Pleating for Mercy

Pleating for Mercy Read Online Free PDF

Book: Pleating for Mercy Read Online Free PDF
Author: Melissa Bourbon
a pattern and a muslin sample before I could even consider beginning the others.
    At first, Josie had said she wanted cap sleeves, but the wedding was in late April and the weather was already turning warm. My instincts told me that she would really prefer strapless, and I started a new sketch, this time with no sleeves. I drew in a very subtle sweetheart neckline and a dropped waist. I added side draping on the skirt. Beaded floral embellishments at the waist. It would have to be lined. Zipper in the back. I jotted notes down next to the final sketch.
    On and on I went, replaying everything the four women had said until I felt completely confident that Josie would love what I’d come up with. Only Nell’s comment about Nate breaking Josie’s heart nagged at me. I couldn’t help worrying about why she believed he might.

Chapter 5
    All the Cassidy women have an affinity for fabrics and trims. It’s in our blood, just as sure as Butch Cassidy’s charm runs through our veins. The attic in the old farmhouse on Mockingbird Lane held stacks of neatly folded fabric that had belonged to the Cassidy women through the generations, dating back to my great-great-great-grandmother and Butch Cassidy’s love, Texana Harlow. The hundred or so mason jars upstairs were filled with buttons, ribbons, and trims, a collection that had been added to by all the Cassidy women. Aside from spending time in the attic, surrounded by the things that bound me to the them all, I felt closest to Meemaw when I was in her kitchen. The distressed pale yellow cabinets, the reused red brick on either side of the deep, white farmhouse sink, the large red-and-white checkerboard-patterned curtain on a pressure rod below the sink, and the copper pots and pans hanging from an exposed beam above the long pine farm table had been her vision. Even though it belonged to me now, it was still hers. It always would be. I stood at the old farm sink, scrubbing the grouted edges, thinking about Josie and the dress I couldn’t wait to start making for her.
    The sound of the front door crashing against the wall made me jump. With all the crazy noises, creaks, and moans, it felt like the house could very well be haunted. A feeling of melancholy settled over me. If only it were true and Meemaw really was still here with me.
    I snatched one of the embroidered tea towels Nana had given me as a housewarming gift. Happy little goats danced at the bottom of one end. Drying my hands, I hurried into the shop. The French door was wide open. I popped the screen door open and poked my head outside. The front yard with its patches of bluebonnets, lavender, and roses was dappled with pale moonlight. The air outside was still and quiet. It should have been comforting, but instead it felt like a tornado was coming. It made me wonder if I could pull off a wedding gown and three bridesmaid dresses in less than two weeks. I closed the door, breathing out the tension that had gathered inside me as I went back to the kitchen.
    A short while later, Mama waltzed in carrying a vase bursting with lavender. For a split second, I thought it was a young Meemaw. Mama looked just like her mother, Coleta, who was a dead ringer for Loretta Mae. There was never a doubt that a Cassidy was a Cassidy—the auburn hair with the trademark blond streak was our genetic signature.
    The teakettle whistled. I was bursting with news of my commission, and a thread of worry that I’d bitten off more than I could chew, but I held my tongue. “Where are those from?” I asked, gesturing to the flowers.
    She set the vase in the middle of the pine table next to my sketchbook. Adjusting her Longhorns cap and tucking in a wayward strand of hair, she sat down. “I planted lavender, and you know how it goes. Start with one, grow a million and one.”
    That’s not how it went for everybody, but that happened to be my mother’s gift. Her thumb was greener than the Jolly Green Giant’s, while mine was the color of an
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