Read The Cinderella Moment Online
Authors: Jennifer Kloester
Tags: #young adult, #Contemporary, #Coming of Age, #Romance, #General, #Juvenile Fiction, #clothing design, #Paris, #Friendship, #DKNY, #fashionista, #fashion designer, #new release, #New York, #falling in love, #mistaken identity, #The Cinderella Moment, #teen vogue, #Jennifer Kloester, #high society, #clothes
Lily looked dismayed. “Why? What does she want?”
Simone shrugged apologetically. “She did not say. Only that you are to go to your father’s study immediately.”
After Lily had gone reluctantly upstairs, Angel picked up her pin-tray and began carefully pinning the pattern pieces to the velvet. She couldn’t help thinking about Lily’s plan. It might work—Philip was away, after all—but, although she could understand Lily not caring whether she deceived Margot, Angel was surprised she was willing to lie to her dad.
Philip wasn’t the sort of father you needed to lie to and, like Angel’s papa, he was a good listener. In that first year, when Papa was so often in the hospital (and before Simone found out and put a stop to it), Lily would sometimes take Angel up to Philip’s study and insist she be included in story time.
He was always delighted to see them and Angel loved the way his whole face lit up at the sight of Lily. Philip had a smile that could light up a room, with twinkling blue eyes beneath straight black brows and thick dark hair with only the tiniest bit of grey at his ears. He was tall and lean, with an infectious rumbling laugh that made Angel giggle just hearing it.
As soon as he saw them, he'd stop whatever work he was doing, stretch out his long frame, and draw them across to one of the big squishy leather armchairs by the fire.
Lily would climb onto his lap, snuggle down and demand a story while Angel sat on a cushion on the floor by Philip’s knee. She’d lean her head against the arm of the chair and sometimes, if he was engrossed in the story, Philip would run his fingers through her hair. Angel loved that because it reminded her of Papa.
When they were settled Philip would read aloud or tell them a fairytale or—Angel’s favorite—make up his own story and they would take turns telling the ending. Angel would stare into the fire and think hard about what the hero might do now that Philip had him locked in a dark dungeon or stranded on some dangerous mountaintop in a storm. She’d imagine a fearless prison guard’s daughter smuggling him out through a secret passage, or a poor but beautiful peasant girl who’d braved the raging tempest to bring him to safety.
Lily usually scoffed at these romantic resolutions and whenever it was her turn to make up the ending she’d offer some dramatic yet practical conclusion like the hero making a speech in court and proving his innocence or skiing down the mountainside and saving the village in the valley below.
But whatever the story or its ending, it was magical just being there.
Philip and Lily’s relationship had always been special and Angel had thought they had an unbreakable bond.
Until last Christmas.
Lily had gone up to Philip’s study to see if he’d take her ice-skating at Rockefeller Center, and when she’d come down it was as if a door had closed somewhere inside her and not even Angel had been able to break it down.
Angel sighed, put down her pins and eyed the velvet thoughtfully. She’d expected Lily back by now. It was getting late—maybe she should put off cutting the velvet until tomorrow. It’d be a slow process because the fabric marked easily and she had to ensure the nap faced the same way on each piece. Still, if she stayed up, Lily might return and tell her what Margot had wanted.
Angel picked up her scissors. The sooner she got cutting, the sooner she could start sewing.
As she smoothed out the velvet, she wondered what Margot could be talking to Lily about for so long. Maybe Philip had called from South America or Lily had forgotten a Junior League meeting again and Margot had insisted on taking her. Or
maybe
Margot had decided to have a heart-to-heart with her
…
“Don’t be ridiculous,” said Angel aloud. “Lily wouldn’t have stayed five minutes.”
She pushed the thought away. If she were going to cut the velvet, she needed to focus.
By midnight she was done and the velvet lay in pieces on her bed. This was her ball gown—all she needed to do was sew it together.
Angel smiled. It was such an easy thought—but sewing the gown together and making it look exactly like her design was going to take every minute of the time left before she had to send her entry to Paris.
She put on her pajamas and got into bed. She lay awake for a while, thinking about Lily and the Teen Couture, and only realized she’d fallen asleep when a hand on her arm woke her.
“Lily? Is that you?”
“Who else?” Lily switched on the bedside lamp.
“Are you okay? You never came back. What did Margot want?”
“To ruin my life.”
Angel froze. “Margot’s found out about London?”
“Worse. She’s had a letter from my grandmother.”
Chapter Seven
Angel stared. “A letter?’ she said at last.
Lily nodded.
“From your grandmother?”
“Yes.”
“The one in Paris?”
“I’ve only got one grandmother,” said Lily.
“Yes, but she never gets in touch,” said Angel. “And why would your grandmother write to Margot?”
“She didn’t. She wrote to my dad—her first letter in over ten years.” Lily scowled. “Naturally Margot opened it.”
“Naturally,” agreed Angel. “What did it say?”
“Margot says it’s an invitation, but I know it’s an order.” Lily put on a posh accent: “The Comtesse de Tourney requests the pleasure of my company in Paris for this year’s summer season.”
“But that’s fantastic!” cried Angel. “Lucky you.”
“I’m glad you think so, because I’m not going.”
Angel gasped. “But—I don’t understand. It’s Paris—why wouldn’t you want to go to Paris?”
“Well, for starters because it’s the exact same two weeks as the London Academy.”
“Oh,” said Angel, suddenly unsure of what to say. She knew how much the London Academy meant to Lily, but this was an invitation to Paris.
Paris!
And Lily hadn’t seen her grandmother since she was five. “That can’t be your only reason,” she said.
Lily hesitated and then said slowly, “It isn’t that I don’t want to see my grandmother. It’s just that
…
I don’t want to see her
now
.”
“Why not?”
Angel was surprised to see Lily’s face tinge with color.
“What’s wrong with now?” persisted Angel.
This time the pause was even longer. At last Lily said, “It’s Dad, he
… ”
“What?” asked Angel.
Lily shook her head.
“Is this about what happened last Christmas?”
Lily nodded.
“You had a fight?”
Lily nodded again.
“About?”
Emotion flitted across Lily’s face, then she sighed and the secret she’d been holding in since Christmas burst out.
“He said he was thinking of getting married again. He said I needed a mother because—because
he
couldn’t give me everything I needed. And then when I argued with him it all just got worse and worse—like everything I said came out the wrong way and then when I’d run out of words he told me he really liked Margot and that he was so pleased I’d overcome my resentment and how great it was that I liked her because she liked me and how she had all this empathy and understanding ’cause she had a teenage daughter of her own—as if that made her the perfect candidate and
…
and then he said it would be such a relief to him if there was someone in the house I could talk to about
things
!” Lily looked miserably at her friend. “Oh, Angel, if you’d heard him you’d know exactly—” She broke off.
Angel nodded. She could only imagine how hurt Lily must’ve been. She and her dad were so close and Philip had always tried to make up for her not having a mother. And it helped that Simone was downstairs because when Philip was away Lily could talk to her.
For Philip to suggest that he needed to get married again just to provide her with a mother was nuts. Angel sighed. Sometimes adults were weird.
She looked at Lily. “But I still don’t get what this has to do with you going to visit your grandmother in Paris?”
“That’s because I haven’t told you the rest,” replied Lily.
“Go on.”
Lily dropped onto the bed. “I told Margot that Dad and the Comtesse don’t speak and he wouldn’t want me going to Paris to see her.”
“What did she say?”
“She laughed that annoying laugh and said that was all in the past and the best way to help my dad was to accept my grandmother’s invitation.”
Angel frowned. “I don’t think Philip would agree.”
“That’s the trouble, he
has
agreed.”
“How can he? Margot only just got the letter and he’s not in phone contact.”
Lily’s face puckered. “Apparently he had a few minutes at an airport and called Margot.”
Angel stared at Lily in dismay. “Did you have a missed call on your phone?”
“No.”
“Oh.”
Angel digested this in silence. Philip had had an opportunity to call home and he’d chosen to ring Margot instead of Lily. That meant things were serious. Maybe Lily was right and her dad really was planning to marry Margot Kane.
Angel looked up. “So, you don’t want to go to Paris right now, because
…?”
“Because I’m not doing
anything
to help Margot get what she wants and what she wants is for Dad and my grandmother to reconcile because the Comtesse knows all ‘the best people and goes to the best parties—even the Versailles Ball.’” Lily mimicked Margot’s voice perfectly.
Angel gave her a shove. “Don’t do that, it’s scary.”
“Sorry.” Lily hugged her knees. “Anyway, to hell with Margot. There’s no way I’m helping her marry my dad and I’m
definitely
not missing out on the Academy just so she can schmooze up to the Comtesse de Tourney.” She looked directly at Angel. “So those two weeks I’ll be in London.”
“But how can you be in London when your dad and Margot want you in Paris?” asked Angel. “I mean, even if your dad were happy for you to go to drama school—which he’s not—it’s obvious he wouldn’t want you choosing that over visiting your grandmother.”
“I don’t care! I am
not
having Margot as a stepmother, so I’m
not
going to Paris. And I’m definitely
not
missing out on the London Academy.”
Angel blinked at the ferocity of Lily’s reply. “There’s always next year,” she said.
“No way.” Lily stood up. “I’ve made up my mind: I’m going to London.”
“But you can’t be in London
and
Paris at the same time. How can you?”
“Come here.”
Lily pulled Angel to her feet. Snapping on the light, she drew her to the mirror.
“Look,” said Lily.
Angel looked at Lily’s face, heart-shaped and animated, her eyes alight with mischief and then at her own puzzled reflection.
“See?” said Lily, pointing to the mirror.
“What?” asked Angel, mystified.
“We could be sisters.”
The penny dropped. “No way! Don’t even think about it.”
“But why not?” Lily looked surprised. “We’d have an awesome time—you in Paris, me in London. Think of it, Angel—two whole weeks in the city of your dreams and no one would ever know.”
“Oh yeah? What about your grandmother?”
“No. That’s why it’s so brilliant. She hasn’t seen me since I was five—not even a photo—she’d never know you weren’t me.”
“Other people would know.”
“Nuh-uh.” Lily looked triumphant. “I haven’t been back to France—no one in Paris knows me.”
“But what about your dad? And Margot? What’s to stop her turning up and exposing me?” demanded Angel.
“No chance,” said Lily. “When Dad phones he never knows where I am—so London, Paris, New York—it doesn’t matter. As for Margot,” she wrinkled her nose, “she’ll be way too busy sucking up to the in-crowd out in the Hamptons.”
“But—”
“If you go to Paris in my place, the Comtesse will take you to all the best couture houses. Jacqueline Montague says she knows all the top designers, including Antoine Vidal. Think about it, Angel—you could meet him.”
Angel hesitated. Imagine meeting Antoine Vidal! And seeing the great couturiers: Chanel, Dior, Versace, Givenchy, Karl Lagerfeld, Balenciaga, Oscar de la Renta, and Vidal. She might get to see his fall collection, after all.
She imagined talking to him about his latest designs and the Teen Couture, his grey eyes smiling
…
Then another vision flashed into Angel’s mind: of lying flat on her face on the floor of the Waldorf Ballroom while Antoine Vidal stared down at her. Angel shivered. That was reality, not this crazy plan of Lily’s.
She lifted her chin. “I’m sorry, Lily. I can’t.”
Lily seemed to deliberately misunderstand. “Yes, you can—it’ll be easy. Think about it—you know everything about me—you even speak French better than me.” Lily’s eyes sparkled. “There isn’t anyone who could be me better than you.”
“Except that I’m not you,” replied Angel firmly. “And I never could be you, no matter how hard I tried.”
“Sure you could,” urged Lily.
Angel paused. How was it that the most difficult things seemed so simple to Lily? She always had some plan or idea that she was sure would solve everything. But this was different. This was taking things to a whole new level and if it went wrong—Angel couldn't risk hurting her mother. Not when Simone had already lost so much. And what would Papa have said to such a crazy plan?