of his niece dating a football player at an away game at a hotel and in that dressâStephen covered his face with his hands and shuddered. âYou thought wearing a dress like that would get his attention?â
âHeâs a senior and all the girls around here are throwing themselves at him!â Kimber squeaked.
Any minute now, there would be tears, which Stephen did not handle well. He hated when his girlfriends cried, and buying something sparkly for them did the trick. âLook,â he sighed, âsneaking out to meet him is not the way. I need to meet this Marion.â
âMarvin,â Kimber drawled out with a whine.
âWhatever. I need to meet him first before you start giving yourselves labels.â
Kimberâs brows shot upward with excitement like a kid on Christmas morning. âYou can meet him at the fair tomorrow!â
âWho said you could go? Youâre still grounded.â Stephen stifled a smile.
âI have to go. Phillyâs in the pageant and I need to help.â
He frowned now with the thought of Lexi Pendergrass and her case full of trophies. His anger shifted once again to the dress-shop owner. He still was not through with her.
Chapter 2
C ursing under her breath, Lexi cringed at the ring of the front bumper of her car banging into the meter on Sunshine Boulevard as she misjudged how much room she had for her diagonal parking space. Lexi shared the blame for her lack of parking skills with the eye-catching Sale Pending sign wedged in the boarded-up glass window of Divinity Bakery. Her heart soared and all she wanted to do was run over to Mr. and Mrs. Foxxâs café and thank them. Their sign however wasnât just turned over to Closed, but an On Vacation notice hung below the sign.
All week, she and the elderly couple had passed each other like two ships in the night. Considering the way things had ended Monday morning, Lexi feared Mr. and Mrs. Foxx had reconsidered selling the store. Now finally, she was inches closer to achieving her goal, having an all-in-one boutique. âWell, damn, girl!â
After reminiscing over her past the previous night, Lexi had decided today to wear a pair of skintight denim jeggings with an old T-shirt knotted to the side.
âSafe to assume the sign is good for us?â Andrew asked, pulling her into his arms and then dipping her backward, causing Lexi to gasp. âDid they call you from the road?â
Lexi straightened herself upright and shook her head. âI only saw the pending sign when I pulled up. I hope they left a message on the machine. Did you hear anything?â
âI havenât checked yet,â said Andrew.
âUh, no, maâam. I donât care what day of the week it is.â The corners of Chantalâs mouth turned upside down as she shook her head back and forth. âYou havenât dressed like this because youâre a businesswoman now, a consultant, the owner of a one-of-a-kind dress shop with a reputation for being the good-luck charm for every girl that comes here for a dress. Everyone knows a dress bought from your shop is guaranteed a placement, if not a title, in any pageant. If one of the sponsors or parents comes in here while youâre dressed for the club, youâre going to lose a lot of credibility with the mothers bringing their kids in for the pageant workshop.â
With Chantal following Lexi into her office and rattling off the agenda for the day, Lexi picked out more appropriate work attire from the closet. She chose a red A-line skirt and matched it with a scoop-neck red-and-white polka-dot sleeveless blouse.
To generate an interest in pageants in town, Chantal had set up a workshop for two Saturdays a month where kids could learn the art of energetic and confident pageant walks. She spent at least thirty minutes of each workshop making the girls practice holding their wrists and hands in a cupcake-like style. Her team, made up of