, I hoped it wasn’t bad news and asked, “Is anything wrong with our reservations?”

“Everything is fine!” she said. “I was calling to offer you a complimentary night here to tour the rooms and finalize arrangements.”

“Really? That would be wonderful!”

I immediately called Oswald.

“That’s awfully generous of them, but I can’t get away,” he said. “Yes, book the reservation for seven-thirty.”

“What do you mean, you can’t go, and book the reservation?”

“Sorry, I was talking to someone else. I’m having dinner with Vidalia tonight to talk business.”

“Another dinner with her? I thought most business is conducted at lunch meetings.”

“Yes, another dinner. It will be a very erotic encounter. We’re going for Chinese and meeting with Sam and her attorney.”

“Have you gotten that far already?”

“I know it’s happening fast, but she wants to start soon, and the more I think about it, the more I know it’s the right thing to do for my business. And for us.”

I had the disturbing sensation that I was living in the bizarro version of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. I’d hooked up with wild Mr. Hyde, and now career-driven, well-mannered Dr. Jekyll was taking over his body more and more often. But if I could be happy for Mercedes, I could be happy for Oswald. “That’s great, Oz. I really hope it works out.”

“Thanks, babe. You go and have fun. The hotel’s a little more comfortable than your loft, and there are a lot of good restaurants and boutiques around. Buy yourself a few new outfits on me. Why don’t you take one of your girlfriends and have a girls’ vacation?”

nineteen

one-way ticket to hell, please

N ancy and Mercedes couldn’t come and even my slacker pals were unavailable on such short notice. The next morning, I packed the green zebra case, including the wedding tunics so I could work on the embroidery on my solitary evening, and drove south.

I passed the congested urban areas, then the generic sprawl of surburbia, and finally drove along a highway that ran parallel to the scrub bushes and grasses of the coast. The drive took me in and out of warm weather and ocean coolness.

I’d called the winery where our wedding would be held, and the owners invited me to come for lunch, so now I navigated a circuitous route down into the valley of a beautiful mountain range. The west side of the range was close enough to the ocean for pines, redwoods, and firs, but madrones and chaparral grew on the warmer, protected eastern slopes.

A narrow road led through a valley of vineyards. Real operations for the winery had been moved to a new facility, and I reached the old stucco building that was now rented out for events. I got out of my truck, inhaling the scent of ripening fruit and the yeasty, fecund smell of old fermentation. Oswald and I had discovered this place when we’d had time for road trips.

The friendly owners gave me a private tasting and helped me to select wines that would complement the dinner. They told me it was too bad the fog was covering the local village where my guests would be staying. “But that’s how it is most of the time and your guests won’t even get the daytime sun here, since your wedding’s in the evening.”

“My guests won’t mind. They’re always going on about the damaging rays of the sun,” I assured them, holding up a glass of a smoky, fruity pinot to catch the light.

I backtracked to the coastal village and drove through the picturesque streets to the elegant hillside resort where most of our guests would stay. I introduced myself to the unctuous concierge, who escorted me to the complimentary room. “It isn’t as large as the honeymoon suite, but I hope it will be satisfactory.”

Then the event planner and I met and she gave me a tour of the rooms and amenities. We went over the necessities for each suite (which included cranberry juice, tomato juice, sunscreen, and canvas hats and visors).

As evening came on, I took a walk through town, which was all of four blocks long. I looked at all the expensive little shops filled with useless items and over-indulgent services. The streaked blond store clerks gave me that “Are you worth our time?” look, and decided that I wasn’t. I looked too much like the busboys in their fancy restaurants. Perhaps, too, my antipathy for the cliché landscape paintings and outrageously priced resort wear was evident.

I turned away from the shops and went down to the beach, taking off my shoes so I could walk along the shore. An afternoon party was winding down on the terrace of a waterfront restaurant. I listened to the bright laughter and talk and watched as people began to leave the paved terrace and walk toward the street. They were the sort of people who bought resort wear. The women’s pastel dresses billowed in the ocean breeze and they clutched sun hats to their blond heads.

“Milagro! Milagro!” a voice called out. I looked through the group until I spotted my friend and gardening client Gigi Barton. A former model, the socialite was a marvelous stretch of a woman, clad now in nautically inspired navy and white, with a red scarf tying back her golden mane. She must have been wearing ten pearl necklaces, from chokers to long ropes. She was as famous for her fake jewelry as for her real wealth.

I waved to her and went to join her, brushing the sand off my feet near the restaurant’s deck and putting my shoes back on. She came forward and gave me a hug and two air kisses with her bright red lips. “Thank God you made it!”

I hadn’t been invited, but Gigi always made the endearing assumption that I was part of her crowd. “Gigi, how’ve you been? This is amazing-I just called you, because I wanted to do a checkup of your garden.”

“When you know everybody, you always see them everywhere. It’s so convenient, because you’re never a stranger anywhere.” By everywhere, she meant wealthy enclaves, and by everybody, she meant the rich who inhabited them. By this thinking, one was able to ignore inconsequential people who populated those vast wastelands without boutiques and Michelin-starred restaurants.

“How have you been? Is Bernie here?” Bernie, the tabloid stringer, dated Gigi.

“Oh, he’s out in the desert again. He said he doesn’t have time to read with all my activities. I’d almost believe he loves his first editions more than me. Where is your handsome fiancé?”

“Oswald’s working. I’m here finalizing a few things for the wedding.”

“Of course, Bernie and I will be there, and I know Nancy will do a wonderful job planning things, but you can always ask me, too! I think my fourth wedding was the most elegant, but my first was the wildest. I’m showing my age, but that’s when trashing hotel rooms was de rigueur.” She turned and called, “Lord Ian, which was my best wedding?”

The crowd of people behind her shifted, and then I saw Ian Ducharme. He came forward, more casually dressed than I’d ever seen him, in a dark blue sweater over a pale blue shirt, jeans, and a panama hat tilted at a jaunty angle, casting his eyes in shadow. He saw me and his eyes widened a little, but otherwise his demeanor remained the same as he said, “I was only at the second, Gigi, and it was splendid. You were a dazzling bride.”

Gigi laughed and gripped his arm affectionately. “Oh, that was my famous white-bikini beach wedding! Milagro, we’ll see you at dinner and after,” she said as her friends began to drag her away. In another minute everyone else was gone; only Ian and I remained.

Panic rose in me, and I considered running into the ocean and swimming out far enough where all I had to worry about was the sharks. But what did I have to be nervous about? I smiled politely and said, “Hello, Ian. I meet you on one coast and then the other.”

“Another coincidence?” he said dryly.

“Do you think I’m stalking you now? The hotel invited me to visit and I’m finalizing arrangements for the wedding.” I was silently cursing Oswald for not joining me here. “And you? Where is Ilena?”

“She has other obligations.”

I didn’t ask if he meant that she had other obligations at the moment, or if she wasn’t here at all.

“I’m sorry we ended things on unpleasant terms,” I said. “I do hope we can continue to be friends.”

I didn’t expect him to burst into laughter, but he did, and I snapped, “What is so damn funny?”

When he finally stopped laughing, he looked more relaxed and said, “You and your attempts to be polite.”

“You think I’m incapable of fitting in with your swanky society pals?”

He stepped forward and took my hand. At his touch, a hot fizz went through my body. He looked into my eyes and asked softly, “Why are you so eager to be like everyone else when you’re Milagro De Los Santos?”

I wanted to step closer, close enough to smell his cologne, feel his warm breath on my face. I wanted to reach out to confirm that his sweater was cashmere, and then press myself along his body, extending the low electric buzz wherever flesh touched flesh. But I yanked my hand free and said, “I don’t want to be the miracle of the saints. I never applied for the job, I don’t like the hours, and I sure as hell don’t like the company. Damn vampire councils, creepy rituals, and people kidnapping and trying to kill me. Your people treat me either like a carnival freak or as a container of high-grade recreational substances.” I stopped because I remembered that Ian’s own parents had treated him like their personal drugstore.

“Now you sound more like my own girl,” he said.

“‘Your own girl’ is five-feet, eleven-inches of taciturn attitude dressed in designer rags.”

He looked satisfied, as if he had won some point. “I must be on my way. I’m confident you’ll be able to stave off any attacks by wharf rats.”

“I already apologized to your sister! It’s not as if she hasn’t been vile to me in the past. You told me yourself that she and Oswald-”

“She’s moved on and is quite infatuated with her friend Joseph.”

Was he assuring me that he had moved on, too? “Yes, we’ve all moved on, and I’m very glad of it.”

“I’m so very glad you’re very glad,” he said smoothly, making me want to scream. “Perhaps I’ll see you at dinner. Good-bye, Milagro.” He turned and began walking in the opposite direction of town.

I watched him go, feeling an unwelcome pang. “No one invited me to any dinner,” I muttered into the wind.

But when I returned to the hotel, the desk clerk handed me a note scrawled on one of Gigi’s hot pink note cards. It said, “8 p.m., Hayden’s,” with a surfeit of x’s and o’s in lieu of a signature. The clerk told me that Hayden’s was a restaurant and gave me directions.

I went upstairs to my room and called Oswald’s office, but he’d already gone off for his meeting with Sam and Vidalia. I left a message for him that I’d run into Gigi and was joining her group for dinner. “You know Gigi. I won’t be back until late so let’s talk tomorrow.”

I took a bath and luxuriated through my important girly grooming steps. I was a fabulous chica and I would look fabulous tonight. I poured myself into a red silk dress, applied too much eye makeup, and dabbed on the hotel’s complimentary eau de toilette sample.

I put on a lightweight coat and walked in my silver high-heeled sandals to Hayden’s. I stood at the entrance of the dark-paneled restaurant. The room was filled with laughing, chattering people, but my eyes went right to Ian, who was with a small group at the bar. He turned and looked at me as I took off my coat and checked it. He nodded in greeting, and I gave a little wave in his direction.

I said hello to Gigi and got involved with a group of her friends who were talking about one of the hot new memoirs. They all knew the author and claimed he was a habitual liar. The conversation was most illuminating, but I was always aware of the vampire on the other side of the room.

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