Interior Designs (26 page)

Read Interior Designs Online

Authors: Pamela Browning

He should have thought of it in the beginning.

Cathryn couldn't believe her eyes. Her vision was hazy from dizziness, to be sure, and the spotlight made her see dots. But she could have sworn that she'd spotted Drew Sedgwick standing at the edge of the dance floor as she and Will whirled around the ballroom.

She looked for him again as they approached the place where he had been. Suddenly her palm went damp in Will's hand. It was either Drew Sedgwick or his exact double, all dressed up in white-tie-and-tails.

She and Will glided away, and she snapped her head around to stare. Her eyes locked with his, and there was no doubt in her mind that it was Drew.

But how? Why?

Why on earth would Drew Sedgwick be here at the Waldorf at the exact same time she was?

But perhaps she had been wrong. The next time they swooped past the place where Drew had been standing, he wasn't there.

She bit her lip and fought back tears as she stared resolutely at the space over Will Atherton's right shoulder.

Obviously, it had been a mirage. She had thought about Drew Sedgwick so much in the past few weeks that she was imagining him in places where he couldn't possibly be. It was just one more sign that she needed a vacation, and the sooner, the better.

"May I cut in?"

Cathryn's heart fell to the pit of her stomach. Will looked dazed. They both stopped dancing and stared at Drew Sedgwick.

"Do you know this guy?" Will asked Cathryn with a frown.

"I, well, yes. We're old friends." Try as she might, she could not take her eyes off Drew's face. His eyes searched hers. He couldn't be real, he couldn't! But did a mirage walk and talk? Did it clasp your hand?

"I have to see somebody about something anyway," Will said ungraciously. He wove around through the other dancers, barely avoiding collision.

"Let's get out of here," said Drew. He held on to her hand tightly, as though she would disappear if he let go.

"But Will is my date. Susannah..." Her eyes scanned the crowd, looking for her friend.

"I've squared it with Susannah. You have her blessing. Avery's going to call a cab and send Will home." Drew charged into the crowd around the dance floor, pulling her with him. Where the crowd thinned out in the back of the room, he paused and put his arm around Cathryn's waist.

"Drew?"

"I have to talk to you," he said firmly. A glance toward the lobby of the ballroom told him that people were still arriving. The elevators would be mobbed, and they would be much too slow.

"Is there a quick way out of here?" he muttered in desperation.

"There's bound to be a service elevator near the kitchen," she said. "But why do we have to hurry?"

"We have a lot of time to make up," he said, urging her toward the swinging doors where the waiters kept going in and out. On the other side of the doors was an elevator, a big one. Drew pushed her inside and punched a button on the panel. The door closed after them and the elevator sped downward. Cathryn was afraid to look at him for fear she'd laugh. This was ridiculous!

They reached the basement with a solid
clunk
, and the elevator door opened automatically to reveal a long concrete corridor that veered off into labyrinthine passages beneath the hotel.

"Now what?" asked Cathryn, who had made up her mind not to be surprised at anything in this crazy sequence of events.

Drew, guessing at their whereabouts, pulled Cathryn toward a flight of stairs topped by a door. It opened on an alley furnished with several overturned garbage cans and a heap of black plastic bags bursting with trash.

"Where are we going?" she asked as they stood indecisively in the alley.

"We're not staying in this alley, I can tell you that," Drew said, rushing toward the street and pulling her along in his wake. They reached the street and, almost as though it was written into the script, a cab pulled over to the curb.

Drew pushed her, none too gently, inside.

"Where to?" asked the cabdriver, running his eyes over them curiously. They didn't look like the type of people to come running out of an alley in New York.

For the first time, Drew drew a blank. "Where to?" he said to Cathryn.

She stifled a smile, but she was equal to the occasion. "Central Park. The horse-drawn carriages."

"Good idea," said Drew approvingly. He slipped his arm around the back of the seat and toyed with the strand of hair that curled along one side of her neck. She'd left her evening cape behind, but she scarcely noticed the autumn chill in the air.

"Nice to see you again," Drew said, an understatement.

"Why are you here?" she asked him. His eyes were bright above his wide smile.

"I'm trying to get you back," he answered truthfully. She looked confused. "I saw you being interviewed on TV this morning. That's how I knew you were in New York. It was a terrific interview, by the way."

"It was just ordinary." She shrugged.

"But you're not an ordinary person. You looked fabulous," he told her.

"Oh," she said. Now that the initial shock had worn off, she still found it hard to believe that Drew Sedgwick could be in New York now, at the same time she was. The odds seemed stacked too heavily against such a situation.

The cab stopped. "Central Park," said the driver.

Drew pressed bills into the man's hand. They got out of the taxi and into one of the carriages.

"Drive slowly," Drew told the driver, who tipped his hat genially. Drew slid close to Cathryn so that they sat with their thighs touching.

"What are you doing in New York?" asked Cathryn, unable to contain her curiosity any longer.

"Conferring with Talma's lawyers," he said, surprising her.

"What about?"

"Child custody." His eyes rested warmly on her face, taking her all in. There was no icy distance between them now, and he was glad.

"Has something happened?"

"Talma wants to stay in Italy with Alfredo, and she wants to take Selby out of the country. I've been looking into their lifestyle, and I'm totally against Selby's living with Talma. I've enrolled her in school in Palm Beach, and I've decided that I'm going to press for custody, even if Talma wants to fight it. These past months have shown me that Selby's stronger emotionally than I'd imagined, and she's sure that she wants to live with me."

Cathryn was surprised at this, and yet not so surprised. Also disconcerting were the feelings of elation surfacing in her own mind.

"What do you think about it?" he asked. A lot hinged on her answer. Cathryn would have to want Selby just as much as she wanted him. There was no doubt in his mind that Cathryn still loved him. It was written all over her face. Somehow, some way, if indeed she wanted Selby, they would work out a marriage. They had to. It was as simple as that.

"I think it's wonderful about Selby," she answered dispelling all his doubts. "Wonderful."

His eyes sought hers and found them. She touched his cheek gently. "I've made a mistake, Drew. A terrible mistake."

His arms went around her and drew her close. He felt her bones melt against his.

"Would you like to try again? Maybe try it until we get it right?"

"Our relationship, you mean?" Her head tilted back so that she could see his face. He was smiling.

"Yes, our relationship, and more when you're ready. I still want to marry you, Cathryn."

She placed her head on his shoulder, and it was a homecoming of sorts. "I have to finish my work on the office building. And I'm designing an interior for Susannah's house in Connecticut. But then..."

"Then what?"

"Then... I don't know. I'm not going to go on the way I have been. I'm either going to sell Cathryn Mulqueen Interiors or turn over more control to my assistants."

He rested his cheek against her forehead. They could hear the sound of the horse's hooves on the hard pavement. It was as though they were far away from the city and everything else. But he knew Cathryn and was well aware of how she felt about her career. "Are you sure that's what you want? Sure you can be happy not working twelve and fourteen hours a day?"

"I'm sure," she said convincingly. "Very, very sure."

"Selling seems like such a drastic measure. Maybe we could work out something with Sedgwick's. You know, expand your Design Boutique so that customers can only obtain your services through the store. You could let Zohra and Natalie handle most of the business, let them actually run the show. But you could handle designing for certain clients and be very selective."

"I hadn't thought of that. It's a possibility, isn't it? Oh, Drew, I like the idea!" Her smile when she looked up at him was radiant, glowing.

"The custody fight is going to be a nasty battle. I wouldn't go through with it if I didn't think I'd win. I'll need your support and help, and so will Selby. I may need your consolation if I lose. This won't be easy, Cathryn. It's going to be hanging over our heads for a long time."

"Everything may not be wonderful all the time," she said, slowly and earnestly. "Life isn't like that. But we'll have each other, and that's what is important to me."

"And what if I don't get custody of Selby? You won't be disappointed?"

She sat up straight and stared at him. "Of course I'll be disappointed! But it won't affect the way I feel about you. I'll stand by both you and Selby and help any way I can. If you don't get custody, Selby will still be able to visit us in the summers or whenever else we can arrange it. What's important is that we love each other."

"I've cut way back on my hours, but I'm going to cut back more. Bud Turney is perfectly capable of taking over a lot of the business of running a chain of department stores. That way I'll have more time to spend with Selby. And with you."

He tightened his arms around her, feeling a transfiguring joy that eclipsed any emotion he'd ever felt. She reached up and stroked his hair gently once before curving her fingers around the nape of his neck, where they fit so well.

"I love you so much, Cathryn," he said unsteadily. He looked down at her face, her dear and beautiful face, before fumbling in his pocket.

Cathryn's eyes widened at the sight of the large gleaming square-cut emerald encircled by a wreath of small brilliant diamonds. She held her breath as Drew slipped the ring on her left ring finger and kissed the skin above it.

"I told you once that you should wear emeralds," he said softly, his adoring eyes never leaving hers. "And as my wife, you will. Yes, my Cathryn, I do want to marry you. But what about you? Will you marry me?"

"Tomorrow, if you like," she said serenely, surely.

"Tomorrow? But there's the license to get, and Selby will want to be there, and—"

"Tomorrow or whenever," she amended, snuggling even closer. "And do you have any plans for tonight?"

He smiled at her tenderly, lovingly. "Tonight, tomorrow, and always," he said, lowering his lips to hers.

Epilogue

From
Palm Beach Parade
:

The marriage of Cathryn Claire Mulqueen to Drew Anthony Sedgwick took place on February 14 at a candlelight ceremony at the Whitecaps Beach Club in Palm Beach, Florida.

The elegant bride is the daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Mulqueen and is the owner of Cathryn Mulqueen Interiors. She is a graduate of the Parsons School of Design. The groom is president and CEO of Sedgwick Department Stores and the son of the late Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Sedgwick of West Palm Beach. He graduated from the University of Florida with a degree in business.

The bride's gown was a slim long-sleeved sheath of white satin and lace designed by Vera Wang. Her floor-length tulle veil was secured to her upswept coiffure by a circlet of crystals and seed pearls, and her bouquet was a cascade of white roses mixed with baby's breath and trailing ivy.

Best man was Ron Carruthers, and groomsman was Bert Stuckey, classmate of both bride and groom at Sun Lakes High School.

Maid-of-honor was Mrs. Ron Carruthers of West Palm Beach, and serving as bridesmaid was Mrs. Avery Clark of Greenwich, Connecticut. They wore matching dresses of blush-pink peau de soie and carried bouquets of miniature white orchids interspersed with seashells gathered from the beach at Mr. Sedgwick's house in Hobe Sound.

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