Sommersgate House(164)

With the spirits still kissing, the words came from Sommersgate, from the voices long since stilled in the past.

“Douglas, Julia, thank you. We wish you…”

Then they were fading, still embracing but slowly fading until they were completely out of sight.

“…love.” It was a whisper and Douglas felt Julia’s tremble communicate itself through his body.

Sommersgate was still, quiet, all that it was, all that it used to be, was gone, fading with the spectres.

Leaving behind only stones and mortar, wood and glass, iron and granite.

All of it built in love.

Douglas and Julia’s home.

Chapter Twenty-Six

The Toasts

Julia stood at the back of the cathedral, her bridesmaids, Lizzie and Ruby, milling around her and Will yanking nervously at his collar but still looking quite dapper in his morning suit.

She’d peeked into the church to see Douglas and Oliver line up at the front and to watch Will escort Patricia to her seat. Patricia was wearing such an enormous, baby pink hat, replete with ruffles and rosettes, that Julia wondered how her mother managed to manoeuvre herself down the aisle without toppling over. Her nephew then turned and tried not to (but definitely did) scurry back to Julia.

It was Julia and Douglas’s wedding day.

Monique was not in attendance, she sent word she was deathly ill with the flu.

Julia couldn’t have been more pleased at the news but she tried to hide her reaction when she saw the dark look that crossed Douglas’s face, though, he said not a word.

The very proud looking Kilpatricks sat in the front row on Douglas’s side, next to Charlotte and Nick, with Sam and Ronnie (and their boyfriends) and Carter and his daughter sitting behind.

Julia thought happily that was a far better representation of Douglas’s family than Monique would ever be.

Both sides of the church were filled to capacity. Julia had protested the guest list but Douglas demanded that every business and social acquaintance he had be present.

“If I could,” he whispered into her neck one dark night, “I’d have the world watch me make you mine.”

It was, of course, an atrociously possessive thing to say but who was she to argue?

For her part, a great number of her family and friends were there, mainly because Douglas had bought every seat on a commercial jet flying from O’Hare to Heathrow. That gesture made the trip a great deal more affordable for a lot of people.

Finishing this assemblage, there was enough paparazzi outside to make the BAFTAs look tame in comparison.

Julia was wearing what Gregory termed his “masterpiece” (in a short time, she had become known widely as Gregory’s “muse”).

Her wedding gown was a simple, long, backless, sleeveless, boat necked, ivory silk dress, the silk being the most extraordinary material Julia had ever touched. Cut on the bias, it fit superbly, flowing all the way down to her feet where the very pointed toes of her ivory pumps peaked out. The back hem fell in a graceful train three feet long. She wore ivory gloves up to her middle upper arms, a choker made of four rows of pearls separated by bars of diamonds imbedded in platinum, a matching bracelet and a set of earrings that had a teardrop pearl suspended from a beautiful diamond (this an “early” wedding gift from Douglas making her wonder what the “during” and “after” wedding gifts would be – for her part, she carried with her a secret that was Douglas’s present that she prayed he would adore). She carried a bouquet made completely out of perfect white roses.

As usual in Julia’s life, the day had not run smoothly (to say the least).

She had started it in her rooms surrounded by her girlfriends from Indiana and England, everyone wanting to help but doing nothing but getting in the way. Charlotte, Gregory and Patricia had a fight over how Julia was going to wear her hair even though Julia and Sylvie, the stylist, had long since decided on a style.

“She must wear it up, something soft, with curls at the back and tendrils around her neck with baby’s breath,” Patricia demanded (and Julia thought it sounded like something a girl would wear to a prom).

“Down! Straight! Edgy!” Gregory clipped out, speaking (as per usual) in as many exclamation-point-ending, one-word phrases as he could (Gregory, at last, a match for Patricia’s dramatics).

“A sleek, elaborate up-do, with the front of her hair parted severely, smoothed over and tucked in…” Charlotte declared and then went on for several more words.

Julia let Charlotte win because that was the closest to what Sylvie and Julia had decided and because Charlie happened to be the editor of a glossy fashion magazine and likely knew what she was talking about.