Authors: Gerald Hammond
Having somewhat collected her emotions and turned to the more practical issues at hand, she noticed for the first time that there was not a mirror in the place. She began sponging at the wedding dress with a mixture of water and the salt the young boy had delivered through the letter box, but the edges of the bloodstains had by now dried in. When Alistair arrived in answer to her second phone call she said, âTake me home again. I'll have to change. Quickly.'
Alistair looked in horror at her bloodied dress. âYou're not allowed to bleed all over my good seats.' It was touching that his concern was for his car upholstery rather than the dishevelled bride.
âI'm not going to bleed anywhere,' Jane said. âIt's not me who's bleeding.'
For some mad reason this seemed to satisfy Alistair. She sprawled on the luxurious back seat and breathed deeply. She felt that it might have relieved her feelings if she could have snarled like a wolf or bitten somebody, but there are few nervous outlets available to a seriously bloodstained bride. She contained herself as they drove up the hill.
I
n the door mirror of the limo she could see herself although there was no comfort in that view. The puppy's blood was not only over the wedding dress, it had sprayed on to her face and hands and was even splattered in her hair. If there had been anybody in the Square they would have been staring, their attention first caught by the reappearance of the bridal car and then the sound of her scampering feet. She pretended to herself that she could make herself invisible, as she had done in moments of embarrassment ever since her childhood, though as far as she knew it had never worked yet.
The limo made short work of the steep hill. Alistair had longed for somebody to ask him to hurry and now was his chance. The fat tyres produced a squeal as he turned off into the byroad. The rest of the trip back to Whinmount passed in a flash. As soon as she leapt out of the car â as fast as the corseted wedding dress would allow â Jane gave instructions to Alistair to go and fetch Deborah, her Maid of Honour. The first thing that Jane saw on darting inside the front door was the light flashing on the recently installed telephone, insisting that there were messages. There was, in fact, a string of messages and they were all from Deborah, desperate to know why she had not been collected yet. Was she forgotten? While trying not to look at herself in the hall mirror, Jane called her maid of honour and assured her that the limo was on the way. She told her to sit beside the driver so as not to run the risk of staining whatever gorgeous dress she was no doubt wearing. Rather than be trapped in the hall answering a thousand questions, Jane disconnected.
She collected a big jar of salt and dashed upstairs. The bath was quickly part-filled with water and salt and she left the wedding dress to soak in it, while knowing that it was already far too late. Hoping against hope, she scanned her wardrobe but no miracle had produced a long white dress since the last time that she looked in it. There was nothing all-white except a tennis frock, but that was so short that it would barely have covered her underwear. Then memory threw up an inspiration. She closed the wardrobe and went to the airing cupboard and there she found a white nightdress of some silky material, a present from Roland on a recent birthday and never worn because it was far too sexy even for a fiancée. Perhaps for a husband it might have been just within the bounds of the permissible. As a wedding dress it would be outrageous but of the various choices open to her it seemed the least unacceptable and in fact the only one possible.
In washing the blood off her face Jane had necessarily removed the make-up that she had patiently applied two hours earlier. The return of Alistair brought relief in the form of Deborah, the maid of honour, who absorbed the sorry tale and, although her hand was shaking â with laughter Jane hoped â at the thought of the microchipped robber, managed to remove the more obvious bloodstains from Jane's hair and to make a better job of the make-up than Jane herself had managed. With the veil pinned over her hair, Deborah said nobody would ever know that anything was amiss. The fact that the veil would be removed during the ceremony was not mentioned. Deborah directed Alistair's attention to the view over the town while Jane whipped a sheet of polythene out of the house and flipped it over the back seat.
They were still tidying the veil during the short journey to Kempfield, whilst Jane was filling Deborah in on the eventful day so far. Deborah was still firing off a million questions to Jane when Alistair indicated that they were arriving at Kempfield. Jane was mentally unprepared as they swept into the outer courtyard and stopped at the big doors. It was hardly the serene kind of preparation appropriate for a bride just as she's about to make the most important union of her life, but it was the only time Jane was going to get considering they were already running at least fifty minutes late; even the most high-maintenance of brides couldn't expect to keep her groom and congregation waiting any longer.
There had originally been a huge, open inner courtyard between the farm buildings but as the centre grew unstoppably, as well-managed enterprises will, and its catchment area had expanded, this had been roofed over to make an enormous general purpose workshop. It had now been cleared of benches, machinery and ongoing projects and then decorated tastefully but frivolously with garlands of coloured wrapping paper from the printworks, whose manager had been at school with Jane. It was into this building that Jane made her entrance, with Deborah behind her, holding a delightful bouquet of flowers that the local florist had donated, of which there were plenty more in strategic places around the venue.
On making her belated entry to the sound of a great cheer, Jane was stunned by the number present. Somehow news of the event had got a mention on the Internet, probably on Facebook, and in the local media, with a hint that the event was open to any friend of a friend of the bride or her family; and it seemed that this definition might have become stretched almost to snapping point. Champagne had been mentioned without the proviso that it had been made on the spot and from elderflowers rather than grapes, and of course everyone expected a great feast as well.
Looking around, Jane could see officials, volunteer leaders and benefactors of Kempfield; former schoolfellows, fellow students from college; many of GG's old friends, clients and colleagues; her own clients and most of the denizens of Newton Lauder. It had been made clear that morning suits were not expected; the groom and the best man wore kilts and tweed jackets and at that point formality ended. So the guests were a multicoloured, melting pot of all styles, fashions, uniforms and hairdos; everyone having their own opinion of what constitutes an acceptable dress code at a wedding on a gorgeous summer's day.
While the bride was awaited the festivities had begun anyway and luckily the supplies of food and elderflower champagne seemed to be holding up. It seemed that volunteers had managed to clear up most of the mess of the earlier explosion, but the smell of wine was all-pervading, although considering everyone was drinking the stuff, and would be consuming plenty of it as the day wore on, they would become immune to the smell fairly quickly.
As Jane entered further into the room, she noticed the expressions on various faces â the men entranced, the younger women envious and the older ladies outraged â and was reminded that the nightdress that was now substituting for the bloodied wedding dress was daring in the extreme, being made of a very thin and clinging material with inserts and panels of lace that was so transparent as to be barely visible. Oh well! She would soon be a respectable married woman. And she had been too busy to have the traditional hen night. Surely some allowance could be made. She avoided eye contact with any of the throng as she held her head up and walked calmly forward towards the rear of the room, which was to act as the wedding ceremony area.
Manfred, Jane's soon-to-be brother-in-law, was to be best man. Roland and Manfred were first to reach Jane. Roland in particular was almost gagging with questions and he rushed up to her, clasping her hand in both of his. His expression was a mixture of relief and concern; relief that Jane had turned up (as part of him had begun to worry that she was having second thoughts about their future), and concern at what exactly had delayed her. Manfred too was spouting questions, but Jane hushed them both. She was living in hyperdrive.
âIt's not the bride's place to make speeches,' she said. âManfred, your job. Please apologize to everybody. Explain. Urgent call surgery. Attempt to rob knifepoint. Microchipped the ⦠the intruder. Got blooded, went home to change. Sorry delay. Please enjoy.'
She stood back, confident that she had given a full explanation. Manfred was a tall man with a head of carefully waved hair and a handsome face ruined, in Jane's opinion, by an effeminate mouth. Putting flesh on the bare bones, he began a tolerable speech of explanation and apology.
As Manfred finished, Jane found herself breathing heavily with nothing to do at last except to get married. But before that could happen she was approached by a confused-looking Mrs Ilwand. Emotion flushed over her. Before the other could speak, Jane burst out, âI'm sorry about your wedding dress, so sorry, but the pup was spouting blood â I had to put it down in the end â I couldn't just leave it. I was going toâ'
Mrs Ilwand managed to break in without slapping her and instead held on tightly to her forearms in a half reassuring and half restraining embrace. âMy dear, never mind the bloody dress. I don't have a daughter to pass it on to. I urged you to look after it so that I could give it to a charity shop. I'll make a donation instead. More importantly, are
you
all right? That's the point. I could barely understand what the best man was going on about, but I gather it has something to do with an injured pup and lots of blood �' Mrs Ilwand looked at Jane with a sympathetic tilt of her head and grasped her for another hug.
Jane could have fainted with relief; she couldn't believe that Mrs Ilwand was being so forgiving about the ruined wedding dress. She had been thinking of the bloodying of the wedding dress as the ultimate calamity of the day.
âWell ⦠I'm a bit shaken,' Jane replied. She was tempted to add â
but not stirred
'; but backed away from such flippancy. âI'll have the dress sent to specialist cleaners. They get quite used to getting blood out of vets' clothes.'
Mrs Ilwand laughed. âI said not to mind the dress. But what you've got on â¦' She ground to a halt, short of words as her eyes ran up and down Jane's figure, taking in the blatant transparent nature of the replacement dress.
âShocking, isn't it?'
âWell, it does look more like a nightie. Where did you get it from in a hurry?'
âIt
is
a nightie,' Jane explained. âIt was the only all-white thing I could find. Not that anybody will think me entitled to a white wedding when everybody knows that the groom and I have been cohabiting for yonks and if they look too closely they might also notice a slightly bulging waistline â¦'
Mrs Ilwand was still laughing. âThey don't place too much emphasis on that, these days,' she said. âIn the West Highlands things may be different. I was married in that virginial dress but nobody was taken in byâ'
âErrr, I'm afraid that's enough girl talk, thank you.' A voice broke in to interrupt the conversation. Jane looked around and realized that a sort of queue had started to form in front of her, at the head of which stood Ian Fellowes, the local detective inspector who was also Deborah's husband and Keith Calder's son-in-law. He was among those who felt obliged to wait before talking to the bride. Now he had lost patience. âI'm sorry to interrupt so rudely, and Jane, best wishes of course. Now, everybody else please back off. We'll let the full story be known shortly.' Then back to Jane he said in a quieter tone, âJane, tell me about this attempted robbery.'
âI can't add anything to what Manfred said,' she replied, now beginning to regret having been so informative about her delay in arriving. She rather wished she had said nothing and explained all later, once she'd actually got married, which was the whole point of why they were all there today, wasn't it?
âYou weren't listening to what he said.'
âYes I was, some of it. And I'm getting married right now. After that I may have time for you. It can't be so very urgent because of the microchip.'
âThe what?'
âDidn't Manfred mention it? I stuck the robber with the wrong syringe and put a microchip into him, so you'll have him bang to rights, if that's the proper expression. Until I'm available, go and enjoy yourself. The drinks are on me.'
âAnd that's you told,' Deborah said to her husband and ushered him away from Jane into the throng of guests, and towards the bar at the other end of the room.
A small stage had been set up at one end of the workshop with a table for the registrar. That lady had put down her glass of champagne and walked to meet Jane and Roland, ready to pounce. âYou're lucky nobody else wants to be born, married or buried this afternoon,' she said. âSo I was able to wait for you.'
âBless you for that,' Jane said. âWe're just coming.' She realized that she had eaten nothing since breakfast and the big room seemed filled with the smell of a delicious soup that furnished almost the only hot item of food. She did a quick scan of what remained on the buffet. âGod, I'm hungry!' Jane wandered towards the selections on offer, the palm of her hand held up in a stop sign to prevent anyone from coming towards the bride and disturbing her in her primal need to eat before taking the next important step in her life; she certainly wasn't going to look back on this day and only remember the hunger she felt whilst taking her vows.
An electronic keyboard had been borrowed from a choral group based in a local church. At a nod from the registrar the organist struck up the wedding march and seconds later the bridal procession was to be seen approaching the improvised altar with the scantily dressed bride biting into a pork pie. The Maid of honour, who was also facing starvation, had chosen a large slice of quiche. Each had a plastic glass of champagne in the spare hand. There were multiple flashes as the members of the photographic section of Kempfield were busily recording the scene. Instead of the usual respectful silence accorded to a wedding party approaching the altar there were handclaps and even a few cheers. Roland and Manfred had hurried ahead during Jane and Deborah's snack stop and were already waiting before the registrar's table. The ladies handed the gentlemen their empty glasses and wiped their lips on the bridal veil. The groom was noticeably red in the face. The short ceremony then began.