Ties That Bind

Read Online Ties That Bind by Marie Bostwick - Free Book Online

Book: Ties That Bind by Marie Bostwick Read Free Book Online
Authors: Marie Bostwick
Tags: Romance
Ads: Link
arrangement to Miranda’s house today. Not a poinsettia. Too impersonal. Cut flowers, red carnations would be perfect.”
    â€œDo you really think that will help?” he asked hopefully.
    â€œWell, it sure won’t hurt. Merry Christmas, Ted.”

9
Margot
    O n Christmas morning, I got to church an hour early to save spots for my friends. It was an easier job than in years past because I only had to save places for Evelyn and Charlie. Virginia was supposed to join us, but Evelyn called early to tell me Virginia had woken up with a cold and decided to stay in bed.
    â€œWill she be well enough to make it for dinner?”
    â€œShe said she’d try, but not to count on her. We brought her breakfast and opened presents with her this morning. Her nose is red and she’s sniffling, but she’s fine.” Evelyn chuckled. “Charlie and I gave her a new serger for Christmas. I think this cold is a convenient excuse to stay home and play with her new toy. If she doesn’t make it for dinner, we’ll drop off some leftovers on the way home. Don’t worry.”
    It was just as well that I only needed to save two extra places. The church was packed—and beautiful. The candles of the Advent wreath and the long tapers fixed to evergreen swags at the end of every pew filled the air with a warm glow and scent of vanilla and melting wax; a sea of scarlet poinsettias carpeted the steps and the raised altar where Philippa sat in her black robe topped with a shimmering white and gold embroidered clergy stole, looking composed but serious and very ministerial while the organist played a prelude of carols.
    It was a beautiful and reverent setting, but I had trouble keeping my mind focused on the sacred. Fifteen minutes before the service, every pew was filled—except mine. I’d lost count of how many times I had to explain to people that yes, the seats next to me were taken. The closer we got to the top of the hour, the more awkward I felt saying this.
    Thankfully, just as the organ moved into the full-throated, pull-out-the-stops crescendo that signaled the end of the piece, Evelyn and Charlie came scurrying up the aisle. They squished past the knees of six other people to reach the center of the pew, murmuring apologies as they did. Evelyn sat down with a relieved whoosh of breath.
    â€œSorry.”
    â€œWhere were you?” I whispered.
    â€œFruitcake emergency. Don’t ask.” She cast a pointed look in Charlie’s direction.
    â€œIs it my fault that you left the platter on the stove top, right next to an open flame?” he hissed. “It could have been worse. Before we got married you didn’t even own a fire extinguisher ….”
    I closed my own eyes, but not in prayer. I was trying to keep from laughing. The prelude finished just in time and we rose to sing “Hark! The Herald Angels Sing.”
    It was a lovely service. No orchestras, or trumpet fanfares, or processions of live camels and donkeys to the nativity, but lovely. The music was sweetly familiar, carols I’ve sung since childhood, and the story of the first Christmas stirred me to wonder and gratitude, as it always does. And the sermon was … Well, it wasn’t bad.
    The message was spot-on, very clearly laid out. In fact, I think if I’d read the text it would have stood up very well against just about any Christmas sermon I’d ever heard.
    But I didn’t read it. Philippa did. Word for word, and rather slowly, in a voice that was still raspy from her cold. She looked into the faces of the congregation only rarely and when she did, it was with a startled jolt, as if she remembered one of her seminary professors or, perhaps, her father admonishing her to make eye contact with her audience. After she did, she’d look down at her notes, clear her throat and pause for a long, uncomfortable moment before beginning again, as if she’d lost her train of

Similar Books

The Sunset Gang

Warren Adler

Muzzled

June Whyte

B01EU62FUC (R)

Kirsten Osbourne

Death Magic

Eileen Wilks