
Meet the Bikinis:
Erin needs to lose weight to fit into her wedding gown – not
an easy feat with an old childhood crush distracting her.
Angela has let herself go and now she’s got to shed those
extra pounds before she loses her husband to the office
hottie. Megan wants to lose weight but she needs to find her
self-esteem. Then there’s Kizzy, who has to lose her bad
eating habits if she’s going to keep her health, and whose
misguided husband is sabotaging her diet efforts at every turn. Each woman’s diet journey may be different, but one thing
they all know: whether you are facing scary numbers on the
scale or problems in your life, you need your girlfriends.
Excerpt Was it a bad omen when you couldn't zip up your wedding
dress? Erin Merritt looked over her shoulder at her
reflection in the full-length mirror hanging on her bedroom
door and sighed. A good two inches of skin peeked out
between the zipper teeth, taunting, Neener, neener, neener.
How had this happened in just a few weeks?
Don't play dumb, scolded her inner mother. You know how
this happened. And then her inner mother gave her a little
pat on the shoulder. But it's understandable. You've been
under a lot of stress.
She had. Her job as an event planner was stressful
enough. But in addition to being responsible for making all
those fund raisers and community festivals in nearby Seattle
smashing successes, she'd been working on a shoestring on
the most important event of her life, her wedding.
If Mom were still alive it wouldn't have been a
shoestring. Mom always said, "What's money when you're
making memories? Memories are priceless." Especially wedding
memories, and that was why Erin wanted a storybook wedding.
But Adam Hawthorne, her prince charming, kept trying to
mess up the story at every turn. "We're going to have some
tight years at first. I don't want to rack up more debt than
we have to," he was always saying.
If she followed Adam's cheap-o suggestions they sure
wouldn't have any debt. They wouldn't have any wedding,
either. His mom had offered to spring for the cake, so there
had been no need to argue over that. But they'd argued about
everything else, from the flowers ("You don't need to budget
so much for flowers, babe. My cousin could do them for us -
she's big into gardening.") to the location ("Let's get
married in your aunt's backyard.") Nice of him to volunteer
her aunt, who had already done so much for her. Adam had no
problem with volunteering people to do things for them to
save them money. Erin, on the other hand, was reluctant to
draft free labor. It was both tacky and dangerous. Just
because someone liked to arrange flowers or take pictures,
that didn't mean the person was any good at it.
Okay, she got that he didn't want her to spend fifty
thousand dollars on a wedding, but he was carrying this
broke med school student thing way too far, especially since
he wasn't broke and his grandfather was taking care of he
medical school bills. (It paid to be an only child with
generous grandparents.) Anyway, it was their wedding, for
crying out loud, and she was footing the bill for most of
it.
Adam's argument to that was that he was going to get her
maxed out credit card bills right along with her. So what?
She'd be the one paying them off. Anyway, now many times did
a girl get married?
Only once, Mom used to say, and then a woman got smart.
But Erin didn't want to get smart. She wanted to marry Adam.
Wait a minute. That hadn't quite sounded right.
"We can put the money we save toward down payment on a
house," Adam kept saying. "You don't need a big party. Let's
be smart about this."
Depressed, she slipped out of the gown, returned it to
its garment bag and hung it back in her closet. She could
just imagine what Adam would say if he found out she'd
outgrown the wedding gown he thought she'd spent way to much
on.
Why had she been so dumb as to come home from work and
try the thing on anyway? Oh yeah, to cheer herself up after
her crappy day. Well, cheers.
"You've got to quit stressing," Adam was always saying.
Funny, considering he was one of her biggest stressers.
Erin sighed. Okay, everyone had their faults, and Adam's
cheapness wasn't really a fault. He just didn't get how this
all worked. Weddings cost money. And you had to plan ahead,
far ahead. The Heart Lake Lodge was booked a year in
advance, sometimes two. And she much preferred to use that
idyllic location rather than make her aunt go crazy trying
to get her house ready for a wedding. She could afford to
pay her way.She didn't have to use people.
Adam didn't know it yet, but Erin had already reserved
the lodge. Her friend Bev, who worked there, had told her
there'd been a cancellation. Thank God for connections. Bev
had ignored the waiting list and put their name on the event
calendar. And when the time was right, Erin would tell him
all about it and explain how lucky they were, and then he'd
be as excited about it as she was.
It was mid-January now. The wedding was in June.
Hopefully, the right time for telling Adam would be soon.
Erin suddenly felt a need for . . . something. She found
it fifteen minutes later at the Safeway on the chips aisle.
There was nothing like chips and salsa to make a girl feel
better. Chips, salsa, and a margarita, she decided, and
picked up some drink mix, too, to go with the half-full
bottle of tequila she had stashed at the back of the
cupboard.
Dan Rockwell was working the express check stand tonight.
He smiled at her, then eyed her grocery items. "Party, huh?"
"Not really," she replied. She should have picked a
different register. Then she wouldn't have had her brother's
old buddy assessing her food purchases.
"Dr. McDoodoo must be coming over."
"That's McDreamy," she corrected him. "Like in Grey's
Anatomy." If he was going to eavesdrop on private
conversations people had every time they waited in line he
should at least get the information right.
He nodded, pretending to be impressed. "Oh, yeah. I
forgot."
Erin gave him a look that told him exactly what she
thought of his faulty memory. The obnoxious crack was hardly
surprising though. Average-looking men like Dan always hated
Adam Hawthorne because he was so incredibly gorgeous. With
his ice-blue eyes and that square chin, those broad
shoulders and perfectly sculpted abs (not to mention the
rest of him), Adam could have been a movie star.
She supposed Dan could have been a movie star, too, a
sidekick kind of movie star - the average-looking guy with
the slightly crooked nose who did dumb stuff and said funny
things and was always there for the hero, but never cool
enough to be the hero.
Dan was a dork.
From: BIKINI SEASON, presented by St. Martin's Press,
April 2008
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