The Dressmaker Who Made a Billionaire Forget Why He Came In-hothiyenvy_5

The first time Weston Hale saw Clara Bennett, he was not supposed to feel anything.

He was supposed to walk into a tiny Brooklyn dress shop, commission one private design, and leave with a name he could either use or forget.

That was how men like Weston moved through the world.

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Doors opened.

People smiled.

Talent presented itself and waited to be chosen.

But the rain had soaked through the shoulders of his coat by the time he stepped off Atlantic Avenue, and the shop window was fogged at the edges from the radiator inside.

A delivery truck honked behind him.

A cyclist shouted something sharp into traffic.

The curb water ran gray and dirty under the tires.

Then Weston pushed open the glass door, and the small bell above it gave one tired little ring.

Clara Bennett was standing barefoot on a wooden step stool in the middle of the shop.

She did not turn right away.

She had one hand inside a cloud of ivory silk and the other holding a dressmaker pin between two fingers.

Her brown hair was twisted up in a messy knot, with a pencil tucked behind one ear and loose strands brushing her neck.

Chalk dust marked the side of her plain black dress.

Around her, the shop looked too narrow for a dream that large.

Bolts of fabric leaned against one wall.

A sewing machine sat under a lamp.

A paper coffee cup had gone cold near a tape measure.

A little American flag sticker clung to the lower corner of the front window, half-hidden behind the rain on the glass.

Weston had seen grander rooms.

He had spent afternoons in Paris ateliers where assistants wore gloves to touch beadwork.

He had sat in Milan while gowns worth more than cars moved down white runways under camera flashes.

He owned one of the most profitable luxury fashion houses in America, and people with better lighting, better budgets, and better last names had begged him to notice them.

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