Holding the Dream Page 0,118
likes to shop here," Patsy confided to Kate when Laura slipped into the back. "No small accomplishment that, since getting him to stop for a can of peas is a major feat. Of course, I think he likes to come in and look at the pretty girls."
"We're here to serve." Kate affixed a gold seal to the tissue she'd wrapped over the cashmere.
"This compact here." The first customer tapped on the glass. "The heart-shaped one. I think my sister-in-law would love it."
"Just let me get it out for you."
While the two customers chatted about the compact, Kate boxed the horse. A fresh discussion broke out when Laura brought out the dragon. When the door opened, everyone sighed.
"Oh, what a gorgeous baby!" Patsy pressed her hands together under her chin. "Why, he's an absolute angel."
"He is, isn't he?" Margo shifted the baby carrier to show off her son. "He's seventeen days old."
Business ground to a halt, as it was necessary to admire his fingers, his nose, to comment on how bright and alert his eyes were. By the time Kate brought the cradle out of the back room and John Thomas was settled in it, the women had bonded over the baby.
"You should have called me if you wanted to get out for a little while," Laura scolded. "I'd have picked you up."
"Mum dropped me off. She had some marketing she wanted to do. I think her plan is to stock my kitchen so that if we're locked in for a year, we'll have provisions." Margo settled in a chair with the cradle at her side. "God, I've missed this place. So, how's business?"
"The pair who just left?" Kate began, pouring tea.
"On their way to lunch, yes."
"They became fast friends about fifteen minutes ago over mythical glass animals. It was kind of fun to watch."
"This is the first time the shop's been empty since we opened this morning," Laura added. "We're getting a lot of those people who always have their holiday shopping done by Thanksgiving."
"And to think how I used to hate them," Margo sighed. "I checked with my doctor. He says if I keep it to mostly sitting behind the counter, I can start coming in a few hours a day starting next week."
"There's no need to rush," Kate objected. "We're handling it."
"I don't like you handling it without me. I can bring J. T. with me. Babies mist shoppers' brains."
"I thought you were going to interview nannies."
"We are." Pouting a little, Margo bent over her son, adjusted his blanket. "Soon."
"She doesn't want to share," Laura murmured. "I know how it feels. When Ali was born, I - " She broke off as a trio of fresh customers came in.
"I'll take them," Kate volunteered. "You two indulge yourself in mommy talk."
For the next twenty minutes, she showed one customer every diamond earring in stock while the second poked through the bric-a-brac and the third cooed over a napping J.T.
She helped serve tea, saved a frantic husband with a last-minute anniversary gift, and rehung the castoffs left in the wardrobe room.
Shaking her head at the way some people treated silk, she stepped out again. New customers were browsing amid a hum of female voices. Someone had switched on an Art Deco lamp to test the effect, and smooth golden light shimmered in the corner. Margo was laughing with a customer, Laura was stretching on her toes to reach a box for a purchase. And the baby slept.
It was a wonderful place, she thought suddenly. It was a magical little treasure chest filled with the sublime and the foolish. Crafted, she realized, by the'three of them. From desperation, from practicality, and most of all from friendship.
How odd that she had ever considered it a business to be measured in profit and loss, overhead and expenditure. And odder still that she hadn't realized until this moment how happy she was to be a part of something so risky, so ridiculous, so entertaining.
She walked to Laura. "I have an appointment I'd forgotten about," she said quickly. "Can you handle things here until I get back? It should only take an hour or so."
"Sure. But - "
"I won't be long." She grabbed her purse from behind the counter before Laura could ask any questions. "See you later," she called out, and bolted.
"Where's she going?" Margo demanded.
"I don't know. Just out for a little while." Concerned, Laura stared through the glass after Kate. "I hope she's all right."
She wasn't sure that she was. It was