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Once Upon a Wedding
by 
Kathleen Eagle
  
Publisher: HarperCollins
Subject(s):  Fiction
Romance
Awards:  Romantic Times Career Achievement Award Winner
Romantic Times BOOKreviews Magazine

Format Information

Mobipocket eBook Add to BookBag
Available copies:  
Library copies:  
File size:   307 KB
ISBN:   9780061563317
Release date:   Dec 26, 2007

Description

How do you feel about weddings?

1. Love them

2. Hate them

3. Terrific as long as

I'm not wearing blue taffeta with a bow butt

For Camille, her daughter Jordan's announcement that she's getting married brings about a mixture of pure excitement and utter dread. She's thrilled that Jordan has found someone to spend the rest of her life with, but Camille's too young to be the mother of the bride!

To confuse matters more, Jordan's father, Creed Burke, is back.

Camille has never really gotten him out of her system, and while her head tells her that his impetuous ways made their marriage burn out fast, her heart tells her that the passion they found together has never been extinguished.

Could Creed truly have changed? Her two best friends are split -- one says "run," the other says "relax!" And as the big day approaches Camille has one realization -- that she must follow her heart…wherever it takes her.

If you like this title, you might also like...

The Night Remembers
The Night Remembers
Kathleen Eagle

Excerpts

Chapter One

...

In all four chambers of her practical heart, Camille Delonga believed that one of the surest ways of blowing a considerable pile of money was to hitch a girl's dream onto the six-foot train of a woman's wedding dress. The proof of her sentiment, in all its floral-scented glory, lay beforeher as she and her mother waited to be ushered to their seats in church. There the children of her friend for life, Bridget Mayfield, had been baptized.

Camille had dutifully been there for both babies. The first one had yowled like a tomcat on the make, and Camille recalled wondering how Bridget could live with that noise. The second, who would soon be walking down the aisle in a different sort of white dress from the one she'd worn over twenty years ago, had taken to her christening spotlight like a Christmas cherub. By then babies were looking downright darling to Camille, as were her own beach-ball belly and the bad boy who'd promised to be her mate for life. Soon the belly had deflated. Later the promise. But the beginnings had been glorious, filled, in the way ofbeginnings, with soft colors, summer flowers, and much music. Way too much music.

In the last year Camille had heard more about the details and the worries and the changes in the plans for Lauren's wedding than she cared to remember. But today, like the day of Lauren's first name-giving, all was right with the world. Bridget and Camille had seen each otherthrough some thickheaded and thin-skinned times, and they were still friends. Bridget was the one who enjoyed playing in money. Camille preferred to put it to work, but she enjoyed seeing how Bridget's spending played out. Bridgetcalled Camille a vicarious shopper, but neither saw anything wrong with that. They balanced, often beautifully.

Mother of the bride had been Bridget's best role ever. Every phone call began with a wedding update. She offered a wedding monologue every time they had lunch with Ellie Terrell, the third leg of their girlfriend tripod. Bridget would be soaring over some great wedding find one week and suffering over some perceived loss the next. "In for a penny, in for a pound" had become Bridget's mantra. In for a pile of bills, Camille thought, and she'd said as much, because they were friends.

Not that her opinion on this particular matter counted with Bridget, but thank God it counted with Jordan. "You don't need to be the princess bride," Camille had told her daughter a time or ten. "When your turn comes, have a small, tasteful ceremony, a party for close family and friends, and put the money you save toward a house."

Jordan always agreed, if tacitly. After all, no objection was as good as an agreement. Jordan could be quite sensible when she put her mind to it, which she often did these days. True, she hadn't stuck it out in college, but she had a good head on her shoulders. She could be anything she wanted to be, just as soon as she decided whatthat was. Camille had no reservations about putting all her pennies and pounds into her daughter's education, even when Jordan had dropped out. Education was never a waste.

"Mrs. Burke, Mrs. Delonga, you both look beautiful." Usher James Mayfield greeted them with a killer smile. "I've saved you two ladies the best seats in the house."

Camille tried to remember how long it had been since the bride's older brother had left home. He had known her as Mrs. Burke when he was growing up, but she'd reclaimed her maiden name after her divorce. James must have been in college by then. Bridget's kids had always been such good manner-minders, which somehow irritated Camille enough to want to correct James's error on the spot. But she beat down the urge. Both of Bridget's children had finished...

 

About the Author

Kathleen Eagle is a USA TODAY bestselling author who has been acclaimed by peers and reviewers alike as a premiere writer in her field. A graduate of Wellesley College, her knowledge of Native Americans comes from personal experience--she met and married her Lakota Sioux husband when she was a teacher on a reservation. Her knowledge of weddings--and how they take on a life of their own--comes from the planning of her daughter’s wedding just this year. Check out her website for the results! In her ‘spare’ time, Kathleen is a book reviewer for the Minneapolis Star Tribune.

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