Chapter 30

It Only Takes a Loose Stitch

Celine fixed a star-shaped pin into her hair as she frantically bicycled down Rue Cambon to get to Maison Baudelaire. She was late. She was late and in disarray and if the doors were closed and she missed this round, she would never forgive herself.

Once the iron gate appeared with Gabriel tapping his foot impatiently, a clipboard propped against his hip, Celine hopped off her bicycle, leaning it against the House exterior, and tried to regulate her breaths. He didn’t look pleased to see her in the slightest.

“Mademoiselle LeBeau. Everyone else had already arrived an hour ago.”

“I know,” she returned hastily, trying not to keel over and heave. Her side was cramping. “I’m sorry.”

Gabriel scrutinised her. Consciously, Celine brushed a hand down her dress.

It wasn’t the one she had made for her birthday.

That dress remained discarded on the floor of the attic, still soggy, still carrying a whole night of foolishness in its folds.

Bastien had left a clean one draped on the folding screen for her, along with a note saying that nothing had happened—even though she had woken up practically naked—and that he was sorry.

And had disappeared. He had even abandoned his motorcar in front of the building, with green leaves shaken by the rain pasted all over the hood and the interior still leaking water through the outline of the doors.

“Well…” Gabriel clicked his tongue. “Your model has sent notice he will not be able to come today. So I will—”

Celine stopped him. “He has sent what?”

“He had stuffed an envelope beneath the door for Claude. I am not privy to his reasons. Only that I will be your model for today,” he added with a scowl he didn’t bother to hide. “Hurry up now.”

Celine allowed herself to be ushered inside and straight to her station, where her design stood draped over a mannequin.

She was still trying to catch her breath by the time Gabriel stepped up on the platform, waiting for her to fit the gown to his measurements.

To her relief, he was of the same build as Bastien, though slightly lacking in height, and she only had to tailor the hem of the gown for it to fit him perfectly.

Celine moved through the routine of fitting the dress mechanically.

For the first time since she had stepped foot inside Maison Baudelaire, her thoughts were anywhere but on the contest. Because after all that talk of “I care about the contest” and “I care about you” and “Let’s open my mother’s studio together”, Bastien had walked out on her. Again.

Celine’s recollections during those first few minutes of waking up had been a blur of lights, cheshire smiles, and stairs.

Nothing that would reveal anything. Whatever it was that she had taken must have been a hell of a drink to conjure up Wonderland.

Then Celine had peered at herself, at the gleaming watch clasped delicately around her wrist, and the night before had pieced itself together, every painful, awkward event after another.

Was the idea of loving her so awful that Bastien couldn’t bring himself to show up today?

“Ow!” Gabriel exclaimed. “You nicked me!”

Celine blinked. “I am sorry,” she said, and placed the needle back on the pin cushion at her wrist, pushing it all the way through that she nicked herself in the process. The pain did not register.

“Mademoiselle LeBeau?” Gabriel called, sounding panicked. “You’re bleeding.”

“Huh?” With a gasp, Celine released the needle and ripped off the pin cushion entirely. There was a little dot welling with blood on the back of her wrist.

“Get the handkerchief from my pocket.” Gabriel pointed at the clothes he had folded over her work table. Celine did as he instructed, dabbing at the blood with a shy “Merci,” on her lips. The soft violet silk turned a dark red.

“I would have expected you to be more mindful,” Gabriel chided.

But he didn’t ask if something was wrong.

Celine wagered Gabriel did not care, and frankly, she wouldn’t be willing to talk even if he had asked.

The topic wasn’t an easy one to explain without a hefty folder of family drama and a family tree to accompany it.

Shaking off the stupor, Celine checked the gown one last time, before getting up from her crouch. “I’m done.”

Gabriel stepped down from the platform quite gracefully, to her surprise. He hadn’t seemed pleased at the idea of being her model, but he appeared to like the design now that it was on him.

“No thoughts?” she asked, if only to distract herself from the absence at her side.

It was the penultimate round—even though it didn’t feel right without Bastien—and Celine wasn’t going to throw away all the effort she had put in this competition simply because her model did not want to participate in it anymore.

“I’m assuming you were in a better mood when you made this. It is flawless… And surprisingly comfortable,” Gabriel relented along with a smile. “Considering it is haute couture.”

“Beauty doesn’t always have to be painful,” Celine offered. “Not all flowers have thorns, you know.”

“I suppose you’re right.”

Franz, Coco, and Elise, along with their models, had set up in the main hall awaiting Monsieur Baudelaire’s judgement when Celine and Gabriel joined them. Celine’s cheeks flamed up. She could feel every eye on her, scanning her from head to toe. Then scanning Gabriel.

She smoothed out her dress again.

Monsieur Baudelaire clicked his cane. “Now that we are all here, let us begin.”

There were only four designers left, each presenting their wildest creation, per the challenge’s requirements.

Celine started picking at the nail polish on her thumb as she half listened to Monsieur Baudelaire judge Elise Sartre’s gargoyle inspired gown.

Elana looked like an eerie marble statue in it, though undeniably striking.

Her dark skin contrasted beautifully with the grey fabric.

Celine’s eyes roamed the rest of the designs rather vacantly.

Franz had gone with a butterfly theme, with carefully crafted wings of fabric extending from the back of his model.

Over the weeks, he appeared to have removed the shackles of the old ideas that were holding him back.

As for herself, Celine had prepared a house of cards inspired gown for Bastien—now Gabriel—to model, while Coco with her whimsical tastes had chosen A Midsummer Night’s Dream for her theme.

And while Celine liked it, she worried Coco might have gone a tad overboard with the layers.

Some of the patchwork was falling apart, and Celine crossed her fingers behind her back, hoping Monsieur Baudelaire wouldn’t notice the flaw.

When he approached their team, Celine became alert.

“At this rate, Mademoiselle LeBeau,” he said, “I fear men will abandon their tailors and line up to get their hands on one of your gowns. You’ve gotten even Gabriel to like it. Amazing job.”

Unamused, Gabriel pressed his lips into a thin, sour line. Celine only nodded in appreciation; her focus narrowed on gouging the couturier’s expression concerning Bastien’s letter, but he remained ever the stoic, his attention moving on to Coco’s design.

“Miss Jones, I regret saying this, truly, since your designs are the embodiment of Haute Couture, considering the extravagance you build them with. But we evaluate each designer by the current round, not their past record, and you weren’t in your best form today.

I would have expected poor needlework on your first challenge, not your seventh. ”

He paused for a moment, and then, regretfully, pursed his lips in dissatisfaction.

“Do believe me when I say it is exceedingly difficult to disqualify one out of you four, however these are the rules. I hope you will still work hard to get yourself that fashion house in the future, Miss Jones.”

Celine’s heart shivered in her chest. She tried to catch Coco’s eye, but her friend only winked and mouthed good luck, before she shook Monsieur Baudelaire’s hand, thanking him for his advice and criticism, and slowly returned to her station to clear it out, chin held high.

“Monsieur Olivier, Mademoiselle Sartre, and Mademoiselle LeBeau—you have made it to the next round,” Monsieur Baudelaire said with a smile wide enough that showed all his teeth.

“I am proud to witness that there’s very little that bars the flow of your ambition.

To say nothing of your imagination. From start to finish, your techniques and designs match those of the most revered designers in Paris.

I must say, I am very proud to have been your mentor these past few weeks.

Congratulations, because you three have made it to the final round. ”

A solemn wave of thank yous echoed throughout the hall.

“Your last challenge will be to overview all the designs you have competed with so far. Judge them as you see fit, but at the end of the week I expect you to present me a curated collection. Each of you will be provided ten models for the ten gowns you have designed for this competition, including the five sketches from your first challenge. Once he is done modelling, Gabriel will elaborate further…”

Celine was only half-listening, until she saw the group slowly disperse, realising that Monsieur Baudelaire’s speech had finished. There was an absence at her side, and craning her neck, she realised that Gabriel had moved away too.

Celine found him at her station, or rather only his silhouette behind the dressing screen as he changed into his own clothes, and waited until he finished to approach with her questions.

“What exactly did my model say about not being here today?”

Gabriel squinted at her while struggling with his tie. “Whatever lovers’ spat you two seem to have, I don’t want to get in the middle.”

Rolling her eyes, Celine slapped his hands away and straightened the two ends of the tie. “Let me do that.” She looped it around once. Twice. “And we are not lovers.”

“Please,” Gabriel scoffed.

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