martedì 16 giugno 2015

1989 (#17) - The meeting between Thorne and Macy

On board the Queen Mary, just a few hours before the show begins, Sally confesses to Macy that she is overjoyed and proud that she can count on her. And noticing two of her models, Shawna Carley and Camille Houston, walking around the ship accompanied by two handsome hunks, Sally took the opportunity to talk to her daughter and ask her about her flirtation with Mick. Always very reserved, and certainly not accustomed to confide in her exuberant mother, Macy dismisses the matter with a few words, without giving too much away. Sally, then, can't help but think that Mick, but a man like Ridge, is not the right person for her daughter. And so, determined to get the two of them to know each other, and above all to make Ridge realize how sweet and attractive his Macy is, Sally decides to give fate a hand and force things a bit by locking the two of them alone inside Ridge's cabin, hoping that romance and passion would take over. Fate, however, does not always go the way one hopes. As chance would have it, it is Thorne who takes the place in Ridge's cabin; and when he comes face to face with Macy, he is enchanted by the beauty of the girl who, to gain time for the imminent start of the fashion show, had taken advantage of the bathroom to take a shower. Dressed only in her towels, an embarrassed Macy apologizes to Thorne, and they both end up laughing at the episode. But it's clear that this encounter is a real thunderbolt for both of them, a prelude to a dazzling love story. So Macy and Thorne soon begin to see each other and enjoy each other's company, aware and even a little amused by the fact that they know they represent a unique and strange exception to the context of origin of their families, who have always been rivals and in conflict in the field of fashion. On the other hand, even though it's not Ridge, Sally doesn't seem at all sorry to have succeeded in bringing the two of them together; indeed, she breathes a sigh of relief since she didn't like her daughter's closeness to Mick at all, who was considered to be a good-for-nothing and a calculator.

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