always liked to know everything we were doing.â
âAye well, but that was different. I wasnât wanting to take you to bed every spare minute you had, like Iâll be with Marge.â
âYou knew what you were taking on, and youâll just have to put up with it.â
âHow did the wedding go?â
âIt was just perfect, Lexie.â Unaware that she was turning the screws on her listenerâs tortured heart, Bella Ritchie gave a full description of her visit to London, breaking off if another customer came in and carrying on again afterwards as if there had been no interruption. âIt was different, wiâ two brides. I thought theyâd be dressed the same, being sisters, but theyâre nothing like each other. Dougalâs wife, Marge, sheâs the bouncy kind, full oâ life, and sheâs dark-haired like him, though Iâd say hers is even curlier. Gwen, now, thatâs Alistairâs wife, her hairâs a lovely blonde, natural like yours, nae like some I saw doon there, and it shines pale gold in the electric light. Her face is thinner than her sisterâs and sheâs a lot quieter, but theyâre real nice lassies, though I didna understand half oâ what they said, they spoke that quick. Mind you, theyâd a job makinâ my Willie oot, for he couldna think on the English for what he wanted to say.â
âBut you managed to get on with ⦠Gwen?â
âNae bother! I couldna have wished for a better â¦â About to say âa better daughter-in-lawâ, Bella finally remembered how attached Lexie had been to Alistair before he went away and caught her runaway tongue. â⦠a better day,â she substituted, clumsily. âSun shining and an awful lot warmer than it is up here. And the Jenkinses is just like ony oâ us. Nae side to them though theyâve got a fine big hotel. Thereâs a younger sister, and all, Peggy her name is, and the three oâ them work there, waitressing, cleaning the rooms and such like, good workers, they are.â
âOh aye?â Lexie felt obliged to make some kind of comment.
âRosie, their mother, sheâs a right nice soul, slim like them and quiet, but itâs my opinion she rules the roost, though her man wouldna like folk to think that. He was the biggest surprise we got. You should have seen him, Lexie ⦠a great fat mountain oâ a man, and he does all the cooking sitting on a stool in the kitchen in the basement. The meal â the wedding breakfast they cried it though we didna sit doon till four oâclock â oh, I canna tell you how good it was. Willie said it was the kind oâ soup he likes best, the kind you can stand your spoon up in, I canna takâ him nae place, then he said the fancy stuffing wiâ the roasted turkey went round his heart like a hairy worm, and I coulda kicked him, but they seemed pleased aboot it.â
âThey likely took it as a compliment.â
âAye, and so it was meant ⦠if they understood it.â
âWas it a kirk wedding?â
âNo, no! It was in a Register Office, then back to the hotel in taxis. Mind, Iâdâve been happier if it had been a kirk wedding, but ⦠ach, I suppose thatâs the English way oâ doing it, and the registrar had us aâ in tears at the gentle way he advised them to respect their vows, even Tiny, thatâs Alistairâs father-in-law â¦â
âTiny?â Lexie gave a brittle laugh. âThatâs a funny name if heâs so fat.â
âIt was a nickname he got in the army. To get back to my story, Gwen being the oldest daughter, her and Alistair was wed first â sheâll be nineteen next month the same as him. Dougal was best man and young Peggy, I think sheâs fifteen or sixteen, she was bridesmaid for her two sisters, and Dougal had Alistair for his best man.â
âWhat were the
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