conversations with him were often like a sort of parlor gameâTwenty Questions or Animal/Vegetable/Mineral. Over the years Faith and Hope had noticed their motherâs aptitude at deciphering her husbandâs derailed trains of thought and Faith assumed that with time sheâd also develop the skill. At the moment Sydneyâs presence, somewhat of a shock at first, was now striking her as funnyâand raising an important question. What was behind it all? Betseyâs desire to have the family chum remain in the fold? Whose idea had it been to bring Sydney to the shower, Betseyâs or the âdear family friendâsâ?
Poppy clapped her hands.
âTime for prezzies. You all got the invitation with the explanation, but itâs time to tell Faith.â She looked terribly pleased with herself.
âItâs a Round-the-Clock shower. Everyone was assigned a time and had to bring something appropriate, and I hope amusing, for each hour. Letâs see, weâll start with one A.M. , shall we?â
Pure Poppy. And it was a fun ideaâor so Faith hoped. If it worked, it would be something to suggest to clients. She felt a sudden stab. Clients. She wasnât taking on any more, aside from small jobs, and everything would stop in mid-May. Sheâd had to return the deposits and smooth some ruffled feathers for the weddings sheâd had scheduled for June. The brides had, fortunately, been understanding, swept up in bridal sisterhood, and were relieved that all the plans, and quality, would remain the same with the firm Faith was recommending.
Faith had had many a middle-of-the-night thought about what giving up the business meant. The business that she alone had created; it was a part of her now. She fully intended to start it again in Massachusetts and Tom had been adamant that she should, but at times the idea was overwhelming. And what did they eat up there? Baked beans, Indian pudding, those boiled dinners . . .
She caught Hopeâs eye. Her sister was having a good time catching up with various friends. Hope nodded to her as Faith took a large box from Josie, the one oâclock guest, and prepared to open it. Faith interpreted the nod as Hopeâs way of saying that everything was going to be fine. It wasnât that her sister was a mind reader, although often they were able to communicate quite nicely without words.
Faith nodded back. She was at her shower. It would all work out. Wouldnât it? The it being what? She tried to articulate the âwhatââthe wedding, the move, the marriage? No, not the marriage. She was sure about that.
âThis is what I thought Iâd like to have on in the early hours of the morning,â Josie said as Faith removed a beautifulâand very sheerâpeignoir and gown from the tissue paper. âOr off!â someone called, and the room burst into laughter. Faith darted a quick look at the Massachusetts contingent. The tight-lipped smiles theyâd worn throughout remained frozen in place.
The other early morning gift givers had had much the same idea as Josie, with the exception of Poppy, whoâd presented Faith with a set of Pratesi sheets so silken the thread count rivaled the national debt. Hopeâs 7:00 A.M. gift was a stainless steel French-press coffeemaker from Germany that kept the liquid hot, and an order for a yearâs supply of freshly roasted beans from Zabarâs. Emma handed her a small box from Cartier, saying, âI know Iâm supposed to be noon, but I knew youâd love this after seeing the watch Tom gave you.â Faith did love Emmaâs gift, so Emmaâa Longines vintage mantel clock similar in style to the watch.
Poppy handed Faith a card. âItâs from your uncle Schuyler. He came up here earlier to deliver it himself, said he knew his wife was coming and it was all girls, but he wanted to âshowerâ you himselfâthe dirty old
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