Beautiful Day (17 page)

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Authors: Elin Hilderbrand

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BOOK: Beautiful Day
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In a low voice, he said, “I don’t believe in love anymore, and I’m never getting married
again… but I’m free tomorrow if you need me.” He held up his palms. “Just saying.”

Margot couldn’t tell if the guy was earnestly pursuing her or if he was batting her
around like a cat with a mouse because she’d signed him off. She, with her perfect
instincts, could not tell.

She said, “Okay, thanks. I’ll keep that in mind.”

OUTTAKES

Autumn Donahue (bridesmaid):
Fingers,
Mademoiselle.
Toes,
Black cherry chutney.
I needed something edgy to offset the grasshopper green.

Rhonda Tonelli (bridesmaid):
Fingers, French. Toes, French. Some people get one color on their fingers and another
on their toes, but I think that looks tacky.

Douglas Carmichael (father of the bride):
The green on sixteen gave me trouble, but overall, I was happy with my short game.
I shot an 80. After a few drinks tonight, I will tell anyone who asks that I shot
a 79.

Pauline Tonelli (stepmother of the bride):
I’m wearing blue tonight, nothing flashy, just a St. John suit I got at Bergdorf’s
that does a good job of camouflaging my midsection. I let the nail technician at the
salon talk me into a color for my fingers called “Merino Cool,” which is a sort of
purplish gray. Very au courant, she said. They can barely keep it stocked, she said.
I think it looks like the color my nails will turn naturally after I’m dead.

Kevin Carmichael (brother of the bride):
Tree branch lifted! I can’t believe Margot was going to let them chop it off.

Nick Carmichael (brother of the bride):
I think Finn has gotten hotter since she got married. I’ve seen this happen before.
Women get married, they get hotter. Then they have kids, and… (motion with finger
indicating downward spiral). Then���some of them—bounce back. These are the ones who
have affairs with their personal trainers… or some lucky guy who happens to be in
the right place at the right time.

THE NOTEBOOK, PAGE 10
Readings

When Daddy and I were in our late twenties, there was one six-month period when we
attended eight weddings, and it nearly bankrupted us. I was a bridesmaid in three,
and your father was an usher in two. At nearly every one of these weddings, the readings
were Corinthians 13 and a selection from Kahlil Gibran���s
The Prophet.

I beg you, avoid these choices. If you use Corinthians 13, you will hear a collective
groan.

I am, as you know, a fan of song lyrics. You are the only one of my children who inherited
my taste in music. Your sister and brothers listened to the punk stuff—the Dead Kennedys,
the Violent Femmes, the Sex Pistols, Iggy and the Stooges, the Ramones—oh, how I wearied
of the Ramones! But you were a Rolling Stones fan from a young age, you loved Springsteen,
Clapton, and Steppenwolf, especially
“Magic Carpet Ride.” Remember Halloween in sixth grade when all your friends dressed
up like Courtney Love or the girl in the bumblebee costume from the Blind Melon video,
and you went as Janis Joplin? They made fun of you, and you came home from trick-or-treating
a little weepy, but I explained that you couldn’t help it. You were my daughter.

This is a long way of saying that song lyrics often make good readings. Try the Beatles.
No one has ever gone wrong with the Beatles.

MARGOT

W
hen Margot pulled into the driveway at a quarter to five with her three sand-encrusted
children in the backseat, she let out a shriek of awe and amazement. The backyard
of their house had been transformed into a wedding wonderland.

“Look!” she said to her kids.

No response. When she turned around, she saw all three kids absorbed in their iDevices.
She couldn’t complain, however. It had been a magical afternoon at the beach, the
exact kind of afternoon Margot remembered having as a child. Drum Jr. and Carson had
boogie-boarded with their cousins like fiends all afternoon; Margot could barely get
them out of the water to eat their sandwiches from Henry Jr.’s. Ellie had collected
shells in a bucket, and then she sat on the shoreline and constructed an elaborate
sandcastle. Margot, who was exhausted, drifted off to sleep under the umbrella. When
she awoke, Beanie was sitting with Ellie, helping her mosaic the walls of the castle
with shells. Margot watched them, and though she felt a twinge of guilt, she
knew that Beanie loved spending time with Ellie because Beanie had only boys, and
a little girl was a treat for her. Furthermore, Margot didn’t want to sit in the sand;
she had never been the kind of mother who got down on her hands and knees to play
with the kids, and if she left the shady confines of the umbrella, there would be
the issue of freckles. Margot was vain and lazy; she wasn’t as nurturing as Beanie,
perhaps, but she reminded herself that her own mother had never been a castle builder,
either. Beth used to sit in her striped canvas chair and needlepoint and dole out
pretzel rods and Hawaiian Punch from the thermos.

Margot had enjoyed the beach immensely, even as she spooled the conversation with
her father and the conversation with Griff through her mind. She decided that it was
a blessing she’d sunk her phone because it freed her from worrying about whether or
not there would be any texts from Edge. And she wouldn’t worry herself about what
the text from Edge last night had said. She would ask him tonight when she saw him
at the yacht club.

It was only as Margot got out of the car and took in the staging for the wedding that
she appreciated what a very special day tomorrow would be. She and Jenna had been
talking about the backyard wedding for over a year, but that didn’t prepare Margot
for the excitement she felt now.

The tree branch had been lifted so that the ropes were barely visible. And under the
tree was the large, circular center-pole tent, which was bigger in square footage
than the Manhattan apartment where Jenna and Stuart would live. Inside, the tent was
decorated with ivy, entwined branches, and white fairy lights. There were hanging
baskets of limelight hydrangeas and hanging glass bowls filled with sand and one ivory
pillar candle. There were fifteen tables, ten of which were swathed in the antique
linen tablecloths, embroidered at the edges with green
ivy, that their grandmother had used at
her
wedding, and five were the replica tablecloths that Margot and Jenna had hired an
exceptional Irish seamstress in Brooklyn to make. Margot could barely tell the difference.
She and Jenna had set the new tablecloths out in the sun for three weeks to get them
to age properly. The Irish seamstress, Mary Siobhan, had also made 150 matching green
linen napkins, which were tied with strands of real ivy. The centerpieces were white
and limelight hydrangeas and the pink climbing roses, cut from the house, nestled
into large glass jars encased in a mesh of woven twigs. The bone-white china was set
over dark rattan chargers, and Roger had found 120 Waterford goblets in the Lismore
pattern, which was the pattern Beth and Doug had collected, and Stuart and Jenna would
now collect. The overall effect was one of simplicity and beauty; the white and the
green evoked the house and the yard, and the entwined branches and wooden baskets
evoked Alfie. The pink of the climbing roses was the softest of accent colors. All
of this had been her mother’s vision, and Margot had doubted it; she had cursed the
grasshopper green dress, but now she saw how the green dresses and Jenna’s white dress
would all make perfect aesthetic sense once they were under this tent.

“You’re a genius,” Margot whispered.

She peered up into the funneled pinnacle of the tent, where she imagined her mother’s
spirit residing. She heard someone clear his throat, and she turned to see Roger enter
the tent.

“It looks beautiful,” Margot said.

He moved a fork in one of the place settings a fraction of an inch. “I’ve done a lot
of weddings,” he said. “But this is one of the prettiest. I always say to my wife
that there is no accounting for taste. But you girls knocked it out of the park here.”

“Oh,” Margot said. Why was it always in the face of kind words that she felt like
crying? “It wasn’t us.”

When she entered the kitchen, Margot was met with chaos. There were people everywhere.
Margot’s kids and the Carmichael boys were still in their wet bathing suits, tracking
sand with each step.

“I thought I told you to go to the outdoor shower!” Margot said.

“No, you didn’t,” Ellie said.

Margot allowed that maybe she had forgotten that instruction, but didn’t her kids
know they should always head to the outdoor shower after the beach?

“Go now,” Margot said. “Be fast.”

Autumn, Rhonda, and Pauline were sitting in the breakfast nook, eating crackers with
smoked bluefish pâté. The people from the catering company were trying to work around
them, moving between the kitchen island, where they were prepping food, to the dining
room, which was serving as a staging area, to their refrigerated truck out in the
street.

Then Margot noticed a new face.

“Stuart!” she cried.

Stuart was standing just outside the screen door with three other men, who were all
wearing coats and ties.

Margot stepped out to greet them.

“Hey, Margot,” Stuart said.

He looked terrible. He was pale, and he had bruise-colored circles under his eyes,
and he’d gotten a haircut that was too short. He worked ridiculously hard in a stressful
industry. He was a food and beverage analyst for Morgan Stanley; he never took time
off. He had gone twelve months without a vacation to take today off, and the next
two weeks for his honeymoon to St. John. It looked like he hadn’t left his office
in twelve months—or rather, it looked like he had left it only once, to visit a really
incompetent barber.

And yet there lived in Stuart a kindness so pure that it caused Margot to marvel.
He wasn’t flashy, he wasn’t slaying the market like Finn’s husband, Scott Walker,
he would never buy a thousand-dollar suit, he would never, probably, own a car as
nice as her father’s Jaguar, but Stuart was devoted to Jenna. He sent her flowers
at the school “just because,” he lit candles for her bath, he stood at the finish
line with hot tea and a muffin whenever she ran a race in Central Park. In the five
seconds that Margot spent taking in the sight of him, she felt badly for all the times
she’d tried to talk Jenna out of marrying him.

“You remember my brothers,” Stuart said. “H.W. and Ryan, and… Chance.”

Margot studied the other three men. H.W. and Ryan were identical twins, impossible
to tell apart until they opened their mouths. H.W. was an overgrown frat boy, and
Ryan was gay. Margot deplored stereotyping, but she knew right away that the one who
was better dressed was Ryan. Ryan came over to kiss Margot’s cheek. He smelled divine;
he was wearing Aventus, Margot’s favorite scent, which she had bought for Edge but
he had not, to her knowledge, even opened.

“How are you, Margot?” Ryan asked. “Tell me everything.”

Margot laughed. “Oh, believe me, you don’t want to know everything.”

Ryan slid an arm around her waist and leaned her back into a dip. He was one of those
men whose every move was smooth and elegant. “I’ve been bragging about how lucky I
am to be escorting the maid of honor.”

Ryan was Stuart’s best man. Margot wondered if it had been difficult for Stuart to
pick between his brothers, but Jenna said they had shot rock-paper-scissors for it.

H.W. raised his beer bottle in Margot’s general direction. “Hey,” he said.

Margot smiled. H.W. was paired up with Autumn. They would have sex before the weekend
was over, Margot was sure of it.

Margot had seen the twins on numerous occasions—at Stuart’s thirtieth birthday celebration
at Gramercy Tavern, and then more recently at the engagement party in a private room
at MoMA. But Margot had never met this other brother. Chance. Whereas the other three
Graham brothers were square jawed and dark haired and built like hale and hearty tobacco
farmers, Chance was tall and lean and had strawberry hair. Really, his hair was nearly
pink, and he had a matching pinkish skin tone.
One of these things is not like the others.
Chance was Stuart’s half brother, the product of an affair Stuart’s father had in
the nineties. He was nineteen years old, a sophomore at Sewanee, the University of
the South, a math whiz, apparently, a good kid if a bit socially awkward.

Well, yeah, Margot thought. It was bad enough that he was a love child, the product
of a midlife crisis, but then someone—Stuart’s father? the other woman?—had thought
it would be acceptable to name him “Chance.” No wonder the kid was socially awkward.
The other woman—Margot had never learned her name—had been married to Stuart’s father
for a few years, then they had split, and Stuart’s father married Stuart’s mother
a second time. It was the kind of story that people had a hard time believing, except
for the Carmichael children, who had been hearing bizarre divorce-and-marriage stories
their whole lives.

Jenna found the story of Stuart’s parents romantic.

Margot thought, Yeah, romantic—except for the living, breathing, six-foot-four reminder
of when things had not been so romantic.

But this was a wedding, what had happened in the past could
not be undone, and so everyone would simply have to roll with it—smile, chitchat—and
then gossip about the darker reality later.

“Hi, Chance,” Margot said. Oh, how she would love to rename him something normal,
like Dennis or Patrick. “I’m Margot Carmichael, Jenna’s sister.”

“Nice to meet you,” Chance said. He had an elegant southern accent; he sounded—and
looked—just like Ashley Wilkes from
Gone with the Wind
. He gripped Margot’s hand and gave it a nice, strong shake. Margot’s line of work
caused her to evaluate everyone’s handshake and eye contact.
Eight,
she thought.
Not bad.

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