noteful: (z what God has joined together)
"How many shades of lipstick do I have on my cheek?" Meg asks.

The last of the guests has finally made it through the receiving line, and the bridal party has taken a moment to catch its collective breath after the whirl of thank you for being here and it was a lovely ceremony (and, from Laura to Alain, do not be a jerk).

Kim smiles. "A few," she allows. "Do you want help with that before your grand entrance?"

"And all the pictured thereof?" Meg asks. "Yes, definitely. Thank you. We'll be right back," she tells Alain.

He reaches out and catches her hand. "Hurry back. You owe me a dance."

The dance in question is to The Beatles' "Michelle." It may not exactly be a traditional choice, but it's in both English and French and includes Alain's nickname for her, and they like it. Alain is fond of humming it while they do things like fix dinner. (And it's certainly a better choice than that silly Bryan Adams Robin Hood movie song that the radio stations won't stop playing.)

There are other people Meg "owes" dances to as well: her father and Alain's father, Luc and Oncle Sylvain. And Carlisle, who asks her for what would probably be a very proper waltz if Meg knew how to dance a very proper waltz. She's quite sure that Carlisle does, but he's very gracious about leading her through steps she's not exactly getting right, and is probably doing a great deal of compensating for her missteps. When the song ends he returns her to Alain, and thanks them both. "Now you get to spend the rest of your lives realizing how lucky you are," he tells them before he goes.

"I think your friend is having fun," Alain says, wrapping an arm around her waist, and Meg looks over her shoulder to see what he's looking at, and then laughs. On the far side of the dance floor, Castiel appears to have been adopted by three of Alain's young cousins. (Meg knows their names are Hélène, Laetitia, and Virginie, though she doesn't know which name goes with which cousin). The four of them are dancing in the unself-conscious and fairly ridiculous manner of ten-year-olds and (apparently) Angels of the Lord.

There's no sit-down meal, though there's also no shortage of food. Not for most people, anyway, though Meg and Alain can't quite seem to get enough of a break from talking to people and dancing and photographs to actually get any of it themselves. Meg is starting to wonder how to go about remedying that when Parker arrives with a very full plate and hands it to Alain.

"You two need to eat something," she says. "Can't have the bride and groom fainting at the reception. I'm ninety-nine percent sure that's considered bad luck. And those little puff things by your thumb are excellent."

"Thank you," Meg says.

"Eat," Parker repeats. "I'm going to go say hi to the cute boy over in the corner."

Alain looks over to the corner. "That's my cousin Thierry. He doesn't speak English."

"Pfft," Parker says as she goes, with a wave of her hand that implies a common language is far from necessary.

Then again, this is Parker, so it may not be.

Several minutes later, when Parker is dancing with Thierry, and Alain has gone to get rid of the now-empty plate, Meg takes a moment to just look around the room and try to fix all this in her memory. It's all going by so fast.

"Hello, Meg," someone says from just behind her shoulder.

Hello, Edward. Meg turns around, and smiles. I suppose if I forget anything, I can always ask you to remind me.

Edward's smile has the edge of a smirk. "How thorough you like me to be? Should I prepare a journal with all the things you've missed?"

Meg smiles. No. Not all of them. Only the good ones.

When the DJ takes his break, Luc takes the microphone to make the toast. In addition to being the best man, the groom's brother is, after all, an actor and a performer. He is also fluent in English, and he essentially provides his own simultaneous translation throughout, moving easily from one language to the other, so no one will be left out.

"Mesdames et monsieurs, ladies and gentlemen, a moment of your time, please. Thank you," he says, as the the chatter in the room falls away. "My brother's first girlfriend was a girl called Anastasie." Beside her, Meg hears Alain groan, faintly and without anything much like sincerity. "She had long blonde braids and somewhat crooked teeth, and Alain talked about her all the time. They were six."

Luc pauses, and then continues. "After Anastasie, when he was older, Alain tended to be a little . . . cooler, about his girlfriends. Not quite so effusive. Until one evening, when he he showed up at a bar with this redhead he'd met in the audience of a play I had been in at university. And the next day, did he have anything to say what way, I must say, a rather performance by his only brother? Oh, no. All he wanted to talk about was this girl. How beautiful and intelligent and charming and kind and wonderful she was.

"And as far as I can tell, he has not shut up about her since, though he has decided she is even more beautiful and intelligent and charming and kind and wonderful than he initially thought.

"So, Meg, thank you, for giving my brother someone to talk about the way he talks about you, and welcome to the family. And Alain, I hope that you will always have as much to say about Meg as you do now. Just perhaps not always to me."

Luc raises his glass. "To the bride and groom. May you have every happiness."

"Merci, Luc," Meg says, reaching up to kiss her brother-in-law's cheek when he joins them a moment later. "That was lovely."

"You're welcome. Did you get lipstick on my cheek?"

"Only a little," Meg promises.

There's a small bouquet of roses that the florist has provided for Meg to throw, as she didn't carry one in the ceremony. There's a great deal of good-natured jostling and laughing, but Meg throws it quite deliberately to Kim.

The flowers from the prayer book she carried down the aisle, though, she gives to Laura, quietly and away from the main bustle of the party. "I want you to have these."

"Oh. I -- thank you. They are very pretty," Laura says. After a second, she adds, "I am sorry they will die." There's a longer pause, and then she says, "You will tell me what I am supposed to do with them?"

"Take them home, and keep them as long as you like," Meg says. "There's a superstition that whoever catches the bride's bouquet will be the next person to get married, but I didn't throw them and you didn't catch them. I just want you to have them. Because you're a good friend, and you've come a very long way to be here."

"You helped. It is important," Laura says. And, being very careful with the flowers, she hugs Meg.

All in all, it's everything Meg could have asked of her wedding day, with the possible exception of its refusal to slow down.

"Do you feel a little like this whole day has passed in twenty minutes?" she asks Alain, when the cake has been cut (and most decidedly not smashed into anyone's face) and they've made their farewells and left in a flurry of birdseed and confetti and cans rattling on the back of Alain's car.

"More like fifteen," Alain says. "But it was perfect."

"It was, yes," Meg agrees.

In every way.
noteful: (z what God has joined together)
She's never been all that fond of being the center of attention.

Which is, unfortunately, kind of hard to avoid when you're the bride at a wedding. (Or perhaps that's fortunate, in the grand scheme of things. But Meg still isn't looking forward to it.)

"You look beautiful," her father says, as they wait in the narthex.

"Thank you," Meg says, reaching out to straighten her father's boutonniere, which doesn't actually need any straightening. "You look very handsome."

The organist has almost reached the end of the prelude. The mothers of the bride and groom are being escorted to their seats. Kim (in maid of honor capacity) is having a hurried, whispered conversation with Maryse, Alain's cousin who is tasked with keeping everything running on time and in order today.

Meg shifts her grip on the prayer book, with its gardenia and spray of white rose buds, that she is carrying instead of a bouquet.

"Nervous?" John asks, with a smile that implies he already knows the answer to the question.

"A little," Meg admits. "Not about getting married. Just about walking down the aisle."

The organist begins Clarke's Trumpet Voluntary and Meg hears the unmistakable sound of a church full of people standing up.

Kim turns around, smiles brightly, and sets off on Maryse's nod.

"Well," John says, holding his arm out to his younger daughter, "just keep your eyes on him and you hand on me, and you'll be fine."

Meg settles her hand on her father's arm. "Thank you."

"Deep breath, big smile, and here we go, Megkin."

The use of her childhood nickname almost makes her laugh (which was, no doubt, the point).

St. Andrew's is a beautiful church, and it's full of people she knows and loves and cares about (some of whom are here in defiance of rational laws of time and space), and Meg sees absolutely none of that right now, because she has taken her father's advice and is keeping her eyes on Alain.

Alain, it must be said, does not appear to be paying much attention to their surroundings, either. And his smile right now might be the absolute most wonderful thing Meg has ever seen in her life.

"I like the dress," Alain says, leaning over a little to whisper under the cover of the end of the processional.

"Worth the wait, then?" she asks.

"In every way," he says.

There's a moment of profound silence when the organ ends, and Meg hands her prayer book bouquet over to Kim. And then the priest says, "Dearly beloved, we are gathered together here in the sight of God, and in the face of this congregation, to join together this man and this woman in holy matrimony," and the service has begun.

Meg and Alain had several long discussions with each other and with Reverend Webb about how much of the service to put in French, before deciding (to Mr. Webb's not quite entirely concealed relief) to basically leave it in English. One of the readings and one of the hymns are in French, but of the service itself, they are only using French for parts of the actual vows.

"Who giveth this woman to be married to this man?" Mr. Webb asks.

"I do," John says, and transfers his daughter's right hand from his own to the priest's. Mr. Webb puts Meg's hand in Alain's, and Alain repeats his vows after the priest. Meg suspects Mr. Webb is just as nervous about this part as she was about walking up the aisle; his French pronunciation is a little shaky.

"Moi, Alain Michel, déclare te prendre toi, Meghan Margaret, pour épouse légitime, à partir de ce jour, pour le meilleur et pour le pire, dans la richesse et dans la pauvreté, dans la santé et dans la maladie, pour t'aimer et te chérir jusqu'à ce que la mort nous sépare, selon le décret de Dieu, et je t'en donne ici ma foi."

He lets go of her hand for a second, and then she takes his.

"I, Meghan Margaret, take thee, Alain Michel, to be my wedded husband, to have and to hold from this day forward, for better for worse, for richer for poorer, in sickness and in health, to love and to cherish, till death us do part, according to God's holy ordinance; and thereto I give thee my troth."

Luc, who has not forgotten the rings, sets them on the minister's prayer book. Mr. Webb blesses them and then gives Meg's ring to Alain.

"With this ring I thee wed, with my body I thee honour, and all my worldly goods with thee I share: in the Name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost. Amen," Alain says.

His smile is still absolutely beautiful.

Meg's vow is a bit let poetic. "Je te donne cet anneau en symbole et en gage de ma foi constante et de mon amour durable."

It's the end of the French that Mr. Webb has to lead them through, and he looks very glad to be done with it.

They kneel to receive the priest's blessing, and then he joins their right hands again, and says, "Those whom God hath joined together let no man put asunder." He looks from them out to the congregation and announces, "Forasmuch as Alain and Meghan have consented together in holy wedlock, and have witnessed the same before God and this company, and thereto have given and pledged their troth either to other, and have declared the same by giving and receiving of rings, and by joining of hands; I pronounce that they be man and wife together, In the Name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost. Amen."

And that's it. They're married.

There are still readings and hymns and prayers, of course, and they still have to sign the register, but the marriage part of the ceremony is over. And Meg can't honestly say she pays all that much attention to the rest of it. And then, almost suddenly, are final prayers and blessings, and then the organist is playing the Alla Hornpipe from Handel's Water Music and Meg is walking back down the aisle, with her husband (husband) this time.

They reach the narthex just ahead of Luc and Kim, and for one brief moment they're alone.

"I'm going to kiss the bride now," Alain says.

And he does.
noteful: (laugh and downward glance)
Something Old

The existence of a certain interdimensional bar aside, Meg Ford has never had a better-kept secret than her wedding dress. Even her mother has never seen it before the day she helps Meg dress in it. Months of asking has gotten her groom the information that it is white, and that she really likes it. (Also, that it's not so formal that he will be required to wear a morning coat instead of just a suit. He's very grateful.) It has been here at Sylvain and Ginette's house since the day she bought it with Laura and Parker. Ginette has taken care of the few minor alterations and repairs it needed. Now, looking in the mirror, Meg realizes she hasn't been entirely honest with Alain. She doesn't just really like this dress. She absolutely adores it.

Something New

On the other hand (or foot), the shoes have been far from secret. Just about everyone has seen her shoes by now as Meg has been carefully and methodically breaking them in for weeks now, wearing them around her apartment and to the end of the universe and out to buy the paper at the newsstand on the corner and down the aisle in the church at the rehearsal. It's the only logical way to deal with them. The heels are higher than anything she usually wears, and she's going to be on her feet in them rather a lot today, and no one wants blisters for their honeymoon. (Especially not when one is headed to Paris.)

Something Borrowed

She doesn't wear a veil. She wears her hair up, held in place with a great many bobby pins and a silver comb that belongs to Tante Ginette. She'd worn it at her wedding, she'd said, when she'd offered it to Meg with a great many if you'd likes and only if you want tos. It was quite obvious what it would mean to her if Meg wore it, though, and Meg never for a moment considered declining. Ginette hasn't any children of her own, and she's very close to Alain and his brother, Luc. She's been lovely and gracious and wonderful about extending that include Meg as she's become an ever more fixed part of Alain's life.

Something Blue

Her emerald-cut aquamarine earrings were a gift from Alain for her birthday, selected expressly for today. Most of the jewelry she wears today came from Alain, which only seems appropriate. One of the two bracelets around her right wrist was a gift in honor of their two-month anniversary, the first gift she ever had from him. Her engagement ring has temporarily taken the place of the amethyst she usually wears on her right hand, so it won't be in the way of the gold wedding band she'll be putting on shortly. She doesn't wear any kind of necklace; the neckline of the dress doesn't need help or competition.

And a Silver Sixpence in Her Shoe

When every detail of Meg's outfit has been checked and double-checked, Kim goes to put the last touches on hers, and their mother produces a small velvet box like that for a ring.

"What's this?" Meg asks.

"It was mine, from my wedding," Deirdre says, and Meg opens the box to find an old English sixpence. "For your left shoe. I hope it brings you as much luck as it brought me."

"Thank you," Meg says, settling the sixpence in the side of her shoe, and then hugging her mother.

"You're welcome. Now don't make me cry. We don't have time to redo our makeup."

"Wouldn't dream of it."
noteful: (z avec Alain (toi et moi))
Meg is getting married in not quite seventeen hours.

Today has passed in something of a rush, a flurry of details and lists and phone calls and confirmations and timetables and, at some point, she is relatively certain she might even have had lunch.

She spent much of the morning with Alain's cousin Maryse, who is in charge of all the lists and details and timetables from here on out. Meg had not been at all sure about handing all that over, because they're her lists for her wedding, even though she knows she's going to have Other Things to focus on for her wedding day. But Maryse has proven to be calm and practical and organized, and moreover she brought her own index cards to their first meeting, and Meg has surrendered custody of her Notebook.

They have successfully rehearsed getting married to everyone's satisfaction. They've practically successfully rehearsed the reception, as almost all of the guests were at the rehearsal dinner that closed down Sylvain's restaurant this evening.

This wedding is as planned and prepared as it can be.

Meg's plans for the rest of the evening involve mint tea, a crossword puzzle, checking to see how the Blue Jays did in Seattle, and getting a decent night's sleep.

All of which she will get to just as soon as she finishes checking the one list she still has, which is a packing list for her overnight bag. After all, the groom is not supposed to see the bride on the day of the wedding until the ceremony starts, which she thinks is rather silly but which matters to Alain. They cannot, therefore, both sleep in this apartment, so Meg is headed off to spend the night at Sylvain and Ginette's.

She could have taken this bag over earlier, of course, but she wanted the excuse to come back to the apartment with Alain after the rehearsal dinner. It's amazing how difficult it is for the bride to find time alone with the groom once the wedding celebrations have started.

Meg is just closing the bag when Alain wraps an arm around her waist. "Do you have everything?"

She nods. "I do, yes."

"And your father won't be here to pick you up for another ten minutes. Whatever will we do with the time?" he asks, though he's already kissing her neck.

"Alain?" Meg asks, a moment later.

"Oui?"

"Luc has the rings, right?"

Alain laughs. "Oui, ma belle."

"And you won't let him forget them?"

"Non," Alain says, moving to kiss her again.

Meg reaches up and lays one finger across his lips. "And you won't let him keep you out too late tonight?"

Alain kisses her finger and then brings his hand up to move hers away. "One drink. That's all. Juré craché."

"All right."

"Ne t'inquiète pas," Alain adds, and Meg lets him turn his attention back to kissing his fiancée.

It's several minutes later, and not without some reluctance, that Meg takes half a step away from him. "I should go," she says. "Dad'll be here soon, and you know what parking's like down there on a Friday night. If I'm waiting, I can just jump in the car when he gets here."

Alain sighs. "My responsible Meg." He brushes one lock of her hair back behind her left ear. "I love you more than I can say."

"Je t'aime, aussi. Je t'adore."

Alain kisses her one more time, and then picks up her suitcase.

"Come on. I'd be a terrible fiancé if I let my bride-to-be wait alone on a street corner the night before the wedding."

"And you've been such a wonderful fiancé so far," Meg says, as they make their way out of the apartment and down the steps. "It would be a pity to mess it up right at the end."

"The end?" Alain asks, holding the door out to the street for her.

"Well, yes. You won't be my fiancé much longer. This time tomorrow, you'll be my husband."

Alain smiles, and reaches for her hand. "And you'll be my wife."

"I will, yes," Meg says. "And that is my dad," she adds, as John Ford's car comes into view. She waves to him, and then takes her overnight bag from Alain. "Have fun with Luc tonight."

"I hope the Blue Jays won for you," he says, as John's car comes to a stop and Meg darts out into the road to get into the passenger seat before the light changes.

"Ma belle," Alain calls, and Meg pauses at the car door. "What does your dress look like?"

Meg laughs. "À demain, Alain," she calls, and gets into the car.

"Until tomorrow, Meg."
noteful: (Default)
Doctor and Mrs. John Matthew Ford
request the honour of your presence
at the marriage of their daughter

Meghan Margaret

to

Mr. Alain Michel Gagné

Saturday, the sixth of July
nineteen hundred ninety-one
two o'clock
St. Andrew's Church
Montreal, Quebec

and afterwards at the reception


the favour of a reply is requested

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noteful: (Default)
Meg Ford

June 2013

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