Months of preparation, weeks of worry, days of scrutinizing and agonizing over
every detail, every possible contingency, and finally the day we have all been
dreading has arrived. At this point there’s nothing left to do but take a deep
breath and charge into the breach. Are these quotations from a soldier’s
journal the morning of D-Day? Nope. Today we have our last meeting with…the
caterer.
Yes, ladies and gentlemen, Pam has crunched the
numbers with relentless efficiency. But at some point final decisions have to
be made and a check cut. Today is that day, and afterwards there will be no
turning back. I mean once you pick the filet and chicken marsala entrees you
can’t wake up in the middle of the night next week and suddenly decide that the
shrimp and grits with Virginia ham might have been a better play!
But if all we had to worry about was picking an entrée
this would be a walk in the park. No, there’s also the prickly debate over “crudités
vs. butler passed.” Now, I don’t have to tell you what a thorny issue that can
be. Actually…I probably do since before the advent of Pinterest, nobody knew
what the heck a “butler passed” was! I see the term “butler passed” in Pam’s
notes and I’m thinking, “…may he rest in peace and all, but why is that my
problem?? Are there no other butler’s available in the city of Richmond for
that weekend??”
Then there’s the question of the champagne toast, the
optional “coffee bar” and the baffling omission of sweet tea from the beverage queue.
They list lemonade and water only. Excuse me, but I’m pretty sure that this
wedding isn’t taking place in upstate New York. This is Virginia people! It
will be the middle of July and we’re going to be outside. If we don’t offer
iced, sweet tea with lemon, we’re going to have a riot on our hands. If we have to cut cost somewhere, we can always scratch the Dom Perignon and go with the Cold Duck, but I'm drawing the line at sweet tea.
Last night my wife was sitting on the sofa at her
laptop, with her three ring wedding planning binder opened and copious notes
littered all over the room. She looks up at me and asks, “Do you think there is
any way that you can come with Kaitlin and me to the caterer’s meeting tomorrow?
She batted her eye lashes, her bottom lip quivered ever so faintly and I found
myself saying, “Sure.”
So, I will come along to Celebrations on the
Reservoir today to meet the caterer and hash out the great crudités vs. butler
passed debate with my girls. I will try my best not to say anything snarky or embarrassing.
When asked my opinion I will offer it succinctly and without embellishment, “I
agree! Oh, and pass along my condolences to that butler’s family.”
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