They are married and we survived it.
Part of me wants to simply end there…
Actually, things went quite well from the initial disaster
in the Dollar Tree (see here) right through to the actual day.
That may have been largely due to the fact that Sally was
off in Alberta, Canada, shooting another movie and Mom and I were planning the
festivities with only minimal contact/input from her. Instead, we were listening to the other bride.
Because, yes, of course my mom and sister would plan to be
married on the same day, in the same
ceremony.
Hold onto your hats…
I don’t know if I’ve mentioned that Mom and Sally are on
completely opposite ends of the whole ‘body shape’ scale. Both are quite slender,
but that is where all resemblance ends. Mom has to stretch to hit five feet and
Sally has to wear flats to pass beneath a six-foot doorway. Mom has dark hair—well,
dark with grey streaks (Sally-caused, I’m sure) and Sally is white-blonde and
green-eyed.
Actually, if you’re interested, I look like my mom, albeit
two inches taller. Sally takes after our late father.
Ahem…
Anyways, Mom and I arranged the ceremony, the reception,
the hors d’oevres/real food, the flowers, and
the tuxedo rentals. Actually, Uncle Pete arranged his own clothes. Mom and I
just had to dress Mort. It wasn’t as easy as it sounds—mostly because Mort’s
taste in clothes and ours is…well, let’s put it this way—Mom and I have taste.
Sally footed all the bills.
It actually worked surprisingly well.
Oh, things got a little tense when Sally’s booked flight
from Alberta didn’t materialize in the still-confused post-covid I’ve-been-locked-up-for-over-two-years-and-I-have-to-go-somewhere
airport frenzy. Still, she managed to make it with a little over nine hours to
go before the ceremony.
AND she remembered to buy a dress!
Mom took the news well—blotting her eyes and coming out from
under her bed with a big, rather watery smile on her face. Déjà vu.
Anyways, the people we had hired to do hair and nails arrived
right on time. Ditto the limo—pulling into our cul-de-sac
with minutes to spare. The dresses looked good. Mom’s was a soft, rather
drifty chiffon that suited her right to the ground.
Sally (the I-don’t-care-what-I-look-like-as-long-as-I’m-covered
girl) was wearing a surprisingly dramatic silver sheath that fitted her like it
was painted on. And what was even more startling was when she turned to me and
in a tone that could have been mistaken for uncertainty, asked, “Do I look all
right?”
I blinked and nodded as my eyes unexpectedly filled with
tears.
Mort and Peter were over at Uncle Pete’s. Mom and I figured
if anyone could get that boy pointed in the right direction, it would be his
future father-in-law/former army sergeant.
Anyways, we all arrived at the church on time. And apart
from the two red-headed Townsend boys getting into a pillow fight partway down
the aisle using their ring-bearer pillows (with rings ricocheting
off nearby pews), things went as near to clockwork as they could have.
Even the reception started out well.
Food. Stories. Presentation of little bags of
Toasts.
And that’s where things went so very wrong.
You have to know from reading past ‘Sally’ stories that she
and punch bowls do not always co-exist peacefully. (See: Salloween.)
Well, Mom and I relented for this uber-important day and
opted for a lovely carved-glass punchbowl, seated in lonely glory on its own small
bench next to the head table and directly in front of the stage.
Opposite, at the other end of the head table was a twin bench
which held the all-important wedding cake.
With me so far?
The toasts began.
Sally and Mort climbed up on the stage, excited to deliver
their toasts to important people (ie. Mom, Uncle Pete/Dad, Peter and me). Raising
their glasses of sparkling apple juice (we are a tee-totaling family, just FYI),
they started in.
And it was at that moment that Mort…mis-stepped.
Now normally it wouldn’t be a problem.
But the two of them were standing at the edge of the stage,
directly over the previously-mentioned punchbowl.
Mort slipped.
Sally tried to catch him.
And the two of them toppled sideways together off the stage.
And onto the inner side of the ‘punch’ table.
The legs of the table folded smartly, launching the
punchbowl in a perfect arc over the head table.
Sloshing the hapless head-table sit-ees (Again, Mom, Uncle
Pete/Dad, Peter and me) with bright crimson punch.
But it didn’t end there.
Nope.
Remember that part where I said the wedding cake, in all its
glory was sitting peacefully on its own small bench at the opposite end of the head
table?
Yeah. That.
The launched punchbowl, after describing the aforementioned
perfect arc, landed bowl-side down on that beautiful, artistic creation.
Rendering it less so.
The room went silent.
Sally and Mort scrambled upright and surveyed the
damage.
For a moment, the world seemed to hold its breath.
Then everyone in the hall leaped to their feet and let out a
wild cheer.
They were, after all, coming to a ‘Sally’ event.
And that means SOMETHING exciting must happen.
Right?
Mom shook her head and smiled ruefully at me while Uncle
Pete/Dad dabbed at the rivulets of punch running down her cheeks with a
formerly pristine napkin.
Then, as the cheering died down and people sank back into
their seats, sighing with contentment, Uncle Pete/Dad got to his feet.
Once again the room went silent.
He nodded at Sally and Mort, who quickly sat down, and then
turned and left the room.
A moment later, he returned, pushing a cart upon which was a
massive (and quite beautiful) wedding cake.
Another cheer went up.
Yep. Dad’s got this.
Welcome to the family.
My words: Hors d’oeuvre ~ Cul-de-Sac ~ Déjà vu ~ Sel de Fleur ~ Ricochet
Were given to me, via Karen by my friend Tamara at https://thethreegerbers.blogspot.ch/
Now go and see what words the others got—and how they used them!