A li Reynolds leaned her head back against the pillow in the soaking tub and closed her eyes. With the help of the pummeling water jets, she let the rush of the past few days recede into the background. She and B. had made it. They were finally in Las Vegas. The rest of the wedding party was there, too. Back in November, when she and B. Simpson had first settled on a Christmas Eve wedding at the Four Seasons, it seemed entirely doableâa piece of cake. After all, how hard could it be?
Because Ali and B. had chosen to be married in a hotel, much of the planning was done by simply cruising through the wedding planning pages on the Four Seasons website. Arranging the time, date, flowers, type of ceremonyâincluding their preferred verbiage in the vowsâwas just a matter of making a few mouse clicks on her computer. Ditto for the menus. One was for what they were calling the rehearsal dinner despite the fact that there would be no rehearsal until the morning of the wedding. She also used the website to choose separate menus for both the reception and the post-ceremony supper. Ali stepped away from her computer, thinking that she had most everything handled. Unfortunately, she had failed to take her motherâs reaction into consideration.
Preparations for Aliâs previous weddings had been well beyond Edie Larsonâs geographic reachâÂChicago for the first ceremony and Los Angeles for the second. Caught up in running the family business, the Sugarloaf Café in Sedona, Arizona, 363 days a year, all Aliâs parents had been able to do on the two previous occasions was arrive in time for the rehearsal dinners and depart immediately after the nuptials.
This time around, Ali wasnât so lucky. Her parents, Bob and Edie Larson, were both retired now, having sold the restaurant. Bob had found plenty to do in retirement, but Edie, left with too much time on her hands, had hit the wedding planner ground at a dead run, a Âreaction for which Ali herself had been totally unprepared.
In the past, Ali had found the term âbridezillaâ mildly amusing, but when it came to dealing with an Edie who had suddenly morphed into what could only be called the brideâs âmomzillaâ? That wasnât amusing in the least. To Aliâs surprise, Edie had whipped out her long-unused Singer sewing machine and set about stitching up a storm. In keeping with the season, ÂEdieâs mother-of-the-bride dress was a deep-green velvet and probably the most sophisticated attire Ali had ever seen in her motherâs wardrobe.
With her own dress safely in hand, Edie had gone on to tackle outfits for the twins, Aliâs grandchildren, Colleen and Colin, who would serve as flower girl and ring bearer respectively. Colleenâs dress was a ruby-red taffeta, and Colinâs tux, also homemade, came complete with a matching ruby-red taffeta cummerbund. Once that was finished, Edie took it upon herself to sew identical cummerbunds for all the men in the wedding party.
Aliâs father, Bob, was not an official member because Aliâs son, Chris, would do the honor of walking her down the aisle. Even so, Edie had gone so far as to bully her husband into actually buying a tux as opposed to renting one so Bob would have one to wear to formal dinner nights on their next cruise. Edie had been in despair about Aliâs ever finding a suitable wedding dress, and her sense of dread deepened when her daughter abruptly removed herself from the wedding planning equation. For the better part of two weeks in early December, Ali avoided all the frenetic pre-wedding activity by, as Edie put it, âlarking offâ to England.
Thatâs what Ali and B. had both expected her trip to Bournemouth would beâa lark. She went along for the ride when her longtime majordomo, Leland Brooks, returned home to the British Isles after living in self-imposed exile in the U.S. for the better part of sixty years.