Ðóññêèé ÿçûê – àçû ìèðîçäàíèÿ, Ìóäðûé ñîâåò÷èê, öåëèòåëü è ìàã Äóøó ñîãðååò, îáëåã÷èò ñòðàäàíèÿ Îò ìóñîðà â í¸ì îñòà¸òñÿ ëèøü øëàê. Ñ àçîâ íà÷èíàëè è âåäàëè áóêè, Ñìûñëîì âñåãäà íàïîëíÿëèñü ñëîâà, Àçáóêà – ýòî íå òîëüêî çâóêè, Îáðàçû, öåëè, ïîñòóïêè, äåëà. Âåäàé æå áóêâû – ïèñüìà äîñòîÿíèå, Ìóäðîñòü ïîñëàíèé ïðåäêîâ ñëàâÿí, Ãëàãîë Áîæèé äàð – ïîçíà

Christmas At The Caf?: Christmas at the Gingerbread Caf? / Chocolate Dreams at the Gingerbread Cafe / Christmas Wedding at the Gingerbread Caf? / Wish Upon a Christmas Cake

Christmas At The Caf?: Christmas at the Gingerbread Caf? / Chocolate Dreams at the Gingerbread Cafe / Christmas Wedding at the Gingerbread Caf? / Wish Upon a Christmas Cake Rebecca Raisin Darcie Boleyn Curl up by a roaring fire with a delicious cup of mulled wine and enjoy two festive winter warmers, for the price of one!A Gingerbread Cafe ChristmasChristmas is the season the Gingerbread Caf? was made for and owner Lil has every recipe down, from gingerbread men to snow dusted mince pies. So when gorgeous outsider Damon opens a shop opposite The Gingerbread Cafe, Lil refuses to let him steal her customers without a fight – no matter how much he makes her heart flutter!Wish Upon a Christmas CakeKatie Warham has just one wish this year: to have the best Christmas ever. But that didn’t include the surprise arrival of her ex-boyfriend, Sam! Katie didn’t think any man could tempt her under the mistletoe this year…yet as the snow begins to fall, could her Christmas wish actually come true?What readers are saying about A Gingerbread Caf? Christmas and Wish Upon A Christmas Cake: A Gingerbread Caf? Christmas‘Simply divine, with stunning writing slipping between being utterly romantic, charming and fun-filled and a little emotional.’ – Reviewed the Book‘A book that’s sure to leave you feeling all warm and fuzzy inside’ – Paris Baker’s Book Nook‘Fun, quick, festive reads that’ll leave you glowing from within.’ – Into the Bookcase‘It has everything, from sensational food to gorgeous romance and all the little things in-between.’ – Becca's BooksPraise for Wish Upon A Christmas Cake‘A beautiful and heartwarming tale, that really tugged at my heart strings…a delightful debut novel’ ? Gilbster‘…put on your fluffy pyjamas, grab a hot chocolate and immerse yourself in the delights of Wish upon a Christmas Cake.’ ? The Book Review Caf?‘What a gorgeously delicious book this is! It just makes me wish I was reading it by a roaring fire, with snow outside and a plate full of mince pies!’ ? Goodreads Review‘Wish Upon a Christmas Cake is very much a story of loss and true love with a sprinkling of Christmas thrown in for good measure.’ ? By The Letter Book Reviews Christmas at the Caf? The Gingerbread Caf? Trilogy Christmas at the Gingerbread Caf? Chocolate Dreams at the Gingerbread Caf? Christmas Wedding at the Gingerbread Caf? Rebecca Raisin Wish Upon a Christmas Cake Darcie Boleyn Copyright (#ulink_7946a086-5bea-567c-b206-f3380be95afe) HQ An imprint of HarperCollinsPublishers Ltd. 1 London Bridge Street London SE1 9GF First published in Great Britain by HQ in 2015 Copyright © Rebecca Raisin/Darcie Boleyn 2015 Rebecca Raisin/Darcie Boleyn asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work. A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library. This novel is entirely a work of fiction. The names, characters and incidents portrayed in it are the work of the author's imagination. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events or localities is entirely coincidental. All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins. E-book Edition © June 2015 ISBN: 9781474048491 Version date: 2018-07-23 Contents Cover (#ue4582433-84ae-5a19-a64b-c547797d3218) Title Page (#u52b8f308-c053-5ad8-ae64-9be84649deed) Copyright (#u024acfaa-03c2-5a8e-a3d1-ae1125f6f429) The Gingerbread Caf? Trilogy (#u8cfad33e-0060-5797-b96e-e623c9600665) Author Bio (#uedab2c9d-db17-5b4d-9366-324fd6cc6d71) Christmas at the Gingerbread Caf? (#ud7530af0-293a-5a7e-9706-10e858e8ee88) Blurb (#uf99ebfc8-7da2-5697-8f0e-e31e08e54358) Acknowledgements (#uc7305f3a-08b7-5911-91f7-f50c2f2d449e) Dedication (#u87305f96-b2fb-5cd9-88ca-d3cef17e7993) Chapter One (#uab92bb0b-8c34-5f04-8ec0-cc0da1ef1bc1) Chapter Two (#ub0302e70-c7e5-5f7d-811c-fc26540516f5) Chapter Three (#uf809955e-73fc-58c5-98aa-2ff8f185f43b) Chapter Four (#uf84dc408-c6f0-5665-802a-180f86894690) Chapter Five (#uacf32225-56cf-55dd-afe7-b2224417a450) Chapter Six (#ub7d7b654-c657-5cb8-915b-42b9c37918c4) Chapter Seven (#ue8d66d13-f7ce-5b79-a55c-444420d300fc) Chapter Eight (#uf4ab06ef-a3b7-5928-907a-e43e519d48bd) Chapter Nine (#ucbcd0dac-9fa5-5f2d-89bc-aed0a0fcbb22) Chapter Ten (#ua31a6ee1-a783-54e6-be15-61023c4a3884) Chocolate Dreams at the Gingerbread Caf? (#u6724c403-4944-558b-add1-4522b9ee6a79) Blurb (#u5b53749c-ede3-5135-892b-ea43814f89a5) Praise (#u23f6b5cc-9948-5cc3-87db-342fd9e3b88c) Dedication (#u0c1e8150-6c42-5b53-a098-d7cdcb26f275) Chapter One (#ue2241200-2d94-5dd0-bd7b-c0c328516f69) Chapter Two (#u97fac118-c150-5da3-b3c8-94a6a0741f6b) Chapter Three (#u6c4b1d63-1c4b-5e46-83a6-411129750a01) Chapter Four (#uc1c0a250-0e8a-50bd-99a7-b475a6b46bf0) Chapter Five (#u2a54b724-9be8-554f-ae1c-556e8f19e11a) Chapter Six (#u5e9a910a-ebcd-5ac3-bd48-cb89f0697e98) Chapter Seven (#u2e855b24-b558-5d31-bcf2-f616f49148f3) Chapter Eight (#u7e0463bd-1cdb-5a30-b71e-038df3477d51) Chapter Nine (#ub34b5a41-2473-541c-8244-705ea6971eeb) Chapter Ten (#u38602d79-18c5-5fb5-a3ca-d5710ebf6c0a) Chapter Eleven (#u435f07d3-36d7-5bea-8094-8bd068484fa4) Chapter Twelve (#u8e222674-2cc8-583a-bdb9-c3a4a513e67b) Christmas Wedding at the Gingerbread Caf? (#ubb635b3d-fa3d-5974-b4bf-ae125f398b74) Blurb (#ud67f9f18-9808-5449-8108-b2d8a95be020) Praise (#u1f855a88-69ae-5e16-b61c-d2a79f517f57) Dedication (#litres_trial_promo) Chapter One – Ten days (#litres_trial_promo) Chapter Two – Nine days (#litres_trial_promo) Chapter Three – Eight days (#litres_trial_promo) Chapter Four – Seven days (#litres_trial_promo) Chapter Five – Six days (#litres_trial_promo) Chapter Six – Five days (#litres_trial_promo) Chapter Seven – Four days (#litres_trial_promo) Chapter Eight – Three days (#litres_trial_promo) Chapter Nine – Two days (#litres_trial_promo) Chapter Ten – One day (#litres_trial_promo) Chapter Eleven – Wedding Day (#litres_trial_promo) Epilogue – Christmas Day (#litres_trial_promo) Wish Upon a Christmas Cake (#litres_trial_promo) Blurb (#litres_trial_promo) Author Bio (#litres_trial_promo) Acknowledgement (#litres_trial_promo) Dedication (#litres_trial_promo) Chapter 1 (#litres_trial_promo) Chapter 2 (#litres_trial_promo) Chapter 3 (#litres_trial_promo) Chapter 4 (#litres_trial_promo) Chapter 5 (#litres_trial_promo) Chapter 6 (#litres_trial_promo) Chapter 7 (#litres_trial_promo) Chapter 8 (#litres_trial_promo) Chapter 9 (#litres_trial_promo) Chapter 10 (#litres_trial_promo) Chapter 11 (#litres_trial_promo) Chapter 12 (#litres_trial_promo) Chapter 13 (#litres_trial_promo) Chapter 14 (#litres_trial_promo) Chapter 15 (#litres_trial_promo) Chapter 16 (#litres_trial_promo) Chapter 17 (#litres_trial_promo) Chapter 18 (#litres_trial_promo) Chapter 19 (#litres_trial_promo) Chapter 20 (#litres_trial_promo) Chapter 21 (#litres_trial_promo) Epilogue (#litres_trial_promo) Endpages (#litres_trial_promo) About the Publisher (#litres_trial_promo) The Gingerbread Caf? Trilogy (#ulink_d355670d-bd7e-5994-a262-6daeff187c72) REBECCA RAISIN is a true bibliophile. This love of books morphed into the desire to write them. She’s been widely published in various short-story anthologies, and in fiction magazines, and is now focusing on writing romance. The only downfall about writing about gorgeous men who have brains as well as brawn is falling in love with them — just as well they’re fictional. Rebecca aims to write characters you can see yourself being friends with. People with big hearts who care about relationships, and, most importantly, believe in true, once-in-a-lifetime love. Christmas at the Gingerbread Caf? (#ulink_7d06d137-4790-5107-a850-7edd4359ccd2) The icing on her Christmas cake! Christmas is the season the Gingerbread Caf? was made for…but owner Lily couldn’t be feeling less merry if she tried. She’s spent another year dreaming of being whisked away on a sleigh-ride for two, but she’s facing festive season alone – again. And, just to give her another reason to feel anything other than candy-cane perky, a new shop across the road has opened… Not only is it selling baked goods, but the owner, with his seriously charming smile, has every girl in town swooning. But Lily isn’t about to let her business crumble — the Gingerbread Caf? is the heart of the community, and she’s going to fight for it! This could be the Christmas that maybe, just maybe, all her dreams – even the someone-to-decorate-the-Christmas-tree-with ones – really do come true! Thank you seems too simple a sentiment for the amount of support and encouragement that I’ve received from my writer friends. They are an inspiration to me, and my first port of call to celebrate or commiserate, and I feel blessed to have them in my life. I read their work, and am in awe of their talent. Thank you Lisa Swallow, for everything. None of this would have happened without you. There’s nothing better than knowing you’re an email away to laugh, shout, or discuss hot guys with – purely for research! You’re the best. And your success spurs me on. Julie Davies, I feel like I’ve known you forever. But maybe that’s the sign of an extraordinary writer. Feeling as though you’re connected because their words have touched you. Thank you to the Carina UK team. Victoria, you’ve been amazing, and I felt immediately like we were on the same wavelength. I look forward to working with you on the next book! EWG- The Word Cult; Laura, Jake, Lisa, Alyssa and Deb, I love you guys. To Clare and Liz from Dymocks Ellenbrook – You are the sweetest girls, ever. Ashley, thanks for coming home and not mentioning it when the house looks like it’s been burgled, and you have to make dinner because writing has taken precedence. And Mum, you’re the best proof-reader I know, and very cheap (free) you drop everything and set to work. I love you. Rachel, all I have to do is ask, until our pesky twin ESP kicks in, and you’re there, thank you. My extended family: Aunty Norma, Uncle Alex & Toni, Aunty Jen, Uncle Ronald, Jason & Liesel, Emma, Marg & Kim, Lisa Raisin, Tracy, Cathy, Sam, Tone, Joss, Jules, Jo bear, and Roz ( I’m claiming you) – thanks for all your Facebook messages, and ‘likes’ and ‘shares’ and your constant support. Pretty lucky to have my own cheer squad. Lastly, William and Jaxson – You’re the reason I’m following my dreams. You guys have taught me so much about life, and love, and what truly counts. I love you, my precious (zombie) boys. For Julie Davies Chapter One (#ulink_273070f5-43b5-5203-9d1b-ebbe911cfd7b) Amazing Grace blares out from the speakers above me, and I cry, not delicate, pretty tears, but great big heaves that will puff up my eyes, like a blowfish. That song touches me, always has, always will. With one hand jammed well and truly up the turkey’s behind I sing those mellifluous words as if I’m preaching to a choir. Careful, so my tears don’t swamp the damn bird, I grab another handful of aromatic stuffing. My secret recipe: a mix of pork sausage, pecans, cranberries and crumbled corn bread. Punchy flavors that will seep into the flesh and make your heart sing. The song reaches its crescendo, and my tears turn into a fully-fledged blubber-fest. The doorbell jangles and I realize I can’t wipe my face with my messy hands. Frantic, I try and compose myself as best I can. “Jesus Mother o’ Mary, ain’t no customers comin’ in here with this kinda carry-on! It’s been two years since that damn fool left you. When you gonna move on, my sweet cherry blossom?” CeeCee. My only employee at the Gingerbread Caf?, a big, round, southern black woman, who tells it like it is. Older than me by a couple of decades, more like a second mother than anything. Bless her heart. “Oh, yeah?” I retort. “How are you expecting me to move on? I still love the man.” “He ain’t no man. A man wouldn’t never cheat on his wife. He’s a boy, playing at being a man.” “You’re right there.” Still, it’s been two lonely years, and I ache for him. There’s no accounting for what the heart feels. I’m heading towards the pointy end of my twenties. By now, I should be raising babies like all the other girls in town, not baking gingerbread families in lieu of the real thing. I’m distracted from my heartbreak by CeeCee cackling like a witch. She puts her hands on her hips, which are hidden by the dense parka she wears, and doubles over. While she’s hooting and hollering, I stare, unsure of what’s so damn amusing. “Are you finished?” I ask, arching my eyebrows. This starts her off again, and she’s leg slapping, cawing, the whole shebang. “It’s just…” She looks at me, and wipes her weeping eyes. “You look a sight. Your hand shoved so far up the rear of that turkey, like you looking for the meaning of life, your boohooing, this sad old music. Golly.” “This is your music, CeeCee. Your gospel CD.” She colors. “I knew that. It’s truly beautiful, beautiful, it is.” “Thought you might say that.” I grin back. CeeCee’s church is the most important thing in her life, aside from her family, and me. “Where we up to?” she says, taking off her parka, which is dusted white from snow. Carefully, she shakes the flakes into the sink before hanging her jacket on the coat rack by the fire. “I’m stuffing these birds, and hoping to God someone’s going to buy them. Where’s the rush? Two and a bit weeks before Christmas we’re usually run off our feet.” CeeCee wraps an apron around her plump frame. “It’ll happen, Lil. Maybe everyone’s just starting a little later this year, is all.” She shrugs, and goes to the sink to wash her hands. “I don’t remember it ever being this quiet. No catering booked at all over the holidays, aside from the few Christmas parties we’ve already done. Don’t you think that’s strange?” “So, we push the caf? more, maybe write up the chalkboard with the fact you’re selling turkeys already stuffed.” This provokes another gale of laughter. “This is going to be you in a minute—” I indicate to the bird “—so I don’t see what’s so darn amusing.” “Give me that bowl, then.” We put the stuffing mix between us and hum along to Christmas music while we work. We decorated the caf? almost a month ago now. Winter has set in. The grey skies are a backdrop for our flashing Christmas lights that adorn the windows. Outside, snow drifts down coating the window panes and it’s so cozy I want to snuggle by the fire and watch the world go by. Glimmering red and green baubles hang from the ceiling, and spin like disco balls each time a customer blows in. A real tree holds up the corner; the smell from the needles, earth and pine, seeps out beneath the shiny decorations. In pride of place, sitting squarely in the bay window, is our gingerbread house. It’s four feet high, with red and white candy-cane pillars holding up the thatched roof. There’s a wide chimney, decorated with green and red jelly beans, ready for Santa to climb down. And the white chocolate front door has a wreath made from spun sugar. In the garden, marshmallow snowmen gaze cheerfully out from under their hats. If you look inside the star-shaped window, you can see a gingerbread family sitting beside a Christmas tree. The local children come in droves to ogle it, and CeeCee is always quick to invite them in for a cup of cocoa, out of the cold. I opened up the Gingerbread Caf? a few years back, but the town of Ashford is only a blip on the map of Connecticut, so I run a catering business to make ends meet. We cater for any party, large or small, and open the caf? during the week to sell freshly made cakes, pies, and whatever CeeCee’s got a hankering for. But we specialize in anything ginger. Gingerbread men, cookies, beverages, you name it, we’ve made it. You can’t get any more comforting than a concoction of golden syrup, butter, and ginger baking in the oven in the shape of little bobble-headed people. The smell alone will transport you back to childhood. CeeCee’s the best pie maker I’ve ever known. They sell out as quickly as we can make them. But pies alone won’t keep me afloat. “So, you hear anything about that fine-looking thing, from over the road?” CeeCee asks. “What fine thing?” She rolls her eyes dramatically. “Damon, his name is. The one opening up the new shop, remember? You know who I mean. We went over there to peek just the other day.” “I haven’t heard boo about him. And who cares, anyhow?” “You sure as hell wouldn’t be bent over dead poultry, leaking from those big blue eyes of yours, if he was snuggled in your bed at night.” I gasp and pretend to be outraged. “CeeCee! Maybe you could keep him warm—you ever think of that?” “Oh, my. If I was your age, I’d be over there lickety-split. But I ain’t and he might be just the distraction you need.” “Pfft. The only distraction I need is for that cash register to start opening and closing on account of it filling with cold hard cash.” “You could fix up those blond curls of yours, maybe paint your nails. You ain’t got time to dilly-dally. Once the girls in town catch on, he’s gonna be snapped right up,” says CeeCee, clicking her fingers. “They can have him. I still love Joel.” CeeCee shakes her head and mumbles to herself. “That’s about the dumbest thing I ever heard. You know he’s moved on.” I certainly do. There’s no one in this small town of ours that doesn’t know. He sure as hell made a mockery of me. Childhood sweethearts, until twenty-three months, four days and, oh, five hours ago. He’s made a mistake, and he’ll come back, I just know it. Money’s what caused it, or lack thereof. He’s gone, hightailed it out of town with some redheaded bimbo originally from Kentucky. She’s got more money than Donald Trump, and that’s why if you ask me. We lost our house after his car yard went belly up, and I nearly lost my business. “Lookie here,” CeeCee says. “I think we’re about to get our first customer.” The doorbell jangles, and in comes Walt, who sells furniture across the way. “Morning, ladies.” He takes off his almost-threadbare earmuff hat. I’ve never seen Walt without the damn thing, but he won’t hear a word about it. It’s his lucky hat, he says. Folks round here have all sorts of quirks like that. “Hey, Walt,” I say. “Sure is snowing out there.” “That it is. Mulled-wine weather if you ask me.” CeeCee washes her hands, and dries them on her apron. “We don’t have none of that, but I can fix you a steaming mug of gingerbread coffee, Walt. Surely will warm those hands o’ yours. How’d you like that?” “Sounds mighty nice,” he says, edging closer to the fire. The logs crackle and spit, casting an orange glow over Walt’s ruddy face. Chapter Two (#ulink_09d85958-3ef7-5372-ad13-282813fc0d1a) CeeCee mixes molasses, ginger, and cinnamon and a dash of baking soda. She sets it aside while she pours freshly brewed coffee into a mug. “You want cream and sugar, Walt?” “Why not?” Walt says amiably. CeeCee adds the molasses mix to the coffee, and dollops fresh cream on top, sprinkling a dash of ground cloves to add a bit of spice. “Mmm hmm, that’s about the best-looking coffee I ever seen. I’m going to have to make me one now.” “So, I guess I’m stuffing these birds by myself?” I say, smiling. “You got that right.” She winks at me, and walks to the counter handing Walt the mug. He nods his thanks and drinks deeply, smacking his lips together after each gulp. “What can I get for you?” CeeCee asks. “Janey sent me in for a ham, and a turkey, not too big but not too little, neither.” He rubs his belly for emphasis. “Sure thing,” CeeCee says. “How’s about one with Lil’s special stuffing? Janey won’t need to do a thing, ‘cept put it in the oven, and baste it a few times.” “Yeah? Then maybe we’ll have a peaceful Christmas morning.” “Doubt that,” CeeCee says. “If she can’t get all het up at her husband Christmas Day, it just ain’t Christmas.” “You think?” Walt tilts his head, and smiles. “So, you girls still busy, what with the new guy, an’ all?” I look sharply at Walt. “What do you mean?” “I heard he’s selling turkeys and hams, just like you.” “Say what!” CeeCee says, barely audible with her head pushed deep into the chest fridge. All I see is her denim-clad rump poking out. “What, you don’t know?” Walt says and averts his eyes suddenly sheepish. “But I thought he was a small goods shop?” My heart hammers — the last thing I need is more competition. “Yeah, he is—what did you think small goods was?” I sigh inwardly. “Well, small goods, with an emphasis on the small —” CeeCee butts in. “Maybe a few cheeses, some o’ that fancy coffee. What, he gonna start making gingerbread houses too now, and pumpkin pies, and whatnot?” She places her hands on her hips, and is getting up a full head of steam. “That just ain’t how we do business round here.” Walt scratches the back of his neck. “I thought you knew. He’s been advertising in the paper…” I castigate myself for not being more observant, but I don’t want to make Walt feel any more uncomfortable than he already is. “That’s OK, Walt. I might have a little chat with him, later on. CeeCee made a nice batch of apple pies yesterday. I’m going to give you one for Janey. You tell her we appreciate her custom, OK?” CeeCee adds a pie to the box with Walt’s ham and turkey. “Nice big chunks of apple, too. You make sure you heat it up first, OK?” He takes his wallet out and hands CeeCee some cash. “Thank you, girls. She surely will appreciate that.” “You have a good Christmas, if we don’t see you before,” I say, nodding to him. “Same goes for you. And thanks, I hope you sort it all out.” “Don’t you even think of it,” CeeCee says. We wait for Walt to leave, and I expel a pent-up breath. “Well, no wonder!” I pace the floor and silently curse my own stupidity. CeeCee wrings her hands on a tea towel. “Lookie here, maybe he just don’t know. You should go on over there and tell him.” “How can he not know? It’s a small town—any idiot can work it out. You think he’s going to start catering too?” I walk to the window and stare out. There he is, waving like a fool. At me. I glare at him and stomp back to the bench. “He’s trying to make nice. Well, that won’t wash. I’m going over there to tell him what I think of him!” CeeCee sighs. “Wait, don’t go over there and have a hissy fit. That ain’t gonna help matters.” “He’s got no business stealing our customers. And I’m going to tell him that.” I bundle my apron, fling it on a table, and march out of the shop. The cold air stings my skin, and I rue the fact I didn’t put my jacket on. Damon sees me coming, and smiles; his big brown puppy-dog eyes look kindly at me, but that doesn’t stop me for a minute. He’s a shark. A charlatan. And I’m going to tell him so. He walks out to the stoop of his shop. “Hey,” he says, sweet as pie. “I was going to come over and introduce myself this afternoon.” “Who do you think you are?” I stuff my hands into the pockets of my jeans, and resist the urge to stamp my foot. “Sorry?” His forehead creases, adding to his rugged good looks. He sure can play the innocent, all right. “You think you can just move into town and steal my customers? Don’t think I don’t know what you’re doing!” The street comes alive as shoppers stop to watch. This’ll be spread round town before I’m even done talking. He looks truly bamboozled, but I know it’s an act. I’ve seen plenty of men like him. He’s dressed like some kind of cowboy, tight denim jeans that hug in all the right places, a red checker shirt, unbuttoned one too many buttons, exposing his chest. This infuriates me. Good looks like that, he’s going to be popular and I’m going to suffer for it. I can see the ladies of this town, frocking up, smearing all kinds of gloop on their faces, while they parade around his shop, pretending to be interested in whatever it is he’s selling. “I’m really not following, ah, Miss…” He rubs a hand through his sandy blond hair, which is too darn long for a man. “Name’s Lily, and you don’t fool me, mister. Not for a minute.” “What are you talking about now? What have I done?” He grins; he actually grins. “You’ve been selling turkeys. And Christmas hams! God only knows what else. You’re using your looks to get the ladies in this town to spend their hard-earned money in your shop, and putting me out of business in the meantime.” “My looks?” It’s all I can do not to huff. “So, you’ve got nothing to say for yourself?” He kicks the slushy ice on the pavement, as if he’s trying to formulate some kind of lie. “I’m sorry if I caused you this…upset. But I own a shop, and I sell all kinds of things for Christmas. I never thought it would affect you. Surely, there’s enough room for both of us?” “No, there darn well isn’t! And I’m going to make sure you’re not open long enough to find out, anyway.” I spin on my heel and head back to the shop. He calls out behind me, “I’m starting up cooking classes, Miss Lily. You want to book in to one?” That stops me in my tracks. Shivering from the elements, I turn back, hovering in the middle of the road. “You what?” He smirks at me, and for a moment I see my future — an empty shop. There’s no way the ladies of this town will be able to resist him. “I said, I’m starting cooking classes. You want to come to one?” “Are you trying to bankrupt me?” He rubs his chin, and widens those big brown eyes of his. “No. I’m just trying to earn a living.” My eyes are blazing, but I try to smile and act more confident than I feel. “You go on and do that, then. We’ll see who is still in business by the new year.” Cars honk at me blocking their way. With their headlights trained on me I suddenly feel under the spotlight. I race back inside the shop, my hands shaking as if I’ve got the DTs. “You gonna catch your death going outside like that!” CeeCee says. “Go warm up by the fire. Look at you, so white I’m gonna call you Casper.” I’m so worked up, I haven’t realized I’m covered in snowflakes. My teeth chatter, as if they’re holding a one-way conversation. I rush towards the grate, my hands outstretched to the flames. “So? What’d he say?” CeeCee frowns, and massages her temples. I rub my hands together, and turn my back to the fire. “You’re not going to believe it. He’s going to start cooking classes!” CeeCee’s face relaxes and she laughs. “That boy know he good-lookin’.” “Do you think it’ll affect us?” “Not likely, but who knows? I think we need to have some kinda sale up in here.” We look towards the window and gaze across. His shop is filled with customers. “Would you look at that?” I point to a small itty-bitty woman. “Rosaleen’s over there, and in her church clothes.” I knew this would get to CeeCee. “I don’t believe it. Church clothes on a Wednesday.” Before I know it, CeeCee is out front. “Hey, Rosaleen, shouldn’t you be supporting members of your congregation?” she hollers over. Rosaleen looks at us, her face pinched. “He is a part of our congregation. I already asked him.” CeeCee shakes her head and tuts, before walking back inside. “Dressed up like that, trying to impress him, at her age, no less.” She harrumphs. “Right, sugar plum. What we gonna discount? Most o’ those folk so tight they squeak. If we offer cut-price goods, they’ll be back over here with their tail between their legs.” “Good idea. I’ll get the blackboard, and we can write it up and face it directly towards his shop.” We giggle like schoolgirls, and I smile. We’ll win, I know it. We have to. There aren’t enough customers in this town for both of us. Chapter Three (#ulink_864426f6-435a-5563-86f1-193b3fafe733) The next morning, I get to the shop earlier than usual. I’m planning on baking some gingersnap-pear cheesecakes, after a friend of CeeCee’s dropped us in a pile of fresh pears. The scent of the ripe fruit hits me as soon as I open the back door, aromatic and sweeter than any perfume. Thinking I may as well open the shop since I’m here anyway, I catch sight of Damon. His door is open and there’s a flood of customers on his stoop. I peer over, and, lo and behold, he’s got a chalkboard facing my way. It reads: Why did the turkey cross the road? Because the other side is better! Of all the dirty tricks. I edge away from the window, and try to calm myself. We sold nearly half our turkeys yesterday, but at half price, so there’ll be almost no profit, but at least I won’t be stuck with them. I thought surely that’d be the end of it, and he’d learn his lesson. I guess not. I set to work peeling pears and try to think up a new strategy. It’s finicky work, but cooking always calms me. That’s probably why I run a business that makes next to no money. An hour later, the fruit’s peeled and sliced. I finely grate fresh ginger and mix it through the sliced pears, setting it aside so the flavors combine. I smirk when I realize I have the perfect payback for Mr Smarty Pants across the way. “Where you at?” CeeCee waddles in from out back. “Where am I? Cee, it isn’t exactly big in here, you know.” “Now don’t you be backchatting me. You won’t believe what I just heard.” She plonks her bag on a table, and unwinds her scarf, getting tangled on account of the fact she’s wearing her mittens. She’s out of breath and in a tizzy. “What?” “He’s starting those cooking classes, and tonight he’s making gingersnap-pear cheesecake!” I gasp. “That ain’t all. They get to take whatever they bake home with them.” “How did he know we’re baking that today?” “He must have seen Billy come in with all those pears, or else someone told him.” “Who did we tell we planned on gingersnap-pear cheesecake?” “We only told Reverend Joe, and Billy’s mamma.” Yesterday we had a multitude of customers that came in to shoot the breeze. Anyone could have heard. We’re going to have to watch everything we say in future. CeeCee narrows her eyes. “I bet it was Billy’s mamma. And she’ll probably start taking their pears over to him.” “Is there any point even making it now?” Eyeing the amount of fruit I’ve spent so much time preparing, I sigh. “Be a shame to waste it.” CeeCee surveys the work I’ve done. “I have a hankering for it after all that talk yesterday. We make it, and then if they don’t sell we halve the price by lunchtime. Maybe no one’s booked in to his classes—you ever think of that?” “Yeah, you’re right. It’s not like most of them don’t know how to make cheesecake, anyway. Did you see his sign?” CeeCee shuffles over to the window, muttering and cursing, though she doesn’t hold with cursing, usually. “I don’t believe it. He’s trying to start a war with us! What we gonna do?” I turn on the CD player and the gospel choir begin with Silent Night. The lights in the window flash green, red, and a luminescent white. The angel atop the tree seems to smile benevolently down on me. Steeling myself, I say, “We’re going to appeal to their Christmas spirit.” CeeCee looks at me as if I’ve lost my marbles. “Here you go.” I reach under the counter and produce a Santa hat and a bell I found in our box of old decorations. “And what you expect me to do with this?” She widens her eyes, and jingles the bell. “You, Mrs Claus, are going to drum up business by walking the length of the street, handing out candy canes, and some kind of coupon. Buy one, get one free. Or Buy one, pay it forward, and they can donate a free item to the church. What do you think?” A grin replaces her consternation. “I didn’t think you had it in you. How’s about I walk on his side of the street?” I know we should be feeling worried on account of giving so much away, but we’re like schoolkids, and I’m having more fun than I care to admit. “Sounds like you know what you’re doing, Mrs Claus.” CeeCee laughs, her big-bellied southern haw, and goes to our Santa display. “I’m just gonna borrow the fat man’s jacket here for a minute—lucky we the same size.” She wraps the dusty red jacket around herself and giggles, and tries to fit the hat over her thick black curls. “You gonna owe me a hair set, sugar plum. This hat sure gonna flatten my wave.” “Sure, I’ll organize Missy to fix your hair up pretty for Christmas.” I laugh. “I look a sight!” she says, grinning at her reflection in the window. “Right, go print me some coupons, and I’ll set to work.” Leaving Mrs Claus out front, I rush back to my shoebox-size office and hastily type some coupons. Everyone in town loves a bargain, and if they are seen doing something for the church, even better. Let’s see him try and outmaneuver me on this. I have the added bonus of being a local born and bred, and our town is more reserved with new folk. With a sly grin on my face, I jog back out to the front, yelling, “That fool won’t know what hit him,” only to run straight into the damn fool. “Who are you talking about?” Damon asks, rubbing his chin where my head has just connected. “Ouch! Who creeps up like that? If you want me to feel the earth move, that isn’t the way to go about it,” I say, sure I’m going to be sporting a big lump on my head any minute now. “Which fool are you talking about?” I make a show of wincing, while I try and think of an answer. CeeCee’s no help, standing there as a half-dressed Santa, her lips quivering as she tries to hold in laughter. I know she’s going to lose it, and then the whole sorry story will come tumbling out of her mouth. “Excuse me, mister, who said you could come in here and spy on us?” His forehead creases, and that same sexy smile creeps back on his face. “Who said I was spying?” “That smile might work on other girls, but it sure doesn’t work on me. I said you’re spying. Now get on out of here. Shoo.” I wave my hand towards the door. “Shoo? Not until you tell me who the fool is.” “You’re as dumb as a bucket of rocks if you think I’m telling you anything.” “I see.” He scratches his chin, which has a red mark from our collision. “I think you’re cooking up another plan to steal my customers.” “Of all the…I think you’re forgetting who was here first. You’re stealing my customers—let’s be clear on that.” I try hard not to poke my tongue out at him. He brings out the worst in me, this newcomer. He’s wearing those same tight jeans, and under his open jacket he’s wearing another of those checker shirts, but has yet another button undone. I can see right down to his belly button and I happen to notice he’s got quite the six-pack going on. The girls round here are going to swoon over him. He edges backwards, his brown eyes sparkling with mirth. “Well, my family has lived here since before there was electricity, don’t you know? And wouldn’t the town folk love to know you’re not giving me the same warm welcome that they are?” CeeCee bustles over. “Oh, yeah? And who’s your family, then? Ain’t no one mentioned your people to me.” “My people, as you say, are the Guthries, born and bred right here in Ashford for as long as anyone can remember.” CeeCee and I inhale sharply. The Guthries are the oldest and richest family in our town. So rich, they don’t live here any more. They follow the sun and never struggle through a winter unless they’re skiing. They owned a fleet of cargo ships, and train lines, and had their fingers in all sorts of pies when it came to transport. A few years back they sold their businesses, raking in a fortune. They still own by and large a heap of properties around town, and are well-respected, church-going folk. Not that we ever see them in Ashford, any more. It’s all I can do not to cry. There’s no way I can beat him if he’s backed by that kind of money. “Why you even bothering to work, then?” CeeCee asks. “We know most o’ the Guthries don’t do much ‘cept sit on their porches and get fat off good ‘ol American food, since they got no need for employment. They’ve got people to do their bidding.” “They’re my family, but I make my own way.” He crosses his arms and puffs out his chest like a prize cock. His jaw juts out, making me think there’s more to the story than he’s letting on. “You the rotten apple?” CeeCee asks, tilting her head. I hope to God he is, then my shop might just have a chance. “I don’t like handouts, that’s all.” CeeCee makes a show of clearing her throat. “Good to hear. Now we got cakes to make, but I guess you know all about that.” He ducks his head. “Well, all right. I was just coming to invite you over to my cooking class tonight. Free of charge.” My fighting spirit returns, and I paste on a smile. “Thanks all the same, but we’ve got so many orders to assemble. Yesterday was one of our busiest days ever, you see.” “I see. Not much money in half-price poultry, is there?” “Well, you know how it is,” I say. “We’re full of Christmas cheer this time of year.” CeeCee rings the bell maniacally. I nod to her, grinning. “And we like to look after folk around here.” “I’ll say.” He uncrosses his arms and leans over to me and whispers, “Bet my cheesecake is better than yours.” I reel, as if poked. “We’ll see about that.” He walks away, cool as a cucumber, and tips a finger to his head as though he’s wearing a hat. We watch him cross the street; he jogs, and jumps when he reaches the pavement. I can honestly say I’ve never seen a man’s butt look so good in jeans before. They’re so tight, every muscle is evident as his body pushes against the faded denim. It’s like watching magic happen. I take a deep appreciative breath in. “He sure ain’t ugly, is he?” CeeCee says wistfully. “No, ma’am.” He turns abruptly and catches us staring, jaws agape. I promptly close my mouth and busy myself at the counter. “Well, I’ll be,” CeeCee says, shaking herself back to the present. “How did we not know he’s a Guthrie?” “I don’t know. What do you think? That they’ll bail him out as long as it takes to close us down?” CeeCee drags her gaze from the window. “Sugar plum, I don’t rightly know. He doesn’t seem like that, though. He seems sweet as cherry pie.” “Here we go. You’re getting all misty-eyed.” CeeCee glances at me, and I can tell she’s debating whether to say what’s on her mind. “Just say it, Cee. What are you cooking in that mind of yours?” “Hmm. I just got a feeling.” I groan. CeeCee thinks she’s got second sight, sometimes. Second sight, only when it comes to me and whichever man she’s trying to set me up with. She shakes her head, and says, “I know, I know, but this time it’s different. There’s somethin’ special about him. I saw the way he looked at you. Like electricity or somethin’. I could see sparks flying between you. It was like lightning. Like—” “Like a thunderstorm,” I interrupt. “Like a great big brooding cloud of despair. That’s what you saw.” “Mark my words. He’s different. He gonna pull you outta this funk.” Ignoring CeeCee, I walk to the bench. The pears have infused with the ginger. I toy with the ingredients for the cheesecake, fidgety all of a sudden. “You think so too?” she asks hopefully. “I think you’re crazy, Cee. And Joel, what about Joel?” I’m hoping if I say it like a prayer, he’ll come back. Joel would see straight through Damon’s ploys. Yeah, so Damon may be flirting with me, but that’s so I loosen up and let him ruin my business. Joel would know what to do about this situation. My heart lurches at the thought of spending Christmas Day alone. No Joel to open presents with. No Joel full stop. In fact, no family here at all this year. My folks discovered cruising when they retired and are sailing around New Zealand, of all places. Damned if I know where they heard about it. My siblings got out of our small town as quick as they could after school was done. My brother lives in New York City, and leads some glamorous life, full of socialites, and parties. He’s so far gone in that world, he doesn’t make time for family any more. My parents pretend that they’re happy for him, but it breaks my heart their own son doesn’t visit. And my sister, Betty, has gone on to Michigan with her husband and had about a hundred babies. “You thinking of Joel, again?” CeeCee demands. “Girl, when you gonna stop mooning over him? He just don’t deserve that kinda attention. He up and divorced you, Lil…” Her voice softens. “I think it’s time you realized that’s about as finished as a marriage gets.” I didn’t even see it coming. Thought it was a phase — maybe some married men get itchy feet. As devastating as it was, I’d give him another chance, once he knew the grass wasn’t greener elsewhere. But instead, he served me divorce papers. Something I never wanted to see. My heart broke into about a million pieces that day. I think back to our marriage, and the promises we made. When he stared into my eyes, and recited wedding vows, I believed him. When I said, ‘Till death do us part’ I truly meant it. How can one person have that kind of hold of your heart, and not feel the same any more? Marriage should be for ever — at least, that’s what I was raised to believe. When you stumble, you work through it, together. But Joel, he’s not on the same page as me, not yet. CeeCee breaks my train of thought. “You OK, Lil? You look like you seen a ghost.” Pensive, I try and shake the memories away. “You’re right, Cee. No time for mooning over what I can’t change.” I force a bright look on my face, and remember the challenge at hand. “So, you still going to be Mrs Claus, or what?” CeeCee picks up a basket and stuffs it full of candy canes. “Surely am. Gimme those coupons, and let me go drum up some sales.” Chapter Four (#ulink_896a893c-ad5f-5d45-a04d-53f8c69c4382) That afternoon we’re rushed off our feet. The folk in town are vying to pay it forward to the church so the reverend will look kindly upon them. They’ve got good hearts, and I hope, what with all the discounts, I’m still making some money. Everyone who comes in appreciates the gospel Christmas music. CeeCee hams it up in her soprano voice, and pitches and warbles to the customers, who join merrily in. We sell our last Lane cake; the white iced fruit cakes are a Christmas tradition in Alabama, where CeeCee is from. She’s got most of the town folk hooked on her southern food. Most of our gingersnap-pear cheesecakes are snapped up too. Dusting my hands on my apron as the final customer carries his box of goods out, I raise my eyebrows at CeeCee. She’s gulping down iced-tea as if she’s been stuck in the desert. “I sure didn’t expect such a flurry all at once.” She puts her empty glass down, and says, “I don’t think I ever been that parched. Glory be, that was busier than I ever seen it before.” Glancing over the street, I see Damon. He’s on his haunches scrawling something on his chalkboard. Guilt gnaws at me, as I see his shop is empty, and has been each time I had a minute to look his way. He’s spent the morning sitting on a stool by the window reading the paper, or talking on his cell. “What’s he doin’?” CeeCee wonders. “Probably advertising his cooking classes. They just aren’t going to work. Folk ‘round here can cook, anyway.” CeeCee grunts. “Yeah, but that’s what folks said about you opening a shop to sell home-made food. They all said who was gonna buy from you when they been taught how to bake since they was knee-high to a grasshopper? But they did, they surely did. Maybe he ain’t cooking home-made food. Maybe he’s fixing to teach them something fancy. You see all those grown-up kids coming back from whatever big city they livin’ in. They don’t want their mamma’s traditional meals — they want all that fancy stuff, like sushi or some such.” “But he’s making our cheesecake. While it’s mighty tasty, it isn’t exactly fancy.” “Probably just to get them in. Show them he’s one of us. Then he’ll start on with all that seaweed, and raw fish.” She screws up her face. “It’s just disgusting.” Damon stands up, and dusts his hands on the seat of his jeans. He looks over his shoulder at us, and waves. He has big hands Big, but graceful, as I imagine a piano player would have. I’m lost for a moment thinking of whether his hands would be soft or rough and calloused from cooking, when CeeCee yelps. “Free! He’s doing it free!” I look at the blackboard. “FREE cooking class. Baked food, made with LOVE. Take home what you make.” Damon does a mock salute and strolls back inside his shop. “Pray tell, what’s all that made with love about?” CeeCee asks, her forehead furrowing. “You still think he’s special now?” “He’s just playing a game with you.” She takes off her Santa jacket and hat, both damp from the weather. Her hair lies flat on the top of her head; she runs a hand through it, musing. “Come by the fire.” CeeCee says as I throw another log on, and watch it slowly take. We sit on the small sofa that faces the street. CeeCee continues, “You like a daughter to me, you know that. So I’m going to speak to you like your mamma would. Look at that man.” She points to Damon standing at the window, hands crossed over his chest, facing towards us. “What?” “I can tell a person’s heart by their smile. And his smile goes all the way up to his eyes. Joel’s smile stopped right under his nose. You see what I’m saying?” “You’re saying Joel looked down his nose at people?” “Damn straight, I am.” I laugh at CeeCee’s sincerity. She’s trying to hypnotize me into agreeing with her. I shake my head. “Well, if he’s giving out free classes, I might just stay open all night, and sell whatever I have left. I’ll start a batch of butterscotch pies, and hope no one knows it’s me who baked them.” CeeCee taps her nose with her finger, implying a secret. “They’ll know it were you. But you go right on ahead. I’m just gonna sit here awhile and warm my old bones up.” “You do that. I might as well tell everyone our new closing time.” CeeCee’s cackle follows me out of the door as I go to write on the chalkboard. The wind has picked up. I shrug into my jacket, and fumble for the chalk in my pocket. “You can’t let up, can you?” I spin to look up at Damon, a mite scary, leaning over me while I’m squatting at the board. “Not all of us have family money to fall back on, you know.” “That right?” “Sure is.” “You don’t hardly know a thing about me.” “I can say the same for you.” I stand and gaze into his eyes. I try to look fierce, but it reminds me of staring competitions we had back in high school. We stared at each other until someone blinked, and they lost the game. I purse my lips, trying to keep my laughter in check but it barrels out of me, in a very unladylike way. His eyes crinkle. “This funny to you?” “A little. It’s just, it reminded me…” Damon’s phone rings, a loud, startling tone. He checks the screen, and rushes off, head hunched as he answers it. “Well, I’ll be. Can’t miss a phone call. Typical city slicker,” I grumble. By the time I finish the sign, complete with whorls of tinsel colored in chalk, CeeCee has cleaned the kitchen from the day’s labors and has started making pastry. “So much for warming those old bones. You don’t trust me to make the pies, I see.” “Sugar plum, you got enough going on, lest someone say, your pies ain’t made with love.” I sidle up and hug her. I’d be lost without CeeCee in my life. “You’re tired. We can leave the pies until tomorrow.” “It’s OK, sugar. I’d rather be here with you than at home on my lonesome.” “You’re too good to me.” With CeeCee being so sweet, and me being reminded of all the things we’ve both lost, I well up again. I turn away from her and try and dry my eyes with the back of my hand but she knows me better than that. “Don’t you go getting all sentimental on me.” I lose it completely when I see tears pool in her eyes. Again, I curse myself for being such a dramatic crier. I’m so sensitive sometimes it kills me. CeeCee and her husband, Curtis, moved from Alabama to Ashford when their kids were just babies. Curtis worked on the railroads for most of his life, and that’s how they wound up here. He spent his time to-ing and fro-ing on the train lines, with Ashford as their base. Train lines that the Guthries used to own. They swapped one small town for another. And then their kids, all grown up, moved out of town, like so many, gone to find better jobs in big cities. CeeCee lost Curtis to cancer, one winter, not three years back. When I think of her all alone in that old house of hers, I crumble. “I know what you’re thinking, but I’m fine, truly I am. I’ve got my church, and my friends. The kids are coming up for Christmas Day, and I’ll see my grandbabies. That’s all I want. I’m happy on my own. What about you? You wanna come over and spend the day with us? You know you part of the family.” I wipe my eyes, and take a deep breath. “Aw, no. I don’t want to intrude, and I know what you’re going to say, so don’t bother. You cuddle those grandbabies of yours. I’m going to sloth on the couch all day, and watch a bunch of soppy Christmas movies. I won’t even get out of my PJs. It’ll be nice not to have to get up and rush in here.” CeeCee clucks her tongue. “What about dinner? You can at least come over and let me feed you.” “We’ll see.” As much as I love CeeCee, I don’t want her thinking she has to entertain me. She’ll have her own kids there, and her grandbabies who she loves more than anything. A day by myself doesn’t sound so awful. I plan on crying along to cheesy flicks on TV and eating ice cream straight from the tub. “Would you look at that?” CeeCee says, pointing to across the road. Damon’s back on the stool by the shop window looking dejected. He’s bent over, cradling his head in his hands. “That poor man,” CeeCee says. “Breaks your heart just looking at him.” I bite my lip, and ponder. Is he just playing a game here, or what? CeeCee’s rolling out big balls of pastry without even looking; it’s second nature to her. “Go on over there, Lil. Looks like he could use a friend.” “What? Are you falling for this? He’s angling for sympathy, that’s all.” “And why not, pray tell? He’s like a movie star, those fine chiseled cheekbones and that curly hair—don’t you just want to run your hands through it?” Like an expert chef, CeeCee’s flinging the pastry all over the place, while her eyes don’t move from Damon. “No, I don’t want to run my hands through his hair. I’m sure it’s all tangled. That only happens in books, Cee. Sounds like you’ve been reading one too many bodice rippers, if you ask me.” I was all talk. He truly did look sad, sitting there as if he had the weight of the world on his shoulders. “Get on over there, and make that boy smile. Go on, get.” I’m one of those people who always feel guilty. If someone bangs into me, I apologize. If someone drives up the footpath and runs over my shoe, I say sorry I was in the way. And here I am, feeling guilty robbing this man of his customers, yet it’s going to cost me too, this whole competition. I sigh; I’m not made for war. “Fine. I’ll go. And what should I say, do you think?” A huge smile lights up CeeCee’s face, and I wonder if those two are in cahoots together. It sure wouldn’t surprise me. She pretends to be really interested in her pastry all of a sudden. “Take him a pecan pie. I’m going make another batch tomorrow, anyways.” It’s all well and good joking about it, but what am I going to say to the man? I begin to wonder if it was the phone call that’s made him so morose. While I’m wrapping the pie, CeeCee mutters to herself. I know she’s fixing to tell me something, so I take my time, and wait for her to mull it over. “You know, this might sound crazy, but why don’t you two join forces?” “Are you on about the matchmaking thing again?” “No, no.” She shakes her head. “I mean, why not join forces with the Christmas rush? Instead of competing against each other — work together. You never know what might happen. You’ve been trying to find someone to help you cater for as long as I can remember. And lookie here, that fine thing might just be the man for the job.” “And how’s that going to work? Have you been drinking the sherry when you’re baking those cakes?” “Just a nip to fortify me,” she says, and laughs. “But I don’t see why you can’t work together. You know, you could run some cooking classes for him — there’s not much you don’t know about baking. He can supply you with those ingredients you ship in for your catering customers. He sells a whole lot of things you don’t, and vice versa. You can work together. You could expand catering to bigger customers in towns further out, if you had another pair of hands — hands like his.” She looks meaningfully at me. “And when did this come to you? Don’t tell me you just thought about it.” My palms are sweaty, and I realize CeeCee might be right about venturing further out. If Damon can actually cook it might just be a possibility. On my own, I have no hope of catering for larger customers. And there aren’t too many folk interested in working for me, who can cook, and work under pressure, or who want to lose their weekends to do it, either. I’ve been hoping for some extra help, so I can take on more clients, but catering’s hard work. So far, all of the avenues I’ve tried to find staff have turned into a dead end. CeeCee’s idea spins through my mind. If we worked together, I could surely double the catering side of things, and we’d use products we both sold. It could really work. I stop short; what am I thinking? “You can thank me later,” CeeCee says. “Now get on over there and see what’s bothering him.” I fossick through my handbag for my lip gloss, and slick it on. “Well, I’ll be, make-up too?” CeeCee raises her eyebrows. “A girl’s got pride, Cee. There’s no reason for me to go over there looking downright disheveled. It has nothing to do with him.” “‘Course it don’t.” She hums the wedding march as I grab the pie and walk out of the door. “Oh, please.” I roll my eyes heavenward. “Cherry blossom?” “Yeah?” I hold the door open. “You forgetting your jacket again? Someone sure is distracted these days.” I scoff, and walk back inside to the coat rack. Chapter Five (#ulink_a95f1c37-97b3-556a-a18f-dc8f1c71a644) Once I’m out and walking across the road it dawns on me: I’m nervous. I never meant to hurt him by having these sales; I only wanted to stay afloat. Always me and the guilt. It’s a gift of mine to blame myself. Balancing the pie, I take small steps; the road is icy, and slippery. “Well, hello,” I say as Damon walks to the front to meet me. He looks up, his eyes vacant. And for a second I’m truly worried. Has someone died? He looks hollowed out, his shoulders are slumped, and his usual grin is replaced with a tight line. “What you got there?” he asks, his voice barely audible. “Some of CeeCee’s famous pecan pie. Free, and made with love, no less.” That provokes a slight lift at the corners of his mouth. “And what’s with the change of heart?” he says, taking the proffered pie. “This got horse laxatives in it or something?” Laughter bubbles out of me. “I wish I’d thought of that. Nope. This is a peace offering. The proverbial olive branch.” I edge closer to the step, about to walk up when I slip on a pile of sleet, and scramble like some kind of roller-skater before I land smack bang into Damon’s arms. He holds me tight, his face trained down towards me. His aftershave wafts over, something tangy and spicy. I try to hold myself back from outright sniffing him. So, I’ve got a thing with aftershave. “You always throw yourself at men like that?” he asks, grinning. “You wish,” I say, realizing I should probably try to extricate myself from his embrace. It’s just that he’s so warm. “I think you really need to salt and shovel your steps. Not hard to tell you’re new around here.” “What, and miss all the fun?” Untangling myself from Damon, I try to stand without slipping. I notice he still holds the pecan pie, which somehow didn’t get squashed in the fracas. Pulling my jacket together, I say, “So, what do you say — friends?” “Why are you doing this?” he asks, his voice husky. “I’m no good at fighting. I can’t be angry for longer than ten minutes, and this has lasted two days. I’m exhausted. And seeing you over here all glum, well, it’s just not me, causing this kind of reaction in a man.” He leans back against the window and looks up at the sky. He’s silent for too long; an awkward pause hangs between us, making me fidget. “OK, well, I’m going to get back—” “Wait,” he says, touching me lightly on the hand. “Don’t go. You want to come inside for coffee?” There is something different about him, a sadness in his eyes. It dawns on me it might not be the business causing it. “Sure. Love to.” We amble inside and my breath catches. “Wow, you sure do know how to decorate.” We’d peeked in when he was setting up, but now the shop is decked out with half whiskey barrels filled with straw, a bed for jars of preserves. Old wagon wheels are varnished and hitched to the walls, with a variety of goods hanging from the spokes on thin golden hooks. On the decked floor, little round up lights shine, making the place sparkle. It’s like something from a Western movie, a bygone era, and it has a real homely feel. The delicious smell of rich coffee beans lingers in the air. In the corner is a huge fireplace with mahogany Chesterfield lounges to each side. The only Christmas decorations are a string of lights along the counter, and a small plastic tree on a coffee table. “This is really something,” I say. “Thanks, Lil. Can’t take much credit for it, though. It’s an exact replica of the shop I had back in New Orleans. Someone else designed it.” “So you have two shops?” He moves behind the fancy coffee maker, which is the size of a small car. He presses some buttons and pulls a lever; it coughs and splutters like someone drowning. “Cappuccino OK?” “Sure,” I say and sit on a bar stool in front of him. After much gurgling from the machine, Damon walks through a shroud of steam and hands me a cup jiggling on a saucer. “I hope you like it strong.” “Just like my men,” I say and feel myself color. It just slipped out as if I were joking with CeeCee. He pretends to flex his muscles, and my blush deepens. “So, do you still have the shop in New Orleans?” I repeat in order to get back to a safer topic. His eyes cloud. “Nope. That’s all finished. I’m here for good, now.” A heavy silence fills the room. I can hear my heartbeat thump. He looks forlorn staring into his cup. “Do you want to join forces?” I ask, before I can change my mind and think about anything remotely sensible, like, I hardly know the man. He looks lazily over his cup to me. “What do you mean?” Darn it. Too late to recant. “How many people are booked in for the class tonight?” He takes a sip of his coffee. “Three. The three Mary-Jos.” The three Mary-Jos are infamous for being flirts. They’re teenagers. They all grew up together, some kind of cousins, twice removed or some such. Their moms all staked their claim to the name Mary-Jo and wouldn’t budge. And now our small town has three blond-haired, blue-eyed mischief-makers, who share the same name. It can get confusing. “You’re not going to make any money with the Mary-Jos. Can you cook?” I ask. “Yeah, the Mary-Jos are my best customers, ‘cept they’ve never actually bought a thing. What do you mean can I cook? Sure I can.” His phone blares out from the pocket of his jeans. He sure does receive a lot of calls. He looks at the screen and frowns. “I gotta take this.” He struts away, and answers the phone, speaking what sounds all lovey dovey to me. As if he’s trying to soothe someone. He’s obviously got a girl back in New Orleans. Maybe they’re trying to mend the bridges, or something. Not that it matters; I still love my Joel. I’m only here on business, I tell myself, and drink the steaming coffee, which tastes bitter now. I’m about to leave when Damon strolls back in, rubbing his face. He seems jittery, nervous. I don’t think it’s my place to ask, but I am from a small town, which means it’s kind of in my blood to question. “You OK?” He looks startled, as if he forgot I’m here. “Oh, right. Lil, where were we?” “You sure you’re OK?” “Nothing time can’t fix,” he says, mysteriously. His demeanor worries me, but I figure I’ll talk shop and eventually he’ll tell me what’s really going on. Call it female intuition, but there’s something happening in Damon’s life that takes the sparkle from his eyes after each of those phone calls. “OK, then.” I sit back and explain CeeCee’s idea. The moon is winking behind clouds by the time I cross the street back to CeeCee. I know she’ll be baking up a storm; anything to keep herself from marching over to Damon’s to see what’s taking so long. Opening the front door, I’m assailed with the scent of butterscotch from CeeCee’s pies. It’s rich and comforting, so buttery, and wholesome, I almost want to take one back to Damon. CeeCee jumps out from behind the fridge, scaring me half to death. “So, what’d he say?” “He said yes. I hope I made the right decision.” Fumbling with my apron strings, I decide I’m going to spruce up the shop. I clean when I’m nervous. “Why you all twitchy like that?” “You should see the inside of his shop. It’s got polished oak floors, a big old wooden bar, and these tiny little lights that shine right on down to all the bottles perched there. And some imbedded in the floor too. It’s just so warm, what with all that dark wood. He’s got all sorts of things you just can’t get around here. Makes me think this place—” I glance around at the bare white walls, and the long silver benches we use to roll out dough “—is a little stark. You know, once we put the Christmas decorations away…” CeeCee plants her hands on my shoulders. “So we flick some paint over the walls, and buy some lamps, but what’d he say about the business side of things?” “Oh, right. Yeah, we discussed it, and we’re going to give it a three-month trial. We’ll expand the catering, and he’ll get someone to run his shop, like you do here, and see if we can venture out further afield. It was the darnedest thing, though…” “Sit down,” CeeCee says. “You’re all fluttery like some kind of butterfly.” We move to the lounges, and I take a few deep breaths. I think I’ve overdone it with those fancy coffees of his. “What’s making you nervous?” CeeCee asks. “Well, we were discussing all the ins and outs, and what we’d expect from each other, you know, trying to lay some ground rules out before we agree to start, and he kept taking phone calls. Every two, three minutes. In the end, he didn’t say anything, just rushed off with the phone, and then came back with this defeated look on his face.” “You ask him who it was?” “I asked him if he was OK. He kept changing the subject.” CeeCee mutters to herself, and starts wringing her hands. “I don’t believe it! Oh, Lord.” She looks up at the ceiling. “Why you do this to me?” “What are you talking about, Cee?” “I seen the signs.” She points to the spot between her eyes. “I seen you two…together.” I slap my leg and laugh. “Oh, Cee. Is that why you dreamt up this business venture? So I could get a boyfriend?” “Why o’ course!” “I should know better than to trust you when it comes to me and single men. I’m nervous, because what if he does have a girlfriend, some kind of long-distance relationship or something? He can’t be running off every two minutes to speak on the phone. And what about if he up and walks out, once I get a bunch of customers?” “He ain’t like that,” CeeCee says knowingly. “He a Guthrie, after all. They good people. You just say it delicately, maybe phone calls are better left for after work, like that.” She lets out a squeal. “I knew it. I knew this was gonna be your year.” I laugh along with her, but I’m plagued by doubt. Who would call someone so many times? What’s his secret? Chapter Six (#ulink_f5debedb-8306-5f47-8964-9e3ae5d31644) “I’ve tallied up the takings. We gone and had our best day yet.” CeeCee hands me the banking. “Why, thank you.” We didn’t discount anything, and I sure haven’t seen a pile of cash this big in a long time. Things are definitely looking up for us. “Head on over to Damon. Here’s his money for those gift baskets we made with all his goodies.” It’s been nearly two weeks since we began working with Damon. He used our pork shoulder cuts in a cooking class, and we sold out of them the very next day. We’ve swapped and shared products for Christmas party orders, and gift baskets. It was CeeCee’s idea to make Christmas hampers with all beautiful jars of produce Damon stocked, and a selection of our baked goods. We fancied them up with ribbons, and wrapped the baskets in Christmas colors. They’re selling like hot cakes. And tomorrow, Damon and I cater our very first soir?e together. I have something to ask him before I begin preparations for the party. “You going to be OK if I go over there?” I ask CeeCee. “I’ll jingle that big bell if I get run off my feet,” CeeCee says, looking down her glasses at me. “You go. I’m going to start on some more Lane cakes for folk to have Christmas Day. Take your time.” She wanders off singing under her breath. The Christmas spirit is alive and well in our small town. It’s impossible not to smile when young kids come in, their eyes lit up like fairy lights when they see the gingerbread house, and we give them a marshmallow snowman and a handful of candy canes. Grabbing my scarf and jacket from the coat rack, I wrap myself up, and wave to CeeCee. “Shout if you need me.” “Get,” she says, shooing me away like a fly. I smirk, closing the door softly behind me. The street is busy with families doing last-minute shopping, mothers wearing frantic looks, searching for gifts before the shops shut for good. I step into Damon’s shop. Customers are milling, picking up things and fussing over the sheer variety he stocks. “Why, hello, pretty lady,” he says. My heart flutters. It truly does. He’s so darn attractive and it’s beginning to prove difficult not to flirt right back. “Ho, ho, ho. I bring you a gift.” I hand over the banking bag. “Thank you.” His smile does go all the way up to his eyes, I notice, just as CeeCee said. He puts the bag under the bench, and pulls out a box. “I also have a gift for you.” I color. “Oh, what? But mine isn’t really a gift — it’s your money from the baskets.” He hands me a beautifully wrapped box, complete with a big gold bow. “Go on, open it.” I rip off the expensive-looking paper then stop. Gosh, darn it, I should have tried to do it delicately, as a lady would. Save the paper, at least. I lift the lid of the box, and when I see it laughter tumbles out of me. “You shouldn’t have.” “Oh, I think I should have.” “What’s it do?” “It’s a shrilling turkey. See?” He takes the plastic yellow turkey from my hands and presses a button. It starts hawing like a turkey on helium. I pretend to wipe a tear from my eye. “That’s about the nicest thing anyone ever gave me. How did you know?” “When I saw it, I thought of you.” “A plastic, limp, bright yellow turkey reminds me of you, too.” Customers look at us like we’re crazy, so I turn the shrilling turkey off and sit down. “Coffee?” “Sure.” He’s hidden by the steam for a moment, while the noisy machine does its thing. “Ma’am.” He places the cup down and ambles around the bench to sit beside me. “I was…” “I was…” we say in unison. “You go…” “You go…” We laugh; suddenly it’s really hot in here. I motion for him to speak. He looks at his coffee, and then up at me. “I was just wondering if you wanted to go to the Christmas carols with me? I hear it’s quite the show.” “Sure, I’d love to.” I say, quickly, before my voice gets shaky like my hands are. A grin splits his face. “What were you going to ask?” I wave my hand. “Aw, I was just going to ask if you’d heard about the Christmas carols. It’s quite the show.” We smile awkwardly at each other, then take comfort in staring into our coffees. I make a mental note to pull out my red dress, and dust off my boots. Jeans and sweaters are OK for work, but not so much for Christmas Eve. And not for a date with Damon. Not that it’s a date. I rush back into the shop, feeling guilty about how long I’ve left CeeCee on her own. She’s in a state, fanning her hands at her face, and looking all faint. “You OK?” She sobs as if she’s gone and lost her best friend. “Cee, what is it?” Lifting her head, she walks to me, throws her arms around my shoulders, like a bear. “I’m just as happy as a hog in slop! I heard you gone said yes to a date with Damon!” The joys of living in a small town. “Seriously, how did that get to you so quick?” “Emma Mae was over there, and heard you twos giggling like children. She said you were snuggled up, all cozy-like.” Her eyes twinkle with unshed tears. “Emma Mae’s a busybody. It’s not a date. We’re just going to the carols together. As friends. No one even mentioned the D word. Plus that phone of his started bleating out all over the place again. Makes me wonder what he’s hiding. Kind of puts a pall over things.” Knitting her brow, she glances over at the shop, as if she can discern from here what Damon’s secret is. “Surely someone knows something about why he suddenly back.” I follow her gaze. Damon’s gesticulating wildly to the local sheriff, probably about the boys attempting to shoplift earlier that day. Poor kids, trying to get their mamma a present on account of their daddy walking out not so long ago. At least Damon had a heart once he heard their story. He gave them a box of small goods to take home to their mamma, as long as they promised never to steal again. “I think,” CeeCee says, dragging her eyes back to mine, “he’s probably just tying up loose ends back in New Orleans. You said he had a shop there, right?” “CeeCee, it doesn’t matter, anyway. I’m just happy to go to the carols with someone other than myself. Plus, it’ll set tongues wagging, so that’s a bonus too.” She nods. “Sure as shooting will. Now you all ready for that fancy shindig tomorrow?” “I think so. I’m going to stay back tonight and do as much prep as I can, then Damon and I’ll head on over about lunchtime to set up. You sure you’ll be OK by yourself? It’s been busy these last few days.” “I’m sure. If I get stuck Walt said Janey’s just a phone call away. Folk ‘round here won’t mind waiting if there’s a queue. I’ll ply them with candy-cane coffee, or some such. You don’t worry ‘bout a thing, ‘cept Damon.” “‘Cept Damon?” I copy, arching my eyebrows. CeeCee fusses with her hair, and tries to look innocent. “You know what I mean.” Chapter Seven (#ulink_fad20bdc-10b0-51f3-abc4-5e75ffa48e2a) “So far so good,” Damon says, setting down a tray of empty Chinese soup spoons that moments before had been filled with tuna and mango ceviche. “Wow, that was quick. Are we making enough?” We’re halfway through, and so far it doesn’t look as though people are slowing down with the food. Damon winks. “We’ll have plenty, don’t you worry. The noise level goes up every time I go out there, and I hazard a guess that the alcohol consumption is rising right along with that noise. People are starting to dance. I think I saw the mayor doing Gangnam Style…” “Oh, golly! I can’t wait to see pictures of that.” Damon’s right. If anything we’ve over-catered. I want to make sure we’re known for quality food, and plenty of it. “What’s next?” Damon says, standing so close I feel his breath on my neck. Goose bumps break out on my skin, and I blush at the thought of him noticing them. I clap my hands together. “OK, we need to slice the turkey and cranberry tart, and assemble the choux pastries—” “With rare beef and horseradish?” Damon interrupts. “Yes, good memory. Be careful with the choux…” “I know, I’ll treat it like I would a lady, gentle and lovingly.” I scoff and roll my eyes at Damon. “Can you get any cheesier?” He grins back at me and I notice when he’s really smiling he has these teeny tiny little dimples, which are inordinately adorable on a fully grown man. Damon takes the tart from the oven, and begins slicing it. The scent of roasted turkey makes my mouth water. Before I know it, Damon’s beside me again. “Here, try it.” He slides a small corner of the tart into my mouth. It takes me by surprise and, in a rush to close my mouth lest I stand gawping, I feel my lips brush his fingertips. He leaves them there for what feels like for ever. “Good?” he asks. I nod. Unable to speak and not only because I’m chewing. His expression changes, to something more serious. “You have to try new things once in a while, don’t you think?” I mumble agreement, and look down to the smoked-salmon blinis I’m making. Damon knows I always try my food before I send it out, so I know he isn’t talking about the canap?s. He goes back to the tart, and I let out a breath I’ve been holding. The evening progresses so fast, I’m almost sad to think we’re just about done. Damon has a tea towel slung over his shoulder and is busy stacking the multitude of dishes into the industrial-sized dishwasher. “Glad to see you know how to work one of those,” I say. “You’ll make someone a mighty fine husband one day.” He takes the tea towel from his shoulder and hangs it on the oven rail. “Oh, yeah? A man who cooks and cleans — you think there’s a market out there for that?” “Depends — what else can you do that might satisfy a lady?” The words tumble from my mouth before I’m able to stop them. I spin on my heel and head to the bathroom before he can respond. As I reach the door, laughter spills from me. I can’t believe I just said that. Chapter Eight (#ulink_d29138d9-1f5f-5168-b105-d207fd6aa499) Christmas Eve and the excitement is palpable. The magic of Christmas never fails to amaze me. I bawled like a baby not two hours ago, when we delivered our gingerbread house to the children’s hospital in Springfield. Damon came up with the idea when we were musing what to do with it. Those courageous kids’ eyes went so wide when they saw four of us carry it in. We set it up nice and pretty in the games room. CeeCee made the kids gift bags full of treats, and they were so excited, it made my heart skip a beat. Just thinking of them being away from home at Christmas, and being so brave, made me appreciate everything I had in my life. I gave them all great big hugs before we left, and promised them we’d return for new year with some party supplies. It’s arctic out. I shrug down into my jacket as CeeCee and I close the shop, and breathe a sigh of relief. That’s work over for us for a few days. No more baking and no more late nights. “So,” CeeCee says. “I’ll see you tonight at the carols. I’m gonna make us a little feast, so you two lovebirds don’t worry about a thing. Just concentrate on getting yourself prettied up.” She casts a cursory glance from my head to my toes. “You not gonna wear jeans, sugar plum.” “Firstly, we’re not lovebirds. Secondly, I’m planning on wearing a dress, but not if you’re going to make it into something it isn’t.” I arch my brow, and try to stare CeeCee down, but I know from experience I won’t win this battle. “Most the girls in town would give their eye teeth to have your figure, and you hide it behind those old jeans, and scruffy sweaters. You got it, flaunt it, I say.” “Oh, please, CeeCee…” “There’s not a man gonna be able to resist you, especially the fine thing across the way, mmm hmm.” “You sound like you want to eat him.” She guffaws, her beautiful face crinkling up like paper. “You got that right — like gooey caramel, that boy.” Laughter barrels out of us, and I know we don’t sound very gentle. “You go on now, and get yourself ready. I’ll see you at the town hall.” I lean down to kiss CeeCee’s soft cheek; she smells like cinnamon and honey. “Thanks, Cee. I’ll meet you there later, then.” Damon’s shop is dark. He must have locked up while we were hooting and hollering. Walking home from town, I notice it’s gone quiet, sleepy. People have left for home to get ready for tonight; the schoolkids on holidays are probably toasting marshmallows by the fire. It’s a nice feeling, the town relaxing in on itself. There’s something incredibly sweet about small towns at this time of year. People look out for one another, and any tensions fall by the wayside. It’s a nice place, old Ashford, and I can’t imagine living anywhere else. Jogging the few blocks to my house, I feel light as a feather. My weary legs don’t ache any more. Funny how knowing I have a few days off energizes me. Inside, my red dress lies sprawled over my lounge like a crimson wave, and my boots sit patiently on the floor. I know I’ll be toasty warm inside the town hall; it’ll just be a matter of not turning into an icicle walking there. We used to suffer in an amphitheater, year after year, each hoping the carols would end so we could go home and warm up. Until last year it was decided the carols, and all the Christmas festivities, would be held in the town hall from now on. It’s a wonder no one thought of it sooner. I head straight to the tub for a good soak. Who knows, I might even consider putting some gloop on my face. Just a small amount, mind. Once the bath is run, I undress and survey my body in the mirror. I’m not thin; I have proper country-girl curves, but they seem to suit me, I think. I rub the soft swell of my belly, thinking about Joel, and our plans to start trying for babies just before he walked out. I wonder if that’s what frightened him off, all that responsibility. He was never one to be tied down, always scheming to make millions. Grand plans to get rich quick. I listened to him intently, and I supported him, because he loved me. I’ve never been attracted to the bright lights of a big city. All I crave is a happy, simple life. I have my job, and good friends, and family. Babies would be nice somewhere down the track. There’s nothing I don’t have right here in Ashford. Well, except love. And babies. I scold myself for all this soppy thinking, and plunge myself into the bath. Tonight the town will come together and we’ll sing and be content with what we have, and it’ll be enough. My red dress fits snugly, and my boots clack as I walk around fussing with the rest of the outfit. I’m not sure about the gloop. Scarlet lipstick smears my lips, and it just feels wrong, as if I’ve gone and dunked my mouth in lard. Mascara coats my lashes and it’s all I can do to see past them; I get the heebie-jeebies when I glance upward and it looks as if I’ve got spiders’ legs poking out of my eyes. And women do this every day? A knock at the door startles me. Damon. Groaning, I peep at myself once more. I’m worried I look like a clown with so much stuff on my face. And I’ve spritzed on too much perfume, I’m sure of it. I fan myself with my hands to dispel the scent as I walk to the door. “Well, look at you.” His gooey caramel-colored eyes hone in on my face. “Too much?” I ask. He ignores me and his gaze travels down my body, making me squirm. “You look beautiful. Truly beautiful.” “Thank you.” I shift my feet and try not to stare at the floor. It’s not a date; it’s simply an escort to a public event. It’s not a date. Damon’s grinning like a fool, and he’s dressed up for the occasion too. He’s still wearing super-snug jeans, which I don’t rightly oppose, but he’s swapped those awful checker shirts for a tight sweater that stretches over his stomach. I can see the outline of his muscles. He’s holding a thick black jacket over his shoulder. And a grey woolen scarf is wound expertly around his neck. He smells divine, like something sweet and sugary. Something edible. I retreat to grab my coat. An uncomfortable heat spreads through my body and if I didn’t know better I’d say it was desire. “Ready?” he asks. “Sure am.” I’m debating whether to hold his hand when his phone rings. I force a smile on my face as he motions to the cell and walks back down the driveway. Who in the hell keeps calling him? I’m feeling about as smart as tree bark even entertaining the thought of going out with Damon. It’s as if I have a gift of picking men who want to break my heart. Hold his hand? Goddamn it, girl. While I wait for him to finish, I head back to the bathroom and roughly wipe off the lipstick. Who was I trying to be anyhow? It’s just not my thing. My eyes prick with tears, and I wonder what’s got into me. “Lil. Lil?” “I’m coming,” I say with one last look at the girl in the mirror. Damon frowns when he sees me. “What happened?” “Nothing. Let’s go — we don’t want to be late.” He goes to speak then changes his mind. We walk to the town center, and Damon chatters away about inconsequential things. I nod, and say, “Mmm,” but my heart isn’t in it any more. I’m annoyed at myself for being upset. Joel, remember, you love Joel. But I begin to wonder if that’s true. Maybe I just like the idea of being married because it means someone loves me above all else. “Have I done something to upset you?” An awkward silence hangs between us, while I walk a pace ahead. “Why do you say that?” “You seem distant, and before you were positively glowing.” “I’m fine. Just tired. I might call it a night. I’ll introduce you round, then head on home.” He catches up and puts his hands in his pockets. “Aw, what? What’s upset you, Lil?” I pull my coat tight and cross my arms. “Nothing, it’s been a long day, that’s all.” There’s an edge to my voice and I can’t seem to disguise it. I hope I don’t start crying on account of this fool. He slaps his head. “Was it the phone call?” Stopping in front of me, he holds my face and forces me to look into his eyes. Lowering his voice to a husky whisper, he says, “Was it?” “The call? Don’t you mean calls? You sure are popular on that damn cell. Don’t you know that’s a lot of radiation going in your ear, right into that brain of yours?” “Is that what’s bothering you, all the calls?” He looks truly concerned, but that doesn’t wash with me. Joel’s phone was ringing off the hook near on a month before he walked out. I know what this is. “It’s nothing to do with me. Your phone is your business.” “Lil, I’m not going to lie. I like you. I like you a lot. But there’s things you don’t know about me. And I was gonna tell you…” “What? That you’ve got a girl back in New Orleans that you’re stringing along?” He has the audacity to laugh. I glare up at him. “No! There is no girl…well, there is a girl…” Storming forward, I push past Damon, and head towards the town square. “Wait! Would you wait?” he says, pulling me back by my elbow. “Let me explain.” Feeling utterly stupid, I brush tears away with my sleeve. “You don’t owe me any explanation.” He groans, looks up at the sky. “You’re making this hard.” I open my mouth to respond and he leans forward and cups my face with those big hands of his. “God, you’re beautiful.” Before I know it, he’s planted his lips on mine and I’m truly lost. Warmth spreads through me, while our lips collide. My body betrays me; my legs feel like jelly. My heart hammers against my chest as I pull him closer. I melt into him, and move my hands to his face, until my brain clicks back into gear. There is a girl. I step back, and glower at Damon. “What do you think you’re doing? You got a girl back home and you’re—” “I sure do.” He’s grinning at me like a damn fool again. What is he playing at? He’s got this love-struck, goofy look on his face. “Are you drunk?” He touches a finger to his lips, as if he’s reliving the memory of our kiss before smiling at me again. “Come on, let’s walk, and I’ll tell you all about the girl back in New Orleans.” I snatch my hand away when he tries to clasp it. “Shoot.” “Her name’s Charlotte, and she’s as pretty as a picture.” He darts me a look that says wait. “She’s got these blond, itty-bitty curls, kind of like yours…” “Get to the point, Damon. You aren’t exactly winning me over here.” “She’s turning seven next month. Charlotte, or Charlie as I call her, is my daughter.” A million thoughts flash through my mind, and I try to pluck one as they rush past. “Is that who keeps phoning you?” “Yeah. I gave her a cell phone, and told her to call whenever she’s missing me.” “She must be missing you a lot.” He clasps my hand and I let him this time, as I brush a stray curl from my face. “And what about her mamma?” “We were married, happily for a while. The plan was always to come back here, once we had Charlotte. This is where my family are from, and I like small towns. I want Charlie to grow up safe, to be able to run around till dusk without worrying something bad is going to happen. But Dianne won’t have it. She landed a corporate job, personal assistant to some bigwig, and everything we planned went out the window. Work took over her life — at least I thought it was work. Turns out Dianne was doing more than just typing for her boss.” His expression darkens for a second, as if he’s revealed too much, my heart breaks for him: it really does. I know what he’s been through, and it hurts. It sounds just like me and Joel, except he’s got a baby girl to think about. “It must be hard not seeing Charlotte every day.” “Harder than I could ever imagine. And you know, I could’ve forgiven Dianne — well, I would have tried to, for Charlie’s sake. But she’s changed. I don’t recognize her at all any more, and I know I can’t live that kind of lie.” “What will you do? About Charlie?” “She’ll be here the day after Christmas for a week, and I guess that’ll be it from now on. Holidays and weekends, and whenever I can convince Dianne to let her visit. Once Charlie’s older she can decide for herself where she wants to live.” “I don’t understand why you didn’t stay in New Orleans, so you could be closer to her.” He looks curiously at me. I get the strangest sensation, as if he’s come back here for me. But we didn’t even know each other. My heart starts to pound. I’ve been listening to CeeCee’s babble about second sight for too long. “I belong here, in Ashford. And this is where I’m staying. Do you mind if I kiss you again?” Without waiting for a reply he bends and kisses me, so softly I swoon. I run my fingers through his too-long hair, and smile inwardly when they don’t get tangled. Maybe those bodice-ripper books are right, after all. We break apart. “You are sweeter than sugar,” Damon says, his voice soft. He gently kisses the tip of my nose and pulls me to him. I embrace his warmth, and love the feeling of his strong arms around me. I can worry about all kinds of things tomorrow, but for tonight I’m going to pretend he’s mine, and there are no other complications, and I’m going to enjoy it. We cross the icy road and see practically the whole town gawping at us. They’re all circled around a bonfire that’s a few feet in front of the town hall. A cheer goes up, and I flush red right to the very roots of my hair. How did we not notice them? I must’ve been spellbound by the damn man. CeeCee is milling at the front of the crowd, near the bonfire, as we amble on over. Tears spill down her face, and I gather her in my arms. “I knew it. I knew that boy were special.” “It was one kiss, Cee,” I whisper to her. “I bought mistletoe, so don’t you worry,” she says, brandishing the leaf in front of me. We both sputter through our hands. She truly thinks of everything. We huddle around the fire, trying to keep warm while delicate flakes of snow drift down upon us. Children run and play as if it’s the middle of summer, not feeling the cold the way we adults do. I see kids I recognize from the caf?, scrambling over the big old fiberglass sleigh that Walt sets up. We’re down to one reindeer now, poor old Rudolph, whose nose gets kissed by just about every family in town for luck. The children’s laughter and squeals punctuate the air, and I smile for them, remembering my own excitement at this time of year when I was their age. We move inside and make our way to Janey, who’s handing out cups of eggnog. I wave at familiar faces; most wink back as if we’re in a conspiracy. Damon clasps my hand as we mill about waiting for the show to start. At this moment I’m as happy as I can ever remember. CeeCee hands us both a candle as the choir assembles. The music for Amazing Grace begins, and this time I smile. I know there’ll be no crying tonight. Chapter Nine (#ulink_0a91f1bd-5822-5b30-aa8b-1670b95c6b03) Muted light peeks through the blinds the next morning, and I lazily arch my back. I feel drowsy as a cat, on account of getting no sleep. Damon’s beside me, curled around the flannelette sheets. I ease out of bed and head for the bathroom to brush my teeth and wash. The girl in the mirror looks flushed, radiant. While I’m scrubbing the vestiges of the gloop from my face, I hear Damon wake. He pads around the room looking for his clothes. I stifle a giggle as I remember that they’re somewhere near the front door. So, things kind of moved quickly after the carols last night. My ears burn, and I know the town folk are talking about us already. I’ll say he simply came back here for a glass of wine, and that was it. Being Christmas morning, there’s more chance he can sneak out without anyone knowing he stayed over. Dizziness grips me when I think of Damon naked. That man’s a fine specimen of the human form, and I just couldn’t say no. Anyone would have done the same. “Lil?” I wander back into the bedroom. There he is, all propped up on the bed, shirtless, and pantless by the look of the bulge under the sheet. “Good morning,” I say, walking back into the room with only a towel on. “I got you another present.” He winks and pats the bed. “Oh, yeah? Didn’t you give me that a number of times last night?” “That was only practice. And today is actually Christmas Day, so I’m going to need to start all over again.” I drop the towel and walk to the bed. He whistles appreciatively as I join him under the sheet. My phone rings, the old cordless lost somewhere deep inside the house. “That’ll be CeeCee inviting us to her place for Christmas dinner. You think you can drag yourself out of bed for some food?” I say snuggling into the warmth of his embrace, wishing the phone would stop so I could stay here. “If CeeCee’s cooking, then yeah.” I throw a pillow at him as I go to fetch the phone. As I scramble past the lounge I pick up an old throw rug and wrap it around myself. The phone continues to ring, and I find it on the kitchen bench. “We’re coming, Cee. Give me—” “It’s not Cee.” I nearly faint, when I hear him speak. After all this time, my heart lifts, and I will it not to. “What is it you want, Joel?” Can’t imagine he’s ringing to wish me a Merry Christmas. We haven’t spoken since he left, and that wasn’t because I didn’t try. But a girl’s got pride, and when he ignored my calls, my pleading texts, I stopped. Waiting for a reply, for any word, was devastating when I was met with silence. “How are you, Lil?” He sounds off, as if he’s forcing himself to sound chipper. “I’m great, Joel. What can I do for you?” I’m aware of Damon not ten feet away, naked and waiting. It seems wrong to leave him there, and wrong to have him there. “I miss you.” I shake my head. Of all the times for him to call; if he’d called yesterday, things would have been markedly different. “Oh, yeah? And what does your redhead have to say about that?” “That’s all over. Has been for a while now. I’ve spent this Christmas break mulling it over, and I know I made a mistake. A huge mistake.” A movement behind startles me. Damon’s searching the floor for his clothes. He pulls his jeans on, and raises his eyebrows at me. “Now’s not a good time, Joel. I’m going to have to talk to you later.” Damon motions to the door. He looks bewildered, and I realize he must know who Joel is. I hold my hand up, so he knows to wait. “Can I call you back? In the morning?” Joel says, his voice beseeching. “I don’t know about that. You take care now.” I hang up the phone, and place it back on the counter. “I’m gonna go,” Damon says, a hurt look plastered on his face. “Wait, why? I thought we were going to CeeCee’s.” He stares at me for a length of time, waiting for me to speak. I haven’t told him about Joel, but figure in this small town of ours he probably already knows. “Was that your husband?” he asks, his voice breaking. “Ex-husband.” “Sounds like you got some unfinished business there, Lil.” My eyes averted, I spin the phone, and desperately try to think. “Please, Damon. Let’s go to Cee’s and enjoy the night.” He searches under the lounge for his sweater. He finds his boots and stuffs them on. I shiver, cold despite the rug wrapped around me. He walks over, and holds me tight. We stay squeezed together for an age. Lightly, he kisses the top of my head, cups my face and stares into my eyes. “Lil, I’m going to give you some space to decide what you want. I know all about Joel. Rosaleen told me.” He has the grace to blush. “So no pressure, OK? You need to do what’s right for you. I’ll always be here for you, no matter what.” His heartfelt plea breaks me. Tears spill as I watch him walk away. He’s right, and that’s what hurts most of all. The phone rings again, and I let it go to the message bank. I don’t want to talk to Joel again until I’ve decided how I feel. I head to the shower. I’ll go to CeeCee’s. Being in the bosom of her happy family will be just the distraction I need. Being alone is too much right now, especially with the scent of Damon still on my skin. Chapter Ten (#ulink_72052e64-67ee-5ab3-b19f-28f13b74cc3d) “Merry Christmas, sugar plum.” CeeCee embraces me, and I will myself not to cry. Way to ruin Christmas, I think glumly to myself. I force a smile on my face as we break apart. “And where is that fine-looking man?” She looks over my shoulder into the inky night. “He’s not here.” She searches my face. “And why not, pray tell?” She ushers me inside. The sound of children’s laughter rolls down the hallway, and I can hear a TV blaring in the distance. “He’s got other things to do. Where is everyone? I want to say hello.” “Oh, no, you don’t. Not before you tell me what’s going on.” CeeCee pushes me into her formal sitting room, a chintzy affair with floral lounges, and floral curtains, her fine china on display. “It’s nothing, Cee. I’ve got gifts for the—” “Stop right there. Now, how long have I known you? And you think you can waltz in here with that pasty smile of yours, and those puffy red crying eyes, and I won’t know somethin’s wrong?” Damn my crying eyes. I need to learn to sob silently, to un-puff. “You gonna tell me or am I gonna have to march over to Damon’s and find out myself?” And she would. “It’s not Damon. It’s Joel.” “What you mean ‘Joel’?” “Joel rang, while Damon was there. He says he made a mistake, he’s not with the redhead any more…” “And what? He wants to come back to you?” “I guess.” I pluck at a tassel on the cushion. It’s hard not to compare the two men, and the only thing that keeps me from running back to Damon is the fact that Joel and I have so much history. I hardly know Damon. CeeCee’s trying really hard not to let loose what’s going on in her head but I can gather she’s none too happy, by the grunting and sighing she’s doing. “Sugar plum, there ain’t nothing I can say that’s gonna change your mind. You have to decide, but I just want you to know, if you lie down with dogs, you gonna get fleas!” I cackle along with CeeCee, and the mood lightens. “You certainly have a way with words.” “So, how you feel?” “I don’t know. Last night with Damon was magical. But Joel and I were together since we were kids, you know?” “I know. And you the forgiving type. Sometimes when a man does wrong, you have to make him accountable, Lil. That man don’t see what we see. He looks around this town, disdain on his face, like he better than most folk. I just wonder if he’s really ready to move back here. You and I both know this place hasn’t changed none in two years, and surely won’t any time soon.” She’s right. Pining for Joel these last two years, I realize I’ve been pining for what we lost, by him breaking my trust. And the fact that Joel always wanted a bigger, better life than what we had. “You know, it’s funny, Joel sounds exactly like Damon’s ex-wife. They think small towns are full of hicks that don’t know any better.” “I know all about her. Rosaleen told me everything at church today.” “She must have sore jaws what with all her yapping.” “She used to it, what with all the practice. And what about Damon? He has a baby girl?” I remember Damon’s Christmas gift then. I’d forgotten in the drama of the afternoon. A gingerbread-house kit. Complete with all the trimmings, ready for father and daughter to assemble when they get some time together. “Yes, he’s got a little girl named Charlie. She’s all set to visit after Christmas. And that’s who’s calling him every five minutes. Poor baby, she’s missing him like crazy.” CeeCee nods, “I can imagine him as a daddy. I bet he’s great with kids.” “But that’s just it, Cee. What if his ex-wife decides she’s made a mistake, just like Joel’s done? And she wants to come back after a while? They’ve got a little girl — they’d have to try for her sake. And then what? I’m left all alone. I just don’t know if I can go through that kind of heartbreak again.” “Really, sugar? You’d stop yourself from falling truly in love in case of a ‘what if’? That ain’t no way to live your life. Who knows what the future holds? But don’t put your life on hold on account of one fool who weren’t good enough for you.” Listening to CeeCee, so fervent and so right, I know. Everyone else has moved on, and it’s time I did too. “How do you think the little girl will feel about her daddy having a girlfriend?” “A girlfriend who owns a shop that specializes in gingerbread men? Pretty darn good! If she don’t love you from the get-go, we’ll sure as shooting find a way to her heart.” “Doesn’t that sound a little Hansel and Gretel to you?” CeeCee slaps her leg, and laughs. When she’s composed she says in a more serious tone, “Sounds as though you know what’s in your heart, Lil. I’m a let you stew on it a bit more.” She pulls me up from the lounge. “Come help me in the kitchen. I promised your mamma I was going to look after you. We need to get some meat on those bones of yours.” “I got plenty of meat on these bones, Cee.” “You could use a little more.” We enter the small kitchen. The table is laid with a red tablecloth, and small green candles sit in the center. Gold Christmas crackers are neatly lined up next to the cutlery. The delicious smell of turkey wafts out from the oven. I think of calling Damon. I can see him sitting here, carving up the meat, and joking with CeeCee. But I don’t, just in case he says no. “You want me to baste it?” I ask. “Sure thing, honey. And I’m gonna start the gravy. I’ll call the kids in to come say hello.” I yawn as I park the car in my driveway. It’s nearly two a.m., and fatigue hits me like a brick. CeeCee and I got to talking and time raced away, as it does. One by one, the kids disappeared and the house grew quiet, until it was just the two of us sitting at the table, drinking gingerbread coffees. The truck door creaks with protest as I push it open and hop down from the seat. I jump, startled, as I see a figure on the porch. “Sorry, I scared you.” “No, it’s OK.” “I couldn’t stay away,” he says. “Oh, yeah?” Heat floods my body as I run to him. I lift my face to his and kiss him full on the mouth. My heartbeat quickens as he moves his hands around my hips and pulls me closer. Cupping my face, he stops to gaze at me. “Yeah. If he wants you, he’s going to have to fight me for you.” We laugh. “I’ve seen those muscles of yours. I think we’d better appoint the winner now, and save all the bloodshed.” He nuzzles into my neck, and I break out in goose bumps. We stand under the light of the moon, and look at each other, grinning like fools. “I missed you like crazy,” he says, and bends to kiss me. Joel and the memory of the years we spent together drift into the night, forgotten. From now on in, I only want the real thing. I’m not settling for second best any more. Before I forget, I go to the truck, and retrieve Damon’s present. He unwraps it delicately and I frown at the memory of myself wrenching the paper off the gift box when he gave me the turkey. When he sees what it is, he stares at me, with that same all-knowing look, as if we’ve done this before. “She’s going to love that.” “I hope so,” I say. “After all, she’s the most important person in your life, and I just want you to know I respect that. To me, your child, no matter what the circumstance, should be number one.” Damon embraces me, and whispers, “How’d I get to be so lucky?” I lead him inside, past the Christmas tree with its flashing lights, so bright and colorful as if it’s shrieking congratulations to us. I hold that thought in my heart, and vow never to forget this moment. I pull Damon to the bedroom; all I want to do is fall asleep in the comfort of his arms. I can’t wait to tell CeeCee. By now, she’s probably planning the wedding; what with her second sight and all, she’ll already know the date, the location, and what kind of dress I’ll be wearing. Chocolate Dreams at the Gingerbread Caf? (#ulink_91deee4d-f619-56f7-bdf3-44fb0936e84f) Chocolate…the most irresistible temptation? The Gingerbread Caf? is all a buzz! This Easter, Lily and the rest of the town of Ashford, Connecticut are planning a truly decadent Chocolate Festival. Cooking up a storm, CeeCee and Lily are not just baking a batch of their sinfully delicious chocolate-dipped gingerbread men, but an excess of chocolate truffles, squidgy, cinnamony hot cross buns and melt in your mouth chocolate eggs. The Gingerbread Caf? staff have definitely enjoyed the tasting process! Add in Damon’s cute-as-a-button seven year old daughter, Charlie, up for a visit and Lily’s perfect Easter may just be around the corner. Until her ex-husband Joel turns up demanding twenty thousand dollars… Suddenly the future of the Gingerbread Caf? is not so clear…and Lily finds herself eating far more of The Gingerbread Caf?’s treats than her skinny jeans allow. Can Lily concoct a brilliant plan to save her beloved caf?, convince Damon she has no feelings for Joel and still throw a Chocolate Festival the town will be talking about for years? There’s only one way to find out… Welcome back to the warmth, cupcakes and sweet confections of The Gingerbread Caf? – your home away from home! Praise for REBECCA RAISIN’s Christmas at the Gingerbread Caf? (#ulink_93e07c24-31b5-534d-855c-238da90ba37b) ‘Christmas at the Gingerbread Caf? is a lovely, cheery festive read, a good old-fashioned feel-good romance to warm the cockles of your heart. This is one of my favourite Christmas reads of the year.’ Books with Bunny ‘This is a great novella that I really enjoyed reading and found that I didn’t want to put it down. It is the perfect read to get you in the mood for Christmas and my mouth was watering after reading about all of the delicious-sounding baking. If you are looking for a Christmassy romance then don’t look any further than Rebecca Raisin’s brilliant debut.’ Bookbabblers ‘Raisin not only excels in creating a festive mood — the tone of family and friends coming together is sweet — but also portrays a lovely winter wonderland setting, where things are covered in snow. This makes the book feel cosy and safe. It’s definitely an uplifting read.’ Sam Still Reading ‘This is a short and incredibly sweet novella that explores a very endearing and unexpected romance. It is definitely one that will make you laugh and warm your heart, and one that can be happily devoured in one sitting.’ Louisa’s Reviews ‘If you love Christmas, romance and HEA then you will love this sweet novella. This one gets an A.!’ Clue Review To Alyssa Davies, it wouldn't have happened without your spider-girl powers, so thank you. Chapter One (#ulink_e1f41d68-a74b-510f-a11a-9ecddf8dae3c) “Good morning, pretty ladies. I come bearing gifts on this picture-perfect spring day,” Damon says mock-formally, and bows. He steps through the doorway of the Gingerbread Caf?, brandishing an almighty postal tube like a sword. My heartbeat quickens at the sight of him. His wavy hair is lit by the sunshine behind casting a golden glow over him, like a spotlight. My only employee, CeeCee, fluffs her curls, before giving him a great big launch hug that nearly knocks him off his feet and makes him groan with delight. She’s a big bundle of southern exuberance, and is more like a friend and mother-figure to me. “And pray tell, what is it?” she asks, pointing to the plain white packaging. “Well, it’s not a shrilling turkey, let’s just say that.” He winks. I smile and glance over at the cash register where the God-awful bright yellow shrilling turkey he gave me at Christmas sits, like a mascot. Damon walks to me and lands a soft kiss on my cheek. Woozy, that’s how I feel when he’s near me. I go jelly-legged and google-eyed, not my best look. It’s so easy to get lost staring at his face, his lips. I fight the urge to launch myself at him too. Who knew love could feel like this? A dreamy, intoxicating, passion-fest. “Go on, open it,” he says. Taking the proffered tube, I shake it gently. “Any guesses, Cee?” “Can’t rightly say.” She smirks, and fiddles with her long pearly necklace. “Oh, so you were in on this surprise?” Her eyes widen, and she shakes her head. “No idea what you talking about.” “No?” I say, amused. “You look a picture of innocence, Cee.” I upend the tube and prise out the contents. A roll of shiny bronze foil flashes under the lighting. Unwrapping a length, I see tiny brown gingerbread men with cute button noses and licorice-colored eyes smile up at me. “You two!” I say, not managing to stop the silly jump-clap dance I do when I’m excited. Under each gingerbread man it says in elegant miniature cursive: Easter at the Gingerbread Caf?. “We thought your chocolate eggs would look mighty nice wrapped up in personalized foil,” Damon says, grinning. “And CeeCee suggested incorporating the gingerbread men.” “This is going to be the prettiest chocolate Ashford has ever seen!” I immediately want to wrap up an egg to see what they’ll look like. It makes me giddy to think how far we’ve come. When I first opened the caf?, it was just me, a tray of gingerbread men, and a never-ending pot of percolated coffee. We have big plans for Easter this year. We set to work, just over a month ago, making all sorts of chocolate eggs, from simple oval shapes, to large bunnies with long ears. The range was so popular we tried making other sorts of chocolates, like ganache-filled truffles, chocolate ginger fudge, and chocolate candied oranges, anything we could, to see if they’d work and there was a market for it. Not all of it’s fancy; mostly it’s just good quality sweets baked from scratch. Sarah from the corner bookshop suggested we hold a chocolate festival over Easter. She thought it would be a great way to draw some new faces into Ashford. It’s such a small community and the last year has been tough for so many of the local businesses. We had an impromptu meeting with the owners of the shops along our street, and decided a chocolate festival would be the perfect excuse to celebrate Easter, and give all our shops a boost. We’ve advertised in all the surrounding towns, and the response so far has been overwhelming. Out-of-towners have already begun to visit Ashford. Some come purely to stick their noses in, others to stock up on books, or hardware, not knowing Ashford has everything you need if you just look hard enough. All the shopkeepers are excited to show their wares in the best light. Sarah has a famous author dropping by to do a reading at her bookshop. Damon has cheese-making classes and a cooking demo planned. The local hardware shop is involved; they’re going to do a sixty-minute session on how to build a basic cubby house for kids. Someone’s roped in a band to play folk music throughout the day. And the chocolate festival will be set up in the middle of the main road, so people can go between tables sampling chocolate in all its glorious forms, before heading into shops for the activities. Sarah has been a driving force, helping print pamphlets and distributing them. She’s set up a Facebook page to help garner interest. Needless to say, she pops over most days to see what we’re concocting. We ply her full of chocolaty goodness, and watch her face for a reaction. Ginger is still a prominent fixture in some of our recipes, but it’s been fun molding, and sculpting chocolate into submission. Damon lets out a long whistle, hauling my mind away from chocolate and back to him. He holds a finger up. “One more thing,” he says, and runs to the doorway to retrieve another package. It’s an odd shape and is wrapped haphazardly in newspaper. As usual I forget to be delicate but figure it’s only newspaper as I tear it to shreds to see what’s underneath. “How do you do it?” I pretend to be dazed with wonder. “I’m going to have the best collection of…ugly going round!” I smile as I press a small button to switch it on. An evil-eyed bunny rabbit starts hopping maniacally across the silver bench, singing out of tune about hot cross buns. Laughter barrels out of us as we watch the demented toy. “I think this may trump the shrilling turkey!” CeeCee hoots. “You, my friend, just started another war.” I sidle up to Damon, and hug him loosely around his hips. “You know that, right?” My lips twitch with the urge to kiss him. He drapes his arm over me and lands a kiss on the top of my head. “A war on…unique seasonal collectibles? That so? Well, before I leave you to attend to the customers who, by the looks, are waiting patiently on my stoop, there’s one thing you should know — seems there’s a teeny tiny fault with the hopping bunnies. The salesperson was basically giving them away. I mean, I just had to buy it at that bargain-basement price…” I give him a playful shove. “Get on with it, what’s the fault?” “It seems Peter Rabbit here doesn’t have an off switch. He can keep that joyful noise up all day long.” “Joyful noise? That what you call it?” CeeCee says. “Sounds more like this bunny got his foot caught in a rabbit trap to me.” “You can thank me later,” he says, edging towards the door while I pretend to lob the rabbit at him. We watch him stride across the street; as usual our eyes are glued to his butt, which looks all sorts of perfect under a pair of tight denim jeans. His shirt lifts in the breeze and I see the tanned, smooth skin of his lower back. The memory of running my hand along his naked body makes me shiver. I shake the thought away, not wanting to look like some kind of love-struck idiot, my mouth hanging open, ogling him from the window. I pull myself together and gaze over at CeeCee, who’s uncharacteristically lost for words, staring at him too. “Hmm, that fine-looking thing sure do know how to please a woman,” CeeCee says, as if she’s in a daze and we giggle. Every time she brings Damon into a conversation she calls him ‘that fine-looking thing’ which always reduces us to laughter. “Yes, ma’am, he sure does,” I say sarcastically, holding my hands over my ears. “But I’ve got a bad feeling this bunny rabbit is about to have a tragic accident.” She smirks. “It’s funny, I thought the very same thing.” CeeCee picks it up and studies the underside. “There must be an off switch. Surely he was only playin’.” The cordless phone trills, making us jump. “I’ll take it in the office so I can hear. It’s probably that fine-looking thing calling to gloat,” I say, jogging to the back of the caf? to the small office. Still smiling, I answer, “The Gingerbread Caf?, Lil speaking.” And wait for Damon’s velvety voice to talk back. “Lily-Ella, it’s me.” It’s a velvety voice all right, but it’s not Damon’s. The way Joel rolls the Ls of my full name takes me back to my old life. Closing my eyes, I picture him, his thick black hair pushed back from his face while he rakes his fingers through it, a subconscious mannerism. I stiffen; it’s been months since we talked. And two years since we divorced. I make my voice businesslike. “How are you, Joel?” “I’ve been better.” He lets out a short hollow laugh. “So you got the boxes I sent?” The detritus of Joel’s life with me had been stashed around my house, things I stopped seeing because they’d been there for an age, but Damon noticed as soon as he moved in a few weeks back. A baseball glove in the hall closet, old clothes in the spare room, used car parts in the shed. Goes to show just how quick Joel upped and left. Damon didn’t say a word about it but I could see a shadow of doubt cross his face as he kept stumbling across Joel’s things so I decided it was high time I de-cluttered my old life. “Yeah, I got them. None of it means anything ’cept the photos. Spent a whole night staring at them.” “Don’t talk like that. They’re just pictures. Nothing more.” I’d sent Joel half of our wedding pictures with the boxes, because it meant something back then, and there’s no point pretending it didn’t happen. When I divvied them up, I spent some time looking through them too, but all I felt was a sort of sadness that those two bright-eyed lovers staring back at me weren’t so suited after all. He sighs. “Look, Lil, I know I made all kinds of mistakes, but I’m a changed man. Totally different from the one who left…” “Stop, Joel. That sounds like a line.” CeeCee calls out, “Well, is it Damon? Tell him I think I’ve figured out a way to stop it. Can’t barely hear it from the depths of the chest freezer…” Her cackle follows me into the office. “Well, it’s coming from my heart, Lil,” Joel says, in a slightly offended tone. “You did this, Joel. You made your choice, and it wasn’t me.” Two years I pined for him after he walked out. Just after he managed to lose our house, and his car yard in one of his get-rich-quick schemes. He took a gamble with our finances and lost without breathing a word of it to me until it was too late. I struggled to keep the Gingerbread Caf? going, and held on through some truly bad times. But he didn’t care; our home was taken by the bank, and we were forced to rent a tiny cottage. He walked away without a backward glance, right into the arms of another woman. To think I waited for him for two years ready to forgive. I was a damn fool, and I’m sure as hell not going to make that mistake again. “Look, baby, I know you’re with some other guy—” “That’s none of your business!” “So our history doesn’t count for anything? You can’t honestly say it wasn’t one helluva marriage before things went…pear-shaped.” The saccharine timbre of his voice reminds me that he can’t be trusted. He’s a salesman through and through. CeeCee says he could sell fire to Satan if you gave him half a chance. “Pear-shaped? Is that what you call it?” It’s impossible to keep the sarcasm from my voice. “And you’re right, it was one helluva marriage, emphasis on the hell. I have to go.” “Lil, can we meet? There’s something I really need to discuss with you.” Exasperated, I exhale down the line. “I think we’ve discussed everything.” “I’m out at Old Lou’s…” I groan inwardly. Old Lou owns a big property on the outskirts of Ashford. It looks more like a junk yard than a place where someone lives. I lower my voice, “How long have you been here?” “A couple of days. I was planning to go check out that new shop in town; you know the one, sells small goods…” Damon’s shop. There’s an abrasiveness to Joel’s voice; he obviously knows all the details of my new relationship. I pinch the bridge of my nose as my head begins to ache. I wonder what he’s scheming in that great big melon head of his. One thing I know for sure is that it’s never black and white when it comes to Joel. Maybe I can nip this in the bud before it blooms into trouble. “Stay away from that shop. I’ll give you ten minutes tonight, and that’s it, Joel. And you’re right, I am with someone else, so if it’s about reconciliation forget it.” I end the call so he can’t respond. Worry gnaws at me. What’s he up to? “Sugar plum?” CeeCee yells. “Are we doing these eggs or not?” “Coming!” I put the phone back in the cradle on the desk and pray he doesn’t call again. Heading back to CeeCee, I see she’s laid the bench with everything we need to make Paschal eggs. Real eggs that we’re going to drain and dye in a rainbow of colors so the children of Ashford can paint them at the chocolate festival. “What’d he say?” She smirks up at me. “Did you tell him the bunny is suffering a severe case of frostbite?” I grin in spite of myself when I hear the muffled drone of the bunny from the square chest freezer, winding down as if its battery is almost flat. “It wasn’t Damon. It was someone…about a catering job. Just a quote.” The lie catches in the back of my throat. I look away so she doesn’t notice my hesitation. “Another one? You two are surely making it big in the catering world.” Damon and I joined forces at Christmas time to cater parties outside Ashford. I was catering alone before but was missing out on the bigger jobs because I couldn’t do it by myself. With Damon’s help, we’ve managed to spread our wings further afield, and have secured lots of corporate events in the bigger towns that border Ashford, Connecticut. Our town, while pleasant to live in, doesn’t have much of a call for canap?s, or any of the fancy dishes we make to order. Luckily we don’t have anything booked until after the festival, otherwise I don’t know how we’d manage. “So,” I say, hoping to distract CeeCee from asking for more details about the phone call. “Who’s doing what here?” I gaze down at the huge bowl of eggs and wonder how long it’s going to take us to drain them all. “I’m not one to beg off, Lil, but I picture how those eggs came to be and I can’t imagine myself puckerin’ up to blow the contents out. You get my drift?” “Cee! Now I’m picturing the chicken laying the egg. That’s just plain gross!” I look at her, bemused, and slightly queasy at the thought. “Mind, I washed ’em good. You’ll be OK.” Her lips wobble and a second later she doubles over; her big-bellied southern haw rings out, making it damn near impossible not to join in. For the first time ever the Gingerbread Caf? is flourishing. We’ve had extra money to invest in more supplies and let our creativity loose. Our window display is a show-stopper, crafted to look like a magical forest. We have trees made with fluffy green cotton candy and dark chocolate trunks. We’ve set up a bed of burnished hay made from toffee-like spun sugar where our chocolate bunnies nest. And tiny yellow chicks, made from fondant icing, are ‘hatching’ out of white chocolate eggs. The intricate display has drawn in kids and adults alike, the heady smell of molten chocolate has worked wonders on passers-by, who can’t help but wander in and see what we’re up to. Semi-composed from the thought of tasting raw egg yolk, I glance back at Cee, who’s moved away and is slapping her hand on the bench every time laughter gets the better of her. “Is this going to continue?” I say, arching my eyebrows. “Every time I put my lips on an egg?” I’m supposed to poke a hole in each end of the egg and blow down so the liquid spills out. Now she’s got me picturing the origins of the egg, and it’s kind of disgusting. CeeCee certainly has a way of lightening my mood, and I chortle along with her. I scrutinize the egg up close and she shrieks; her brown skin is almost purple from laughter; she’s gasping for breath and gripping her belly. “OK…OK, I’m nearly done.” She glances back at the eggs, and manages to hold in her merriment as tears stream from her eyes. “Glory be, I’m too old for this.” “Oh, yeah? If you don’t stop I’m going to make you suck eggs.” “Suck eggs! You meant to be blowing!” This starts us off again. “It’s a wonder we get any work done with this kinda carry on!” CeeCee manages, before her guffaw carries to the street where a few people walking past stop to gawp at us, with quizzical expressions. We manage to control ourselves enough to set to work. CeeCee fills up a saucepan with warm water and adds a dash of vinegar and a hefty squirt of red food coloring, ready to dye the eggshells. I pierce the first egg and glance over at Cee. She sputters into her hand and walks away, her shoulders shaking. “I can’t watch. I just can’t!” By the time she wanders back I’ve done five eggs. “Only ninety-five to go.” I wipe my forehead in exaggeration. CeeCee takes the empty shells, and gently drops them in the pot of scarlet water. She stirs softly so they dye evenly before taking them out to dry in an empty egg carton. We work quietly, and my mind drifts back to Joel. He hasn’t been back to Ashford since we split; it seems odd he’d come back now. I wonder if he’s going to try and make trouble for me, but most of all I worry about what Damon will make of it. Joel can be pigheaded — if he sets his mind to something he usually figures a way to get it. I can’t help feeling anxious he’s back and clearly with some kind of agenda. I curse under my breath as I break an egg. My jittery hands are no match for the delicate shell, and I end up holding a yolky mess. “Don’t think that’s how you’re goin’ to get out of doing them, Lil,” CeeCee jokes. “Got to admit it’s much faster,” I reply as I use paper towels to wipe away the goo. A breeze wafts in, making the pages of our magazines flutter on the tables. The glorious floral-scented spring air pulls people from their homes like magic after winter finally packed up and left for another year. It won’t be long before we’re inundated with customers who want to idle away the morning soaking up the soft sun from the comfort of an outside table. Earlier this morning CeeCee made a batch of buttermilk pies, which bake nice and slow in the oven. The occasional burst of vanilla essence floats outside, tempting people to stop in and ask how long they’ll be. “Cherry blossom…” CeeCee’s voice is soft with concentration “…can you pass me the blue dye?” “Sure, give me a sec.” I stand over the bin and shake the rest of the gooey egg off my hands. “Blue, and what comes next?” “That little bottle of sunshine right there.” She points to the yellow dye, her face lit up. I break another egg and this time my curse rings out. “Glory be, sugar plum, you sure do got butterfingers today. You want me to have a go?” “No. It’s OK, I’ll go slower.” Damn Joel. I’m worried. I don’t want him to cast a pall of ugliness over my new life. And what else can he be here for, except to make trouble? “Mmm hmm,” she says distractedly as she spoons an egg out of the pot and rests it next to the others in the carton. She stares straight at me and says, “What’s botherin’ you? You suddenly got the clumsies. It ain’t like you to make mistakes no matter how finicky the job is.” Moving to the sink to wash my hands, I laugh her off. “It’s nothing, Cee.” CeeCee doesn’t pry into it again and I’m grateful my back is turned so she doesn’t try to stare me down. I confess all when she does that and she knows it. We don’t usually keep secrets from each other. But for now, it’s better if she doesn’t know Joel’s back. She’d probably drive out to Old Lou’s and holler at him something fierce. There’s no love lost between those two. CeeCee is protective of me, like a mother hen, and for that reason, I won’t tell her about Joel just yet. Chapter Two (#ulink_69c5dffb-2b6b-53dd-99e0-dee5f3e46e08) I head outside to update the chalk board and to clear the tables of empty coffee cups. Bending down, I write about the buttermilk pies, and the chocolate-dipped strawberries, we made earlier. I turn as someone lightly taps me on the shoulder. I hear a little giggle as I feel a tap on the other shoulder. I spin the other way and look into the deep azure eyes of Charlie. She giggles again, a high chipmunk-like sound. “Tricked you.” I take her into my arms. Her gorgeous blonde curls tickle my nose as I bury my face in her hair. “Charlie bear, you’re here!” “Yep, for a whole week! Daddy said we’re going to paint eggs and do lots of fun stuff…” “We sure are.” I glance across the way at Damon, who stands to watch she’s crossed the street safely. I wave at him and point to the caf? as I take Charlie’s hand and lead her inside. Damon’s daughter, Charlotte, or Charlie as we call her, first came to Ashford just after Christmas. I kept my distance so she could enjoy her time with her daddy but it didn’t take long for her to toddle over the road and ask for a gingerbread man. Soon enough she was helping cut out the figures and stayed most days to bake alongside us, before leaving to go back to her mom, and return to school in New Orleans. It was decided Charlie would spend the Easter break with us because her mom was taking a trip to Vegas, and it’s not the kind of place suitable for a seven-year-old. “You know what else we’re going to do?” I ask as I set her up on a stool by the bench. “What?” “We’re going to have a chocolate festival! The whole town is getting involved, even your daddy, so we might need someone to be our taste tester…” She squeals and claps her hands. “I can!” I look solemnly at her. “OK, you’re our quality control. And do you know what else? If you’re really lucky, you might meet the Easter bunny!” She slaps her hands on her cheeks and says, “The real Easter bunny?” “Of course!” CeeCee and I cackled like witches when we found an adult bunny-rabbit dress-up online, and even more so when they only had one in stock in pink and…in Damon’s size. It was our finest moment, presenting him the suit complete with ginormous rosy rabbit head with flippy-floppy ears. So we might have sung a nursery rhyme or two to convince him it was for the children…when in actual fact it was for our amusement. “I can’t wait!” “And then on Sunday we have the town egg hunt. It’s going to be great fun. You’ll have a basket to hold all the lovely eggs the Easter bunny hid.” “We might need a map.” Her little mouth puckers. I grin and bend down to hug her small frame. “A map might be a good idea. Now let me fix you a snack. CeeCee’ll be back soon, and she was going to ask you to help her bake some hot-cross-bun cake pops, but it’s a very tricky job. I wasn’t sure if you were up to the task…” “I am! I am! I love cake pops. CeeCee said I’m the best helper she’s ever had.” “She’s right.” I pour Charlie a glass of milk. “Now, how about you go look in that fridge over there, and see what you want to eat?” Her eyes light up as she sees the variety of chocolate lining the shelves. “They’re all so pretty. Can I have the gingerbread-man one?” She points to an egg wrapped in the special foil. I kiss the top of her head before taking it out for her. “Good choice,” I say. *** Cee returns not long after and yelps when she sees Charlie helping me ice a chocolate crepe cake. “Oh, my sweet little angel! Come here and give me a great big hug!” Charlie slips off the stool and races into her arms. CeeCee adores the little girl and seems to have adopted her as another grandbaby. Once we’re all settled down, CeeCee tells Charlie what they need to make hot-cross-bun cake pops. “They gonna be a little taste explosion,” CeeCee tells her. “You pop the square of fruity cake in your mouth, and bam, it’s a mini hot-cross bun on a stick! With a nice coating of chocolate, mind.” “Just like a hot-cross bun?” “The very same with the white cross and everythin’.” Charlie looks serious as she helps CeeCee pull out the ingredients they’ll need. *** The Gingerbread Caf? resembles a chocolate shop by the time CeeCee and I finish the day’s work. Square ganache-filled truffles shine from their perch in the glass display fridge. We’ve made a range of flavors, from simple dark chocolate to the more time-consuming white chocolate with Earl-Grey-tea-infused ganache. For those, we candied the delicate tea leaves and used tweezers to prop them on top of the small squares of perfection. There are caramel pecan truffles with honeyed pecans on top, because we figured some people would appreciate some more extravagant flavors. We drag ourselves away from the fridge and tidy up as the soft sunlight begins to fade. The street empties as town folk make their way home at the end of the day. Charlie wandered off home with one of the older kids who live next door to us to watch movies but more likely take a nap after a busy day baking. “I’m going to go ahead and bring the tables inside,” I say to CeeCee. Outside the air has cooled, and I hug my cardigan tight. Flowers bloom from our pots, bright red roses so vivid I can’t help but stare at them, enjoying the way they sway slightly in the breeze, almost as if they’re waving. I fold a small wooden table, and go to lift it when Damon appears. “Let me take care of that,” he says, lifting it as if it weighs nothing. He hoists it over his shoulder and navigates the doorway, careful not to knock it into the newly painted walls. In his wake, his aftershave and the mix of scents that perpetually envelop him drifts to where I stand. The usual Damon smell of coffee beans, and something spicy with a hint of cinnamon; he’s downright edible, and it makes my pulse quicken. When he returns for another table, he glances at me and stops. “What is it?” Concern etches his face. “You look so pale, Lil.” He rubs his strong hands up and down my arms. “Just enjoying the view,” I say, giving him the once-over, but my voice sounds strange, even to me. He pulls me to him, and holds me tight. Resting my face against his chest, I hear the steady thrum of his heart. It’s comforting and in some cheesy way I imagine it beats just for me. I know I need to confide in him about Joel. Damon’s not one to tell me what to do, but I owe it to him to explain so he knows it’s about closure once and for all and nothing more. He clasps my face, rains kisses on my forehead, the tip of my nose, and then ever so softly on my lips. I close my eyes, and kiss him back, harder with more urgency. We pull apart and I gaze up at him; his eyes are lit with a question. He tilts his head, like a sign to start talking. “It’s Joel,” I say. “He’s back and he wants to see me. Says he’s got something to discuss.” Damon’s hands fall to the crook of my back, and I shuffle closer to him. Arching slightly to see each other, we rest thigh to thigh, hip to hip, connected. I continue: “I don’t want you to think it’s anything more than it is. I feel absolutely nothing for him except pity, if you can even call it that.” He searches my face before replying. “What do you think he feels for you, though, Lil?” “Whatever it is it’ll only be a passing thing. He’s at a stopgap right now, and that’s got something to do with it. But I won’t go if it makes you second-guess us.” I gesture to the small space between our hearts. Damon lets out a gruff sigh. “Nothing’ll make me second-guess us, Lil. If you feel you need to do this, you go on and do it. I trust you, Lil, I know you. And that’s all that matters to me. Plus we don’t call you feisty Lil for nothing. I know you can look after yourself.” I slap him playfully across the arm. “Who calls me feisty Lil?” He shrugs. “You know…everyone.” I grin up at him. “They do not!” “OK, they don’t.” His face softens with laughter. “Well, I’m glad you trust me, and I just know it’ll be easier to see him face to face and sort this out once and for all.” “If he hurts you in any way, you know I’ll kill him, right?” Damon says, his voice light, but I can still make out the serious undertone. “You’ll have to get in line behind Cee. Who I haven’t told, by the way,” I add quickly. He runs a hand through my hair, tucking it behind my ear. He’s so gentle in everything he does; I get to wondering how I’m so lucky. “You think that’s wise?” he asks. “I happen to know from experience it doesn’t take long for news to spread around town.” I blush, thinking back to Christmas Eve when Damon and I first kissed. No way we could keep it to ourselves when we embraced passionately in front of the town hall where almost all of the residents of Ashford stood, waiting for the carols to begin. I blame Damon for that public display of affection. He’s got a way of making me forget where I am and what the hell I’m doing. “Lil?” I blink away the memory of kissing him in the snow. “I’ll tell her tomorrow, when he’s gone. CeeCee’s liable to hunt out Curtis’s old shotgun if she knows he’s here.” “How’s her aim?” he jokes, embracing me once more. *** Back inside, I banish the thought of the impending visit with Joel as CeeCee and I do the usual clean-up. She stacks the magazines and resets the tables, and I give the kitchen a mop. “Sugar?” “Mmm?” “I had an idea ’bout the chocolate festival. We sure gonna be busy serving folks, and all we’ve got organized for the l’il ones is painting those eggs. Why don’t we do some more activities for them so their parents can enjoy the day while we occupy the kids in here? You know, maybe some face painting or some such…” “Great idea, Cee! We can do all sorts of things. I was going to make gingerbread Easter bunnies — they can decorate them with tubes of icing. And what about egg-and-spoon races? And egg rolling? This’ll be so much fun for Charlie!” I put the mop back in the bucket and swish it around. “Right,” CeeCee says, blustering over with a bout of enthusiasm. “We better make a list. We’ve only got a few days to prepare.” “I’ll ask the Mary-Jos to bring their face-painting kits. They’re like children themselves — I know they’ll have a great time.” Nothing has changed with the three Mary-Jos, cousins, who look the same, talk the same, and hang around Damon’s shop, fluttering their eyelashes at him in the cutest case of puppy love going around. They’re sweet teenagers, just bored in Ashford. They delighted in making posters for the chocolate festival, I think mainly so they could drive to the bigger towns and gawk at the teenage boys as they handed them out. “Surely they’ll jump at the chance to do something other than look pretty,” CeeCee mutters. “Let’s start on those gingerbread bunnies.” Glancing at the clock, I see it’s almost six. I don’t want to get out to Old Lou’s too late and have Damon’s mind racing at where I am. My stomach flips having to lie again to CeeCee. “Let’s leave it for today. I’ll come in early tomorrow and make a start. How does that sound?” She yawns and pads over the wet floor, careful not to slip. “You right, I got all excited on account of those kids comin’ here. Let’s start tomorrow, and you see ’bout asking the Mary-Jos if they can drag themselves away from Damon’s stoop to help out on Saturday.” I nod and fumble with my apron strings. “We done?” She surveys the caf?; everything except the mop bucket is as it should be. “Looks like it. Head on home, and I’ll see you tomorrow. Don’t forget your scarf.” This time of the evening there’s a chill in the air. “Shoot, then I got to cross over your nice clean floor again. No matter, I’ll get it tomorrow. You go see that fine-looking thing now, you hear? Don’t fuss around here no more.” “Yes, ma’am.” I hug her tight and promise myself I’ll tell her all about Joel tomorrow. Chapter Three (#ulink_da4281ed-510e-5b61-b686-22753621f693) The wind wails softly as I step outside to empty the bucket and wash the mop. I go to put the cleaning equipment back in the small storage shed when I’m blinded by the headlights of a wide old car pulling in the car park. The engine rumbles like some kind of beast. I shield my eyes from the glare of the lights before the car crawls into a space, and the bright headlights shine on the fence instead. I don’t recognize the car, but can guess by the classic model it’s something belonging to Old Lou. Cars like this are spread all over his property dying a slow rusty death from being pummeled by the elements. The car shudders to a halt, and out steps Joel. My stride falters when I see his familiar lopsided smile. He’s dressed in low-slung denim jeans, and a tight black sweater. His dark hair is swept back, as always, making his olive skin and deep brown eyes the first thing a girl might notice. But all I see is the same expression on his face when he was close to making a sale at the car yard, and I steel myself. “Thought you might’ve got cold feet.” He saunters over to me, and pecks me on the cheek. Up close, I see dark circles under his eyes, and take a step back at the stale smell of cheap wine that cloaks him. “Figured I’d drop by and see you instead, and your…empire.” He waves a hand towards the caf?. “Let me lock this up.” I point to the storage shed. “Go on inside.” I’m surprised to feel absolutely nothing from seeing him again. I thought maybe there’d be some kind of wistful flutter of the memory of our love but instead, there’s just numbness. I guess the spell he had over me is long gone. He moves to hug me but I sidestep him. “Joel, I warned you about that. I’m with someone else now.” Putting a hand to his chest, he feigns surprise. “It was just a hello hug between old friends.” “Go on in,” I say more forcefully. “OK, don’t run away now.” He winks, and runs a hand through his hair. I ignore him, and turn back to the shed as I hear his heavy footfalls on the back steps. Taking a deep breath, I remind myself to give him ten minutes, and then send him on his way. Damon will be waiting for me. Longing races up my spine when I think of going home and showing him just how much he means to me. When I walk back into the caf? Joel’s standing by the cash register shaking the shrilling turkey. “What are you doing?” I ask, snatching it away from him. “Whoa, you sure are defensive these days, Lil. I was wondering what the hell it does, that’s all.” There’s no way I want him anywhere near Damon’s gift; silly as it sounds, it’s special to me, that goddamn turkey, and the memory it holds. I stuff the turkey back on his spot, and cross my arms over my chest. “So, what is it you had to discuss with me?” He rubs his hands together and surveys the kitchen. “Coffee first? Or maybe, a glass of something stronger?” “Everything’s switched off. And we don’t keep alcohol here.” He clucks his tongue, and slowly wanders around the caf?, picking up things as if he’s in a store. “I like what you’ve done with the place. It looks…cozy. No more stark white walls, and only a stick or two of furniture.” I itch to say it’d taken a good two years and a lot of hard work to be able to afford luxuries such as paint and the odd assortment of shabby-chic secondhand furniture we’d acquired slowly. But I bite my tongue. He’s stalling for time, and I don’t want to drag this visit out any longer than I have to. “Joel, I really have to go. So can we get down to it?” When he turns to me, I hold my breath; something in his eyes scares me. “You know I left here with only the clothes on my back. I didn’t ask for anything from you.” I return his glare. He can’t be serious. “That’s because there was nothing to take from me, Joel. Remember?” “Is it serious between you and Damon?” I rack my mind wondering who would have told him about Damon. Joel isn’t exactly popular in Ashford, and Old Lou never ventures into town. Even Rosaleen, the town know-it-all, wouldn’t stoop so low as to tell Joel anything. “It sure is.” I pick up my handbag, and fling the strap over my shoulder. “If that’s all you came to discuss then your question is answered. I hope you have a nice life.” He laughs, a low, mean sound. “I do have a question for you, Lil. How much does the caf? make these days? I’ve seen flyers all over the place advertising your so-called chocolate festival. Word is you’ve got yourself a nice little earner…” The malice in his voice leaves me cold. “That’s none of your concern now, Joel.” “No?” He steps behind the register and presses the button to spring it open. When I see his face drop, I hide my smile. The takings are safely tucked away in the freezer in an empty box of frozen peas. CeeCee and I figure no one would look there, not that there’s much crime around Ashford anyway. “What, Joel, do you need a loan or something?” I try to keep the disdain from my voice. “You think you can walk in here and act like some kind of evil cameo from a Batman movie and I’m just going to stand here and take it? You really need a trench coat or some gloopy black eyeliner to be believable.” He slams the cash register shut. “I’ll cut to the chase, then, silly Lily.” His voice is hard, and his eyes no longer hold the close-the-deal look; they’re icy with anger. “When I left you for the glamorous Rita, I’ll admit it was for her sizeable assets.” He holds his hands out in front of his chest. I scoff. “Oh, please. As if I care.” “It wasn’t just the double-D cups that had me hooked. It was also her healthy bank balance. Anyhow, that’s all finished. And it pains me more than you know to say she didn’t set me up like she promised. So what do I do? You gotta spend money to make money, right? Speculate to accumulate?” I purse my lips; he’s a walking clich?. What did I ever see in him? “What is it you want, Joel?” “Well, I got to thinking where can I get some money fast to start another car yard… Any idea?” I cross my arms over my chest. “No idea.” “And then I thought…actually, yes! The quaint little Gingerbread Caf?, a veritable money spinner of late. I got to remembering how this caf? came about. Do you remember, Lil?” My throat tightens, and I blink back tears. There’s no way I’m giving him the pleasure of seeing me cry. “What are you saying, Joel?” It’s all I can do not to hiss the words. “I set you up, Lil. I paid for all of this…stuff.” He turns, his arms outstretched. “As I recall I loaned you twenty grand to get this place started. That oven is mine, that fridge; hmm, I think I paid for that dishwasher too.” “You lost everything we had, Joel. Everything. I managed to hang onto the caf? by sheer hard work. I don’t owe you a cent.” I hear the tremor in my voice and hate myself for it. It’s true Joel gave me the money to set up the kitchen in the caf?, but I didn’t consider it a loan, since I supported him financially most of my adult life before moving on to start the Gingerbread Caf?. He sneers, and I resist the urge to slap the look from his face. “It was just bad timing, Lil. The whole global financial crisis thing. We both lost things we loved. But the money I loaned you wasn’t mine — it was…family money, you could say.” “You’ve got to be kidding me, Joel. This is low even for you.” I shake my head, wondering how a man I once loved could be as cold and as calculating as this. Family money. I want to rage at him. Before he died, Harry, Joel’s father, was a loan shark, who cost a lot of people their homes with his exorbitant rates. I should have known better that any money from him would come with strings attached. “But I need to make a fresh start. And far as I see, this is the only way I can do it. You’ve got a Guthrie now…very clever, Lil. You won’t want for anything again, will you?” I scowl at him for all I’m worth. Damon’s family is from old money. The Guthries made their fortune from transport: they owned a fleet of cargo ships and train lines back in their heyday, but have since sold their empire, and now live off the profits. Some place more hoity-toity than Ashford, but they’re good people, and are well respected in this town on the rare occasions they visit. Damon works off his own bat, doesn’t take handouts from them. He’s got his pride, unlike Joel here. “I would never borrow a dime off Damon or his family! Now, get out! You’ll get nothing from me.” Fury makes my hands shake and my voice rise an octave. “Maybe it’s time to sell this place, then?” He walks to the back door then stops and turns, pulling an envelope from his back pocket. “Here, some light reading for you. I’ve already been to a lawyer, and, as you’ll see, you owe me. Twenty large, Lil. Plus interest. It’s been three years you’ve sat on my money.” He throws the envelope on the bench and slams the door behind him. I listen to the low rumble of the car as it leaves the car park before I let the tears flow. Sitting at a table, I cradle my head in my hands and blubber until I can’t see straight. I’ve never been a pretty crier, and this time isn’t any different. Loud choking sobs make me hiccough, and sputter, but I let it all out. Even just the threat of having to sell the Gingerbread Caf? is enough to make me dizzy with worry. He couldn’t have picked a worse time to drop this on me; there’s still so much to organize for the festival, and now this will hang over me like a black cloud. Regret sits heavy in my heart about keeping Joel’s visit from CeeCee. She’ll be fit to kill when she knows I met him without telling her. And Damon? What will he think about the mess I’m in? I sit there for an age, thinking of all the things I should have said. The moon shines bright in the dark night. I walk to the window and stare up at it. I think of telling CeeCee and know her retort would be, “There’s not a snowball’s chance in hell you losing the Gingerbread Caf?, not on account of that damn fool, anyways.” Chapter Four (#ulink_92c5ce25-1908-538d-a9f1-c1c099a60c95) My old truck whines as I pull into the driveway; another thing I was all set on replacing this year, but I guess that may not happen now. I jump down from the cab, and head up the porch. Light from inside peeks out through the thick lace curtains. I take a deep breath and brace myself to tell Damon. Inside, I throw my bag and keys on the buffet, and head towards the kitchen. Damon’s there, his back towards me, a tea towel slung over his shoulder as he stirs something that smells tangy, in a pot. “Hey,” I say, edging towards him. He turns to me as he pulls the tea towel from his shoulder and tosses it on the bench. His smile disappears when he glances at my face, which is probably puffy and ruddy, and all sorts of ugly. “Hey, you.” He takes me in his arms, and I want to kick myself when the tears start again. This time they fall silently without the great big chest heaves. He doesn’t ask anything, just holds me tight. I close my eyes, and thank God I have a man who loves me right. I tilt my head and show him my face. “Lil.” He wipes my tears away, and leans down to kiss me softly on the lips. He exhales slowly and squeezes me tight once more, before stepping back, and pouring a glass of red wine. “You need to unwind. Take this—” he hands me the glass “— and go soak in the tub. It’s all ready for you. How about I finish up in here, and come talk to you while you relax?” I take a sip of wine, and feel myself go heavy with relief. “Sounds great.” I kiss his cheek. “Where’s Charlie bear?” “She’s asleep. She spent the rest of the afternoon up in the treehouse with the kids next door.” His face softens, and I know he’s thinking of the lifestyle here for his little girl. He wants her to be able to roam free and explore safely, the way kids in small towns can. A place where they make their own fun, like we did at their age, before computers and technology took over. “She must be exhausted. Did she have some dinner?” “Home-made fish fingers.” He grins as he sees my eyes light up. “And I made some for us too.” “You’re never too old for fish fingers. What’s in the pot?” I motion to the burgundy syrup he’s stirring. “Plum sauce — thought I’d try the recipe out before the festival. It’s to go with the deep-fried Camembert dish.” “My mouth’s watering. I hope you’re making some Camembert to go with my fish fingers…” “Surely am. Taste this first.” He holds the spoon to my lips; the sauce is sweet, and tart at the same time. “It’s good,” I say. He drops the spoon in the pot, and kisses the taste from my mouth. His voice is husky. “You better get in the bath before you drive me to distraction.” Heat flushes my face as I shuffle to the bathroom, listening to the sound of Charlie’s soft snores as I walk past her bedroom. Moments later, he’s there, perched on the white-tiled ledge of the bath watching me submerge myself under the soft water. I push my wet hair back, take a deep breath and tell him all about Joel, and what he wants. He leans his head against the wall, and stares up at the ceiling. I can tell he’s angry at Joel by the way he clenches his jaw. Feeling mighty silly to be in such a predicament, I push the bubbles around the bath so I don’t have to see his expression. “Do you think you’ll have to pay him?” “I don’t see why I’d have to. The only worry I have is that it was from his father’s bank account. At the time he gave me a bunch of reasons for that…we were married, we shared everything. I lost more than twenty thousand when he made all those bad business deals. As far as I’m concerned that money is mine, always was. I supported him financially for most of our marriage, because I was so na?ve, and then he lost it all. Except the caf?, and that’s only because of how hard I fought to keep it.” I take a huge gulp of wine, which spills from the side of my mouth. Goddamn it, just once I’d like to feel like one of those sophisticated women, who wear gloop and drink wine in the bath looking as glamorous as a movie star — but, no, I manage to muck it up. “If it comes to it I don’t have enough to pay him even if I wanted to.” I shudder, even thinking about the remote possibility of having to sell the Gingerbread Caf?. “I can give you the money.” “No, no way.” Damon frowns. But I don’t want anyone to bail me out. That’s what got me into the mess in the first place. Easier if I pretend it’s no big deal in front of Damon and CeeCee until I plan exactly how to extricate myself from Joel’s clutches. He sighs softly. “You can call it a loan if that makes you feel better.” “Thanks, but I need to sort this out myself. Once and for all.” “I forgot — feisty Lil.” He leans forward to kiss me. I grab the scruff of his shirt and pull him in the water fully clothed. He yelps, and then gives in, lying atop me, just at the right angle for serious smooching. “Feisty, did you say?” I challenge him. “Feisty and beautiful,” he murmurs. I kiss the words from his lips, and pull at the buttons of his drenched jeans. *** Tidying the last of the dinner dishes away, I hear the patter of little feet behind me. Charlie’s blond hair’s a tangled mess from sleep and she clutches an old teddy, so worn out it’s mostly gray in color. “Hey, kiddo, you OK?” I ask gently. She lifts a hand to shield her eyes from the light. “I woke up and forgot where I was.” Her bottom lip trembles slightly — I think of how hard it must be for her, this new life, without her parents together under the same roof. Careful not to overstep my mark, I motion to the family room. “Why don’t you go on in to your daddy, and I’ll make you a nice cup of hot cocoa?” She looks over her shoulder, then shakes her head. “Can you read me a story?” I wipe my hands on the tea towel, and nod. “I sure can. Let’s tell your daddy I’m going to tuck you in.” “OK.” We hold hands, and my heart swells. She truly is the most beautiful little girl — I wonder how Damon can stand to be parted from her when she leaves. “Charlie.” He sits up as we enter the dimly lit room. The TV flashes in the darkness. “Did you have a bad dream?” “No.” She falls into his arms. He lifts a hand and pushes the soft curls from her face. “It’s the room. I woke up, and got a little bit confused…” He closes his eyes and kisses the crown of her head. “How about I get you a night light tomorrow? That might help.” She nods her head. Their sleepy embrace is about the sweetest thing I’ve ever seen. “Lil’s gonna read me a book.” I make a mental note to buy some pretty things for Charlie’s room so it feels as if she belongs here, and not so much as if she’s a guest in our lives. “That sounds mighty nice,” Damon says. “Sleep tight, I’ll kiss you goodnight when I come past.” He tilts his head almost imperceptibly and gives me a look as if to check I’m happy to be the one to put her back to bed. I smile, and nod. Back in the small room, I switch on the bedside lamp and tuck her in snug. “Lil?” I select a book from the small pile stacked on the shelf. “Mmm?” “If I say I love you, that doesn’t mean I don’t love my mommy, right? I mean…she won’t be hurt, will she?” I perch on the edge of the bed and weigh up how to answer. “You know…no one can replace the love you have for your mom or dad. By saying you care for other people as well as them just means you’ve got a big heart—” I tap her chest “—with enough love in there for everyone. I think your mom would be happy to know that you feel safe and loved here. That’s all that would matter to her.” “So she won’t mind?” I flash her a smile. “Seems to me she’d be pretty proud of you. And you can tell her how much you miss her while you’re here, because I’m sure she’s missing you.” Charlie nods sagely. “I do miss her, but I miss you and Daddy when I’m gone too.” “We do too, but that only makes it so much more fun when you come back.” “I love CeeCee too. My mommy says she sounds like a funny lady.” We giggle. “See? Sounds like your mom is happy that you’re having fun while you’re here.” “OK.” Charlie puts her teddy bear under her arm. “Will you do special voices when you get to the part about the wolf?” She points to the book. I relax against the bedhead. “I sure can.” Chapter Five (#ulink_2128f7fa-0f46-5a36-8627-8b86bd3d57c4) Birds chirp from the tree outside my window, making me bolt out of bed. Shoot! Sunlight streams in; I’ve overslept. Damon’s side of the bed is empty, and I take a second to wonder why. It’s not like him to leave without waking me; most mornings we sit together over a cup of coffee that’s so strong it makes my eyes boing open. For a moment I wonder if he’s rethinking our relationship because of Joel’s sudden presence, then dismiss the ridiculous thought. I curse as I pull clothes from the cupboard. My mind races with all the things we need to do for the chocolate festival, and the activities for the kids on Saturday. I also want to buy a few things for Charlie’s room, cute little girly things: pink sheets, a lamp, maybe some Barbie dolls. I throw on a loose tee shirt, and pull up some jeans. CeeCee will be wondering where I am; I promised to get in early to make the gingerbread rabbits. In the bathroom I assess my reflection in the mirror: a mite pale, but a lot better than I looked last night. The thought of Joel’s letter sitting in my bag galvanizes me. I have to make an appointment with Mr Jefferson, a semi-retired lawyer, and the only one in Ashford to boot, for some legal advice. A quick splash of cold water on my face is all I have time for. Make-up isn’t my thing anyway. Ripping open the letter from Joel, I read a whole bunch of legal gobbledegook. My shoulders slump. I’m not sure if it’s because this lawyer’s on Joel’s side, but it sounds as though I will have to pay. He must have planned it so he’d always have a way to get the money back. *** CeeCee’s hollering away at someone as I walk through the back door of the Gingerbread Caf?. She’s slamming her hands on the bench and looks all ruffled. I rush over. “Cee, are you OK? What is it?” She puts a hand on her heart. “There you is. Glory be, I been so worried! I had to go on over to Damon and make sure you were OK. Rosaleen told me Joel was here last night!” I look sharply at Rosaleen, who averts her eyes on account of getting caught gossiping. “You don’t miss a trick, do you?” I say to her, fighting the edge in my voice. I have no idea how she manages to discover every tidbit in this town, but she does, and then she spreads the gossip like a game of Chinese whispers. “I better go.” She picks up a bag of cookies. “I hope everything works out and that…well, you know…” Her voice trails off as she nods to CeeCee and scurries away quick as a mouse. We watch her scrawny frame retreat before turning to each other. “I nearly done had a heart attack when I heard that snake was here when you all alone! What’d he want? I couldn’t get a word outta Damon, his mouth shut so tight I worry it’d been superglued!” She’s so riled up she speaks in exclamation marks. I take the envelope from my bag. “Let’s sit on the sofa.” I trudge to it, knowing CeeCee’s going to be worried. “He called yesterday, said he wanted to meet. Cut a long story short, he wants the money back I used to set up the caf?.” “He what? That man as crooked as a dog’s hind leg! But he owes you a whole lot more than that! He lost your house and everythin’.” Sweat breaks out above her lip; she picks up a magazine and uses it like a fan. “I know.” I pat her knee. “Don’t worry, please, Cee. I’m going to see about an appointment with Mr Jefferson, and figure out what to do.” I try my hardest to sound bright, as if I’m not concerned, and hope it fools her. “I got a bad feeling about this, Lil. He ain’t gonna let up so easy, lawyer or no.” “It’s fine, Cee. We’ll keep going like we always do. I’ll work out something. You want a gingerbread coffee?” Her eyes are glassy and I realize she’s about to cry. “Cee, it’s OK. Really, don’t cry.” “It just ain’t right. You worked your butt off to make this place into a business.” “We’ve both worked our butts off. Don’t you worry. I’m not going to give in without a fight.” I kiss her soft, plump cheek. “Put your feet up for a bit. I’ll bring you a coffee and a piece of pie.” “OK, just for a minute, then.” She keeps up a one-way conversation, muttering to herself, and shaking her fists. *** Once the shock wears off, CeeCee’s back to her bustling, busy self. I try and put Joel out of my mind as we get to work. It’s hard, though, when I picture his sneering face, and think of how cunning he is. We line the wicker baskets by the front door with greaseproof paper, and fill them with freshly baked hot-cross buns. Within minutes we have customers three deep as the smell travels out to the street. “I knew that was a good idea!” CeeCee says, pointing to the baskets. “It’s like bees to a honeypot.” And I have to agree. The caf? is more appealing with all the touches we’ve added recently. Damon built a bookshelf on the wall closest to the fireplace. We filled it with cookbooks, and paperbacks, and hunted out gingerbread coloring-in books for kids. CeeCee found the wicker baskets at a church f?te, and we used all our knowledge of DIY to mount them on the wall. We must have looked a sight that day, two women with nails hanging out of our mouths, drills in hand, as we tried to attach them to the wall. So they hang a little crookedly, but with the amount of nails we used they certainly won’t fall down. Over the Christmas break we painted the walls a dark chocolate color and hung gingerbread-man bunting and fairy lights along the edge of the cornice. It’s chintzy and sweet, and I’m proud of what we’ve accomplished. The customers trickle away once the hot-cross buns are sold so we stop to catch our breath and plan the rest of the day. I make a quick call to Mr Jefferson, who tells me to fax over the letter from Joel’s lawyer and that he’ll call me as soon as he’s done some investigating into it. Joining CeeCee on the old sofa by the bookshelves, I take a minute to watch the world go by outside the Gingerbread Caf?. I could easily grab a book off the shelf and while the day away reading, and gawping out of the window after each chapter. “I faxed the documents to Mr Jefferson,” I say idly, noticing Damon’s shop is filled with customers. He sells a range of small goods, and does cooking classes once a week, which all manner of local women get themselves glammed up for. Seems once Damon moved to town girls from eighteen to eighty suddenly forgot how to cook. I watch him wander around the shop, speaking to customers, and get the same tingly feeling I always do when I lay eyes on him. Even when he wears those ridiculous checker shirts he loves so much. They are growing on me, I guess, especially when he leaves one too many buttons open, exposing his chest. I blink the sleepy desire away, and try and look at though I’m not lost in some kind of fantasy world. CeeCee sighs loudly. “I feel better knowing that he’s gonna help. He’ll see you right. Guess there’s no chance Joel will just up and disappear, is there?” “You never can tell,” I say, wishing it were true. CeeCee uncrosses her arms. “If I sit here any longer I’ll fall asleep. Let’s bake something new.” I stretch, yawning. “Like what?” “Let’s make some dark chocolate cr?me brul?es. Then that’s one less thing to do for the festival.” “That’s if we don’t eat them all,” I say, following her back to the kitchen. I can almost taste the rich creamy dessert with its caramelized sugar topping, just by picturing it. *** With the cr?me brul?es made, and only two or three missing, as temptation got the better of us, we spend the rest of the morning serving customers and planning our range. Trying to organize what can be made ahead, and what needs to be done as late as possible. CeeCee’s busy concocting a huge slab of macadamia and white chocolate fudge — I can’t even look at it after the amount we’ve eaten today. A lanky man strolls through the doors, looking almost as if he’s lost something. He takes in the walls, the ceiling, as if he’s a repairman. “Can I help you?” I ask. He’s not from around here — that much I know. He strides to the counter. “Name’s Dennis. I heard this place was for sale. Joel told me to come and meet with you — he was a bit sketchy on the details…” Anger clouds my mind, and I can’t help but glare at the damn fool in front of me, whether he’s innocent or not. What in the hell kind of game is Joel playing sending someone out like some kind of tire-kicker to look over the place? “This place most certainly is not for sale!” I yell, indignant. His eyes widen. “But Joel said…” CeeCee storms over. “You go back and tell that nasty piece of work this kinda carry-on ain’t gonna wash with us! Go on, get.” She shoos him away. He takes one look at her and spins on his heel. She turns to me. “This ain’t gonna stop, Lil, till he gets his way.” “I’ll call Mr Jefferson back. But I’m not going to let him bully me into paying, Cee. I’m just not.” We’re distracted as Charlie runs through the door out of breath. “Daddy said you were making Easter eggs today!” I glance at CeeCee, who in a tacit wave of her hand knows instinctively not to discuss what just happened in front of Charlie. We lock eyes for a moment longer; I can tell CeeCee’s still reeling from Joel’s latest attempt to intimidate me. I mouth the words, “It’s fine.” CeeCee purses her lips, and pulls the little girl into her arms. “Wanna help us make some eggs?” Her cornflower-blue eyes widen in excitement. “Yes please! Daddy bought me an apron and everything.” She opens up her pink backpack and pulls out a brown apron. “Would you look at that?” Cee says. “It’s got gingerbread men all over it. Your daddy sure knows how to buy gifts all right.” We giggle, thinking of the shrilling turkey and the manic bunny. CeeCee helps Charlie fix the strings of the apron, and sets her up on a stool. “So, Lil’s gonna temper the chocolate,” CeeCee says, “which is a fancy way of saying she’s going to melt it. Now give me a minute here to read this recipe.” She plonks her glasses on the bridge of her nose, while she reads. “Oh, this is gonna be fun! Says here, we can pipe in white chocolate first to make little patterns in the molds, like dots or squiggles, then, once that sets, we coat with the dark chocolate. They gonna look pretty as a picture.” I heft up a big bag of dark chocolate buttons, and cut it open. The rich scent of cacao hits me, and it takes all my might not to grab a handful and start eating, no matter that my overfull belly screams in protest. “Lil needs to set up a saucepan with an inch or two of water and wait for it to simmer. Then she gonna fill a big metal bowl with the dark chocolate buttons atop, so it acts like a bain-marie.” Charlie crinkles her nose. “What’s that?” “Kinda like a bath with a bowl on top.” Charlie looks a mite confused at Cee’s description, but shrugs her shoulders and watches our every move. Following CeeCee’s instructions, we wait for the water to heat. “Ready?” I say to them as I add the chocolate buttons to the bowl. Charlie ogles it as if it’s something magical. “I’ve never seen so much chocolate,” she whispers, awestruck. CeeCee cackles. “That bag almost as big as you!” I stir the molten chocolate, making sure to hold the bowl so it doesn’t drop into the water underneath. “That smells like heaven itself,” CeeCee says. “I’m gonna melt a tiny bit of white chocolate so we can pipe it into the molds. You can decorate the eggs however you want, Charlie.” She drags her gaze from the gooey pot of chocolate and claps her hands. “Really? I’m going to do love hearts!” “Sounds perfect.” I smile. We work quickly. I check the temperature — it’s almost at the right heat. CeeCee’s done in no time and sets up the piping bags and molds on the bench. She wipes the oval-shaped molds out with a paper towel, which will help make the chocolate eggs glossy when they’re set. With oven mitts on, I take the bowl of lusciously liquefied chocolate off the saucepan and put it between us on the bench. CeeCee’s used piping bags to swirl thin strands of white chocolate in the molds, which have set. Charlie tries her best to make hearts but they look more like scribbles. She sticks her tongue between her lips as she concentrates. “You’re doing a great job, sugar.” She beams. “Now what?” CeeCee says, “OK, we give it a minute to set, then we lightly brush in the dark chocolate, a real thin layer, and when that’s dry we fill the molds up with chocolate and tap so there ain’t no air bubbles.” Charlie takes a brush and watches us before attempting her own eggs. “Real thin, mind.” CeeCee stands behind her and holds the mold so she can brush the first layer over the hearts. “Now you ready for the fun part?” Charlie puts the brush to her mouth and paints her lips with it. “I can’t help it!” she says when she notices us staring at her mouth, which is coated brown as if she’s wearing lipstick. CeeCee hoots. “You keep that brush just for your eggs now.” We spoon in the chocolate to completely fill the molds and then tap the sides. “Sounds like a horse gallopin’ to the finish line!” I laugh with CeeCee as I survey the bench; we’ve spilt chocolate all over it and it dries quickly in all sorts of obscure dribbles. “Here comes the messy part.” I rip off a layer of baking paper, and spread it on the clean end of the bench. We laugh as we upend the molds and watch the excess chocolate fall out like lava, leaving only the thin shell. Charlie immediately dips her finger into turned-out chocolate. “They look perfect already,” CeeCee says, admiring the even, half shells before she puts them in the fridge to set. We get through three more batches of chocolate eggs, some tiny ovals, some huge as gridiron balls, before we decide to take a break, and sample some of our creations. Charlie hugs us before tottering back to Damon’s shop. Not before taking a handful of treats as she leaves. “I’ll make us a couple o’ gingerbread milkshakes to go with our chocolate — what do you say?” I groan in mock protest. “I can see this little fad adding a few inches to my hips.” CeeCee harrumphs as she mixes up our drinks. “You too skinny anyways.” “Pfft. You would say that even if I was as big as a barn.” CeeCee dips the milkshake glasses into honey, then coats the rim with gingerbread crumbs before filling them up. She mooches over and hands me a glass, and we flop to the sofa. I take a big gulp, and close my eyes at the sheer deliciousness of it. The ice cream makes the drink thick, it’s spicy from the ginger, and sweet from the gooey treacle mixed through. CeeCee smacks her lips together and says, “Glory be, that about as good as a cuddle from yo’ mamma.” Chapter Six (#ulink_697fa6df-1e70-5163-9045-4c3efee42d34) “That’s the prettiest thing I ever seen.” CeeCee tilts her head, and stands back to get a better look at the window display. We’ve added the newly decorated eggs, including one of Charlie’s, which looks as if she’s scrawled white hieroglyphics on the dark chocolate shell. We added a chocolate honeycomb wall and little bees made from licorice adorn it. The display looks like a fancy barnyard, with the spun sugar glinting under the small down lights, and all the cute little animals we made out of chocolate or fondant peering up at us. Easter eggs of every shape and color look downright mouth-watering littered throughout the magical setting. “Let’s go check it from the street.” CeeCee grabs my arm, and pulls me into the bright day. “Would you look at that?” I say. “Walt’s shop is closed again — that’s the third time in a week or so. Why do you suppose that is?” CeeCee crosses her arms and follows my gaze. “I don’t rightly know.” “You think sales are slow?” She turns back to our Easter display, and says, “Could be.” Walt’s shop is dark. His display window is filled with colorful one-off pieces of furniture he lovingly hand-crafts. He uses wood recycled from old boats, their assorted paints faded and chipped, and mismatched to produce the most beautiful eclectic pieces you’ve ever seen. He says his furniture tells a story. The wood he uses has sailed around the world and seen more life than most of us ever will. My heart aches thinking Walt and Janey might be suffering financially. “Maybe we should make him a box of goodies tomorrow, Cee. There’s nothing one of your famous pies can’t fix.” She nods. “That surely will help.” I know firsthand how hard it is to stay afloat in such a small town. We’ve seen plenty of businesses come and go but Walt and Janey’s furniture shop is one of the oldest. They’ve been here forever. Walt is the event organizer for Ashford. He arranges the Christmas carols every year, and all the festivals and gatherings we have throughout the seasons. It strikes me how odd it is he hasn’t been more involved in the chocolate festival. And CeeCee’s uncharacteristically quiet about it all; she’s Janey’s best friend, and surely knows what’s going on. Though, it could be a pride thing — I’m sure if it’s a financial problem they don’t want everyone knowing. “Once I get this Joel mess sorted out, why don’t we look at buying a few more of his tables for out front here?” I motion to the pavement, where we have a motley mix of wooden tables, and mix-matched chairs. “You a good girl, Lil. I think that’d be nice.” We stare at Walt’s store for a while longer. I realize I haven’t seen Janey in town over the last week or so. Usually Janey comes in to shoot the breeze and sit with CeeCee while they talk about their church and their grandbabies. “Did you play bridge with Janey this week?” I ask CeeCee. “Nope. I got word from Rosaleen it were off because we had odd numbers. Happens all the time. We’ll see if Walt turns up tomorrow.” CeeCee bustles back inside before I can respond. *** Later that day, we decide to shut the caf? a tad earlier than usual. All these early starts and late evenings have taken a toll. The street has gone sleepy with so few people about. Everyone is conserving their energy for the weekend festivities; well, I hope so, at any rate. “Sugar plum, you try and put the thought of Mr Jefferson’s verdict out of your pretty little head. Go on and enjoy the night with that fine-looking thing, and worry about it in the a.m.” I couldn’t seem to get hold of Mr Jefferson on the phone all day. The niggly feeling he’s going to have bad news for me hasn’t been far from my mind. “I’ll be fine, Cee. Bet you he’s found a way to fix it, and will call with the good news tomorrow. Why don’t you take a few bunnies home? Not sure we taste-tested them enough.” She haws, loud and high, and pats her handbag. “Already done. I never tried the white chocolate rabbits — can’t go selling the merchandise if I haven’t tasted it for myself.” I pat my bag. “I’ve got a helping of caramel-filled eggs. You never can tell when you’ll get a sugar craving.” “It’s a wonder we ain’t bigger!” She guffaws, and pats her rounded belly. “Wait a minute! You the only skinny one — that just ain’t fair!” I scoff. CeeCee’s got a real thing about calling me skinny, when in actual fact I’ve got proper country-girl curves, which are only getting bigger with all the chocolate I’ve been eating. I shut off the lights and we head out of the front door into the balmy air. Damon’s shop is still open, and I wave to him as CeeCee and I stroll up the street. “You gonna walk?” I ask. CeeCee usually hitches a ride with Sarah when she closes her book store. “Yeah, sugar, after all that chocolate today, I think I might need to make it a regular thing. Plus we’re early. You go on ahead. I’ll see you tomorrow.” She pecks me on the cheek. “I’ll pop in and tell Sarah you’re walking home.” CeeCee lives a bit further out on the other side of town from me, a good twenty-minute walk. “You tell her I need another selection of those bodice rippers you keep teasing me over,” CeeCee says. Laughing, I nod and walk into the tiny bookshop. As usual Sarah is propped up behind the cash register, her head in a book, jeans-clad legs crossed and perched on a stool. “Hey, Lil.” She dog-ears the page of her book, and closes it. I smile in greeting as she stretches and shakes away the dozy look on her face. “Cee’s going to walk today on account of how much chocolate we’ve consumed.” Her tinkling laughter rings out. She’s tiny, and looks like a doll with her smooth black bobbed hair, and perfectly cut bangs that hang just above her eyebrows. “You know, the smell of melted chocolate travels all the way over here. I planned on coming over but I got to reading…” I run a hand over the cover of the old hardback book. “That good?” “A classic…” Plunging my hand into the depths of my handbag, I grovel around for the box of caramel eggs and offer them to Sarah. “Here’s something to keep your energy up.” She laughs, and takes the eggs, unwrapping one and popping it into her mouth. “Gosh…wow.” “Keep going, plenty more where they came from.” I walk around the small shop looking for cookbooks. The small space has an otherworldly feel about it. It’s dusty and dingy with books piled on top of each other or double stacked on shelves. Old books mixed with new, a veritable treasure trove of wonder. Sarah knows instinctively where everything is, but it’s fun to mosey your way around and find something hidden, a gem for yourself. “So you all organized for the festival?” Sarah asks. All the coordinating was done weeks ago. All that’s left to do is the fun part. “I think so. We’ve made most of the eggs, and the truffles, now we’re making the medley of cakes, and fudges, and slices…” “Stop! You’re making me salivate… How can you stand to cook like that without gorging on it all day?” “We do gorge! Trust me, we do. It kind of goes on all day till I can’t fit another thing in. Maybe I should have opened a salad shop…” I pinch my love handles. Sarah scoffs. “Lucky for us, you didn’t. Can’t see us getting a town full of shoppers for a potato salad festival, can you?” I grin and say, “Well, what about a Caesar salad festival?” She clicks her fingers. “A coleslaw festival!” I giggle at the thought. Her expression turns mock serious. “Are you telling me there’s not going to be a three-bean salad festival?” I drop my bottom lip and shake my head sadly. “Not for a few weeks anyway.” “Ha ha, I’ll hold you to that!” She leans under the counter and pulls some thin white books from a box. “I got these in especially for CeeCee. She sure can get through them at a rate of knots.” I smile, thinking of CeeCee reading so many romance books a week, then talking about the characters as though they’re real. She’s got me hooked on them, after talking up so many buff men, and glamorous women. Though there’s not much chance I’ll ever be like the heroines, with their perfectly made up faces, and their sky-high confidence. I poke around the box of books and find an old French dessert cookbook. As I flick through the pages my belly rumbles loud enough for Sarah to hear. “You can’t be hungry and run a caf?. That just doesn’t make sense.” She laughs. “I think it’s living on a diet of sugar that’s doing it.” “Take that book, Lil. I got it in for you.” “Thank you. I can see us trying some of these recipes out tomorrow. Soon enough we’re going to need another pair of hands. We sure are getting busier these days.” “You’ve worked hard for it. And I don’t know if it’s just the advertising we’ve done for the festival, but Ashford sure seems busier these last few weeks.” The talk of customers reminds me of Walt, and I suddenly feel guilty talking about business improving when his shop sits closed next door. “You know why Walt and Janey aren’t open?” “No.” She frowns. “It’s not like them, though, is it?” I shake my head. “CeeCee says she doesn’t know either, but I kind of felt like she did. Maybe I’m reading too much into it. I’m beginning to sound like Rosaleen!” Sarah puts a palm to her face. “Speaking of which, I heard about Joel.” “Rosaleen, already?” Sarah smiles ruefully. “You got it. What are you going to do?” “I’ve faxed Mr Jefferson the letter from Joel’s lawyer, so I’m hoping he has some magical potion that’ll make it all disappear.” “I’m sure he will. And shout out if you need anything.” I gather up CeeCee’s books, and go to pay but Sarah waves me off. “I’ll swap books for chocolate,” she says, grinning. “Deal! Mosey on over when you need a fix.” We hug, before I head outside into the fading sunlight. I take in the surroundings, the little town I love so much, with its old federation-style buildings, and the neat shops, and clean sidewalks. Aesthetically nothing much has changed here over time, other than a few cosmetic make-overs; a building gets a flick of paint, or some bright flowers sing out from new terracotta pots, but all in all Ashford stays the same. Chapter Seven (#ulink_22b1c99d-7e6f-5382-b0b6-b2794ce52a3b) I’m languishing in the tub when Damon gets home. It seems to be my go-to place in times of stress. There’s something about feeling weightless and submerging yourself that makes all your worries ebb away momentarily. He wanders in, his lazy, sexy smile not failing to make my pulse race. “You some kind of mermaid or what?” he says, trailing a hand in the water. “I think so.” I grip the edge of the bath and pull myself over the edge to kiss him hello. “Charlie’s out with the kids next door again. She loves it here.” He sits on the tiled ledge. “Did she talk to you about how she feels guilty loving people as well as her mom?” He smiles. “She did, and she told me what you said, which was pretty sweet. I think she feels better now. I rang Dianne, and told her to speak to Charlie, to put her mind at ease. It’s one thing I’m grateful for, that there’s no animosity between me and Dianne any more. She’s happy with her new life, and I am more than happy with mine. Makes it easier to put Charlie’s needs first.” I arch my eyebrow. “So you’re happy, you say?” My heart races when I watch his expression as his gaze travels up the length of my naked body. “Hmm, I’d say right now I’m…distracted. What’s say we go take a lie-down before dinner?” Before I can answer he’s holding my hands and pulling me out of the bath. I smirk as I say, “Oh, I’m not tired.” His voice is gruff with desire. “That right? Well, you won’t be sleeping.” He carries me to the bedroom, as if we’re some kind of honeymooning couple. *** Still smiling from Damon’s so-called lie-down, I change into old sweats. They’re too large, and are stained from cooking, or more likely from eating, but as comforting as a safety blanket. In the kitchen, Damon’s at the table, his hands clasped together, looking out of the window as though he’s mesmerized by the sinking sun. Two glasses of white wine sit waiting, condensation running off the cool glasses. “Hey, pretty lady,” he says lazily. “Don’t you just look adorable dressed like that?” “Yeah, it’s the latest look. You know the whole sloth vibe…” “I don’t know about that…you make sweats look good.” I sigh inwardly. His flirty, sexy voice makes me want to ravish him again, but I know Charlie will be home soon. I can’t remember ever feeling this intoxicated by love before. It’s so powerful, like a drug, it makes it difficult to focus on anything other than him. We sit quietly, listening to the sounds of the children’s shrieks as they play chase outside. It’s one of those very rare times when you suddenly realize nothing else could make this moment any more perfect. I’m flushed with love; it feels extraordinary, as if we’re the only ones in the world who’ve loved like this. “So.” He turns to me, and by the look in his eyes I know what the topic is going to be. “Did you hear anything back from Jefferson?” I shake my head. “No, not yet. I have this horrible feeling I’m going to have to pay Joel back. But, you know, I have some money saved, and hopefully the revenue from the festival will be enough to keep him at bay until I can work something out.” He folds his arms and goes to speak then stops. Guess he’s weighing up what he ought to say and what he really wants to say. Truly, I am angry at Joel, and will be more so if I have to pay. But I don’t want Damon to think he has to save me. I don’t want to be that girl that needs to be rescued. “Lil, I know you’re proud, and you don’t want to take the money from me. But can’t you see…? To me, it’s not about the money. It’s about you.” “I know. I do. But I can’t have people fighting my battles. I should have known better when it comes to him and his family, so I’ll take it on the chin, and work my way out of it. I’ve done it before, I can do it again.” He frowns as he sips his wine. “But what if you don’t make enough at the festival? Will you accept the shortfall from me?” I try to look composed, confident. “No, there’ll be enough. I’m sure of it.” There’s no chance I’ll make enough to cover the twenty thousand, and the exorbitant amount of interest he wants to slug me, but if Mr Jefferson says I have to pay, I’ll get a loan or something before I even think of borrowing off Damon or selling the caf?. People might call me a fool not accepting his help, but there comes a time when you have to be in control of your own life. And nearing the big three oh, I can’t expect to be bailed out. “I won’t keep hounding you, Lil, but what if he doesn’t leave? What if you have to sell the caf?, all on account of something as stupid as that idiot?” “It won’t come to that. I promise,” I say hopefully. “And if all else fails, I’ll open up a chocolate shop.” My joke falls flat as I see his frown deepen. “Really?” “Easter eggs all year round, I say. No, not really — the caf? is my life. I’d be lost without it.” “I wish you’d reconsider taking the money. I’d happily pay it to get him out of town and away from you.” His voice has a slightly harder tone and I realize maybe Damon does feel slightly threatened by the scurrilous Joel. “He’ll go. I’ll work out a way, and I’ll fight to keep the Gingerbread Caf?. Either way I’m going to add chocolate to our repertoire. There’s something hypnotic about tempering chocolate and molding it into something completely different. I think of all the flavors and textures I can add…” “Sounds like your mind is made up. We could incorporate it into the catering too. Chocolate martinis with a side of truffles. Say, we could even do chocolate buffets, set it out all pretty on a table and let people help themselves.” “See? Now we’re thinking ahead. It’s much better than mooning about things I can’t change.” He nuzzles into my neck; his warm breath on my skin gives me goose bumps. “Well, OK. I’m still learning that you can be stubborn as a mule.” I let out a donkey-like haw, and we laugh together as the sun sinks completely, the orange hue replaced by soft sepia light. Shadows stretch on the floor beside us, and I get lost in the blackness of them, wondering how Joel managed to creep into my perfect moment, and break the spell. Chapter Eight (#ulink_30fd6fc4-d57a-5b4c-8d05-27438033c674) The next morning at the Gingerbread Caf?, CeeCee is swamped with customers. I look on in awe as I jog past the window, and see a long queue inside. I’m late again on account of picking up some more supplies for the festival. I rush in and don my apron. “Sugar plum, glory be, it’s been hectic!” CeeCee has a sheen of sweat on her brow, and is smiling as if she’s won lotto. I grin back at her. From the looks of it everyone is here for chocolate and a rush of pleasure surges through me. I serve customers, who are mostly local, and chat while I get their orders together. CeeCee’s guffaws ring out when she tells the story about me blowing out the Paschal eggs. Seems she just has to tell everyone, including people who don’t ask. “You shoulda seen her face, oh, it were priceless…” I shake my head, and laugh at her hooting and hollering. CeeCee is always excitable when we’re busy. Everyone laughs along with her. “You should’ve been a stand-up comedian, Cee.” With each order we slip in a free gingerbread rabbit, sweet-smelling biscuits that look cute with their white icing whiskers, and ruby-red bow ties. Once the last customer strolls out with a backwards wave, we plonk down on the sofa for a break. “I’m beat!” CeeCee hoists her legs up and closes her eyes. “I’ve never seen it so busy. Seems like the whole town wandered in this morning.” “There’s only a handful of chocolate eggs left. We’re going to have to make more tonight.” “More? Gosh, we’re going to need a holiday after this festival.” I sigh, thinking of a summer holiday somewhere seaside with Damon. Cheesy love songs spring to mind. I envisage him chasing me along a white sandy beach. I grin when I realize I’m fantasizing about my life as if it’s one of CeeCee’s novels. They sure do give a girl inspiration. “What you grinnin’ at?” “Nothing. Just thinking of a holiday one of these days.” There’s no way I’m telling her I’m picturing a beach run while a song plays in my mind. She’ll think I’m cuckoo. “So you heard from that snake?” she asks, narrowing her eyes at me. And there it is again: Joel, the total mood killer. “Not a peep. I can’t believe I wasted so much time with a man like him.” It’s so hard to see what I found attractive in him, now that I have Damon to compare him to. “I must have been a dumb fool not to see him for what he really is.” She glances at me, her face softening. “You ain’t dumb or a fool, Lil. The heart sees what it needs to see. You ever think that maybe it happened the way it did was so when that fine-looking thing came into your life you could recognize real love? Plus, you still so young, not even thirty, you got the rest of your life to spend with a real man. One who adores you just the way you are. Gloop-less, baggy clothed, and ponytailed.” I laugh. “Amen to that.” I just can’t be that girl that gets excited about hair and make-up. And form-fitting clothes are just not me. Jeans and tees are about as fancy as I get most days. Cee’s always at me: “Let down those gorgeous blond curl o’ yours, show off that figure.” It feels wrong, though, as if I’m pretending to be someone I’m not. Plus I can’t see straight when I’ve got that amount of gloop on my face. Feels like glue drying and I can’t stand it. “So what you think Joel gonna do?” I try to keep the worry from my voice. “Don’t rightly know. I just want him gone. Out of my life for good.” “Me too, sugar plum, me too.” People wave as they stroll past, some with an eyebrow raised seeing CeeCee and me lazing on the sofa as if we’re on holiday. “Did you hear from Janey, yet?” I ask idly. CeeCee jumps up. “No, not yet.” I watch her retreating back, and wonder what the heck she’s not telling me. Seems like we’re both guilty of keeping secrets. *** The phone rings, startling me awake. From my bed the alarm clock reads 5.49. Time to get up anyway. I shake the grogginess away, and answer. “Hello?” “You got the money, yet?” I flop back in the bed and close my eyes. Thankfully Damon’s side of the bed is empty so he doesn’t have to hear this. I reach out and feel the groove in the mattress where he sleeps; it’s cold to touch. It makes me anxious we’re not spending our mornings together all of a sudden. “Well?” Joel says again, interrupting my train of thought. I exhale all the hurt and the worry in one long gust of breath. “I can give you three thousand, Joel. But that’s all I have. And it’s more than you deserve.” I don’t mention the festival proceeds just in case he agrees on my paltry savings. Paltry to him, certainly not to me. But there’s no way I’ll be handing over any cash until I hear back from Mr Jefferson. “You’re just going to have to sell, then, Lil. I’m not playing a game here. I’m serious. I’ll give you one more day to organize something or I’ll file with a lawyer,” he threatens. “One day? This isn’t a movie, Joel.” “Don’t be smart, Lil. In the meantime, I’d hate to see a fuse blow at your precious caf?. Imagine that — all your fridges off for the night…all those cakes for the festival, ruined. You’ve got one day.” He slams down the phone. I let out a barrel of expletives and only wish Joel were still on the phone to hear them. *** CeeCee’s at the caf? when I arrive, slamming her palms into pastry dough as if it’s a punching bag. “Why are you here so early?” I ask. “Thought I’d make a start on these pies.” “Sure, but you didn’t need to come in early. Let me help.” I take a ball of dough. “Damon left early this morning too. Hope it’s not my morning breath that’s scaring him away.” “Hmm, don’t think it’s that,” CeeCee says. “Do you think it’s weird, Cee? That he’s been leaving in the morning without me? We usually have coffee and mosey on down together. Now he’s up and gone before I’m even awake.” CeeCee looks at me sternly. “What you gettin’ at?” I shrug. “I just hope Joel hasn’t made him rethink things, that’s all.” I’m not used to the range of emotions that swim inside me, when it comes to Damon. I almost want to cling to him, because he’s so much more than I’ve ever had. She tuts and tosses down the dough. “So Damon’s left early a couple days this week? Days Charlie’s been here? Kids that age are up before sparrows, that’s what it is. I seen the way you two carry on — all that huggin’ and kissin’ you do when you think no one’s watchin’…” A blush rises up my cheeks. “Whoops.” “Yeah, whoops, all right.” She sighs, big and dramatic. “Young love, it’s a beautiful thing.” “Young? Why, thanks, Cee. Has Mr Jefferson called back yet?” I pummel the pastry. “Nope,” she says. “And I checked that fangled machine for messages, nothin’.” “Joel called this morning, said I have one day to sort something out. He’s really hamming up that whole bad-guy act.” I don’t mention his threat about the fuses — CeeCee would be at Old Lou’s before I could say boo. “One day? What you s’posed to do in one day?” I shrug. “Exactly.” CeeCee grunts, and shakes her head. “Put it out of your mind, sugar. Oh, before I forget, another delivery of chocolate buttons arrived. We can get started on the rest of the Easter eggs. I thought we could fill up the smaller ones with some zany flavors for kids, like sherbet, that kinda thing. What you think?” “Sherbet? Sounds amazing!” “Folks certainly won’t find that anywhere else. I wanted to leave early today on account of running some errands.” “Errands? You want me to do them?” I usually help CeeCee with her shopping because she doesn’t own a car. “No, no,” she says quickly. “Just some things I need to sort out. It won’t take long.” “OK. Take your time, Cee. I thought I’d organize those make-at-home choc-chip cookies in a jar, for the festival.” CeeCee wraps the balls of dough in cling film, and sets them in the fridge to rest. “You want me to pick up some pretty ribbons to tie around them while I’m out?” “Sure.” *** After the lunch rush, I walk out to the office to return Mr Jefferson’s call. He phoned earlier when we were knee-deep in customers, and I could tell by the tone of his voice the news wasn’t good. “Mr Jefferson, it’s Lil.” He sighs, a long drawn-out sound. “Lil, I got some bad news. He’s wrapped you up tight with this. By the looks you’re going to have to pay him. From what I can see, the loan has gone through his dad’s business, so technically you owe the twenty thousand, plus interest.” “Even though his dad’s passed on?” “Yes, ma’am. Seems Joel is the beneficiary of his dad’s estate, and is chasing everyone who still owes them. Not that there’s many with anything tangible left. They got some nerve, that family, sending people broke with the amount of interest they charged. No one could afford that kind of money. They preyed on desperate people.” I rest my head against the cool of the wall. “That they did. What should I do? See about getting a loan…” Mr Jefferson clears his throat. “We can see about getting a payment plan of some type. There’s a host of things we can legally do. You can fight it, it’s just the cost of that if you lose…” “No, I don’t have the energy to fight him. Let’s see about some kind of payment terms, then. You think you can hold him off for a little while?” “I do, Lil. Let me contact him, and see about negotiating.” Chapter Nine (#ulink_6db6db10-c8ff-5d5b-af30-304d2940ceae) We’ve made over a hundred small eggs, filled with various flavored luscious ganaches to replenish our stock for the last time before the festival. We dust the tops of each egg with colored sugar crystals to differentiate the flavors. Our jam jars are filled with all the dry ingredients to make chocolate-chip cookies. We’ve tied star-shaped cookie cutters to the jars with gingerbread ribbon. A cute little gift idea we couldn’t resist trying. “I’m going to add a few of these to the window display,” CeeCee says. I nod distractedly as I tidy the bench. A moment later CeeCee rushes back in, her eyes wide, hand on her chest. “What, Cee? You OK?” She is breathless, and points to Damon’s shop. “He’s there, out front with Damon!” “Who?” As soon as the word leaves my mouth I realize. I rush to the window to gaze out. Joel. He’s pointing a crooked finger into Damon’s face. “Oh, my gosh, I better go over…” But CeeCee tugs my arm. “No. Leave it. That’s what he wants. He trying to scare you. Damon’s not a coward. He can stand up for himself.” My heartbeat speeds up. “Yeah, but he shouldn’t have to, Cee. This has nothing to do with him.” “Leave them be.” My hearts leaps as I see Joel poke and prod his finger into Damon’s checker shirt. Damon stands there looking a lot more dignified than Joel, who’s yabbering and yelling like a fool. Damon shakes his head at whatever venom Joel’s spewing out. “Cee, what if they fight?” “If he don’t leave soon, it’s gonna be me who marches over there.” Cee looks determined. Joel’s voice carries over on the wind. He’s so angry he’s spitting. “Cee,” I say urgently, “this is escalating. I have to go…” I trail off when Joel pushes Damon hard in the chest, making him stumble backwards. Damon regains his balance and steps forward, grabbing Joel by the collar of his shirt. A crowd has gathered to watch, including the local shopkeepers, who yell at Joel to leave. Joel’s face is red with anger as he snarls at the crowd, and angrily flips Damon’s hands off his shirt. He lunges forward at Damon, pushing him hard in the chest. Damon lifts a fist, ready to strike Joel just as Charlie wanders out to the stoop, her face pinched with fear. He shakes his head, as his anger is replaced with concern at seeing his little girl so scared. “Charlie…” I gulp. “Is that all you got?” Joel barks at him. “That’s it!” Cee beats me to the punch; before I’ve even turned to look at her she’s powering across the street yelling all manner of things. “I don’t hold with cuss words, Joel, but you making me rethink that! You get your grubby paws offa Damon this minute…” Joel’s eyes are wide with surprise at CeeCee’s volley of abuse. I walk to the front and call for Charlie; she takes one look at her daddy, and races across the road. I pick her up, and murmur soothingly to her. She turns back to watch out of the window, her little heart beating quickly through the fabric of her dress. “It’s OK, Cee,” Damon says, holding a hand up. “Joel’s just leaving, right?” “Oh, no, he ain’t!” CeeCee steps between the two men. “Not till I’ve said what needs to be said. And don’t think I won’t smack you upside the head if you don’t listen!” Joel scowls at her. “Oh, yeah? I’d like to see that.” “Glory be, you nasty. You could start an argument in an empty house.” She turns to Damon. “You go on in now.” Damon shakes his head. “Go and see Charlie bear, make sure she’s OK.” He’s glued to the spot, not wanting to leave CeeCee by herself. I wave him in, wanting him as far away from Joel as possible. Seeing him literally fight my battles is not something I want on my conscience, no matter how much Joel deserves it. Plus I don’t want Charlie to witness anything so frightening. “You forget I’ve known this boy since he was knee high to a grasshopper, so get.” From the window I can see give Damon give her an imploring look. She waggles a hand at him to leave. He takes his time ambling across the street, looking back over his shoulder to make sure CeeCee is safe. “Hey,” he says, walking into the caf?. He takes Charlie from me, and kisses her nose. “You OK?” he asks her. She looks up at him, her blue eyes wide. “I’m good. Was that man going to hit you?” “No, honey, no.” “I’m so sorry,” I say. We clasp hands and watch CeeCee unleash a tirade at Joel. He takes a step back from her but listens to whatever it is she’s saying. “She’s certainly got his measure,” Damon says. “It’s not right. I should be the one out there, not either of you.” “That’s what he wants, Lil. So he’s not having it. Better he knows you have a whole town behind you, ready to back you up. Quicker he learns that, the better.” CeeCee lowers her voice, but her arms flail as she gesticulates wildly. “Think he’ll be scared off now?” “We can only hope,” Damon says. *** CeeCee marches back into the caf? puffing and panting as if she’s been to aerobics. “I’m glad I told that snake exactly what I think o’ him.” She takes a few deep breaths and stands at the window like a sentry. “It’s been a long time coming.” Damon scoops up Charlie from the stool, where I set her up with a piece of carrot cake. “I better get back, ladies. You keep an eye out. If he comes back make sure you holler over.” I hug them and watch Damon carry his daughter across the road. Turning back to Cee, I ask, “What’d you say to him?” “Plenty! Never mind, cherry blossom. I’m parched like some kinda camel.” Guilt surges through me as I hug her. It seems everyone is fighting my battles. It’s time I got rid of Joel for good. I decide I’ll call the bank, see if I can get a credit card or some kind of loan. While I’m there I’ll withdraw my savings and see if that amount tides him over for now. There’s no point drawing it out; I just want him out of all of our lives. Rushing to the kitchen, I mix up a big glass of iced tea and take it back to CeeCee. “At least sit down, Cee.” She’s staring out of the window. I can’t read her expression. “Cee?” “Yeah?” “Why don’t you sit down for a bit?” “I need to go run those errands.” She takes a big gulp of iced tea. “You want anything done while I’m out?” “You sure you’re OK to be going barreling around town after that?” She laughs, her big-bellied haw. “Never been better. Righting a wrong sure is good for the soul.” “Well, OK. If you’re sure, Cee. Maybe take a few hours, see about visiting Janey?” “I won’t be long.” She straightens her dress, and pats down her hair before heading out. *** Uneasy. That’s how I feel when I hang up the call with the local bank manager. Worry sits in my belly as heavy as a brick. He can fix me up with a credit card, but only for a few thousand. And it’ll take a fortnight before I can draw on it. This is like a bad dream that never goes away. Chapter Ten (#ulink_51260423-c03d-514d-94b0-0da76e35b24c) The morning of the chocolate festival rolls around. I’m jittery with nerves. I hope everything goes as planned, and that there are no spectacular cooking mishaps. It’s one thing to muck up a recipe in the caf? but quite another to do it in front of almost the whole town. Most of our chocolate recipes are prepared; it’ll just be a matter of keeping up and replenishing, with only a few things made fresh, like chocolate souffl?s, which we’ll bake in batches, and I pray they rise into a gooey, chocolaty cloud. I get to work early, and find an army of volunteers sitting on the chairs out front sipping mugs of something spicy. “Morning, everyone,” I say, leaning close to peer into their drinks. Sarah from the bookshop speaks up. “It’s a hot cup of gingerbread cocoa. You missed the little gingerbread men Cee perched on top. We ate them up first!” I laugh as CeeCee wanders out with a tray of more drinks, and offers me one. “Thanks, Cee.” I feel almost sad crunching into the cute little button-nose gingerbread man who floats amongst the whipped cream. “You got the tables, Lil?” CeeCee asks. “In the truck. I’ll bring it around and we can set them up when you’re ready.” I borrowed trestle tables from the town hall. We’re going to line them up under umbrellas, and each station will serve a selection of chocolate-themed deliciousness. The road will be closed for the entirety, so we can spread tables down the length of the street. Damon walks out from his small goods shop with Charlie in tow. She skips over to CeeCee and hugs her tight. “My little angel, you go on inside. There’s a special milkshake on the bench for you.” Charlie squeals and runs inside to investigate. I clap my hands. “Before we start, CeeCee and I wanted to thank you all for helping out today, and, remember, you can eat as much as you want! So feel free to take a break from your table and sample everything that’s on offer. We’ll be running things inside, and making sure you’re stocked up out here in the event everything sells.” Our volunteers let out a whoop, and gather together to help set up. I force myself to look cheerful, but I have a horrible feeling Joel might turn up and ruin things. He said I had one more day, so I expected another pre-dawn phone call from him threatening me. But so far, nothing. A tiny ray of hope runs through me — maybe Mr Jefferson’s involvement scared him off. Maybe he is gone for good. Or is that just wishful thinking? *** The Gingerbread Caf? explodes with noise as we cram in as many kids as we can to help paint the Paschal eggs. Laughter rings out as they crack almost as many as they manage to paint. CeeCee and I grin at each other. “At least they’re empty of goo this time,” she says, yelling above the din. The streets are crowded with people milling about, sampling all the chocolate desserts on offer. We cover a few of the tables with newspaper and wave to a bunch of kids, who eagerly run up and take a seat. I direct them all to the cotton wool, and paper plates, the pink cardboard and colored pipe cleaners. “Right, kiddiewinks.” I hold up a finished bunny-rabbit mask. “So you glue each piece in order as they are on the table, then, once you’re done, I’ll tie a length of elastic through these tiny holes here—” I indicate “—and then you can hang them on the pegs Cee’s left on the string line out back, to dry…” Before I’m finished talking, hands spring from every direction, eager to get their crafts started. The Mary-Jos arrive in a hail of glitter. They’re dressed in frou-frou pink gowns, and wear plastic tiaras. One of them, hard to tell which under all that make-up, swishes a wand around, and says, “You, you, you, follow me for face painting!” The children push their chairs back, and chase after her. *** It’s midday when I’m zigzagging through the throng of the festival, and notice Walt’s shop is closed. I stand still as people sidestep me, and watch the shop for movement. Maybe he’s taking a break and has closed the doors for some peace and quiet. I think back to the morning, searching my memory to whether I saw Walt’s shop open at all. I don’t think I did. And why hasn’t Janey stopped by the caf?? CeeCee’s been her best friend since they were girls, there’s just no way even a squabble would keep Janey away, and if they did bicker the furniture shop would still be open. I march back into the caf? and search for CeeCee. She’s leaning against the door jamb, watching Charlie paint a nest made out of shredded brown paper. “Where are they?” I ask more abruptly than I mean to. She pretends not to hear me, but I see her face fall slightly. “Have you ever seen a girl concentrate so hard?” she murmurs. “Cee.” She shakes her head, and I see her eyes glisten with tears. “We just gonna head out back for a minute, Charlie bear, OK?” I follow CeeCee outside to the car park. She leans her bulk against a rusty old car, and takes a deep breath. I wait patiently, my mind spinning possible scenarios. “I was goin’ to tell you after the egg hunt tomorrow. I wanted you to have a good weekend and be able to focus on the business and what with that conman Joel and everythin’…” “Tell me what?” When she looks at me, it’s almost as if she’s another person, there’s such a sadness in her eyes, and without her usual smile it doesn’t look like Cee. “Janey’s been diagnosed with cancer. From what they know, it seems one o’ those aggressive types…” She breaks off as her words become a jumble when the tears finally spill. I wrap my arms around her, knowing there’s nothing I can say that will ease her heartbreak in the slightest, and because I’m so shocked. I think of Janey, with her ever-present smile, silver hair always tied up in an orderly bun. She keeps the town social life ticking over as she buzzes around organizing events, and fundraisers. She’s so vital and vibrant it’s hard to picture her as anything less. Surely it can’t be? “Will she be OK? I mean, modern medicine is so good these days, right?” I lean on the car next to CeeCee. “They gonna try, sugar plum, and I been praying for her.” “Where is she, Cee? Up in Springfield?” CeeCee nods as she wipes her tears. “Why don’t you go to her? Surely she needs you more than anything right now.” She takes a long shuddery breath in. “I was going to wait and see what Walt had to say. He’s coming back some time this weekend to drop off the keys for the store. I told him we’d find a way to keep it open, like maybe do a roster system with the other shopkeepers on the street. That way they still got some money comin’ in.” Once people find out about Janey, there’ll be all sorts of help lined up, from bulk trays of casseroles, to people tending their garden, and anything else they can think of that might ease their burden. Ashford will band together in a show of support for Janey and Walt. “I’m sure there’ll be no shortage of helpers. We better make up a basket of chocolate for them too.” It’s the only thing I know to do in a crisis. Ply people with food and hope it brings a small level of comfort somehow. My heart breaks for them, and for CeeCee, who was trying so hard to keep it from me when she must have been slowly dying inside. “We can sort out his shop, Cee. You should go to her.” Chapter Eleven (#ulink_68add489-fede-5bf4-bcc3-b33fa4b13bb1) By early afternoon the kids finally lose their zeal. We’ve sold out of almost everything as the festival went on merrily outside, while the children played inside. My head throbs with the sudden silence but I brace myself for them to get their second wind as the Easter bunny is moments away from arriving to spread some cheer and hand out eggs we’d secreted out. I stop for a moment, and look over at Walt and Janey’s shop, and can’t help but miss them. I know CeeCee will put on an act, pretending to be all bubbly and happy for everyone’s sake, but really her heart’s broken into about a million pieces. CeeCee wanders over to me and whispers, “He’s here.” She nods to the back door. I find Charlie in the crowd and get set to watch her reaction. CeeCee claps her hands to get their attention. “We just wanna say thank you for coming to play here at the Gingerbread Caf? today. We surely have enjoyed it. If you wouldn’t mind doing me one last favor…” The kids sit cross-legged on the floor, staring up at her. “Can anyone tell me who that is at the back door?” Their heads swivel to door as the Easter bunny walks in holding a basket filled with eggs. They immediately jump up and race towards him screaming, “The Easter bunny!” Damon in his pink fluffy bunny suit is well disguised, but I can almost feel him laughing under the bobbly head as they launch themselves at his knees. Charlie is at the back of the crowd, her face lit with wonder. Parents shade their faces as they peer through the glass. They’ve been relegated outside and seem happy to watch from the street. Damon tries to hand out eggs but can’t pick them up with his huge paws. He muffles, “A little help here?” We giggle and edge the kids back so we can get through and help him. “Have you been a good girl?” he asks me. “Isn’t it Santa who asks that?” “You’re on the naughty list. I’ll deal with you later,” he says, stepping forward and shaking hands with the kids as they stand stunned. I try and wipe the goofy, lovey-dovey look off my face, but find it impossible. CeeCee’s right: I had to kiss a toad before my knight in a bright pink bunny suit found my heart. I watch Charlie pick the foil off her egg slowly and delicately before popping it into her mouth, beaming. *** “It just ain’t the same without Janey and Walt here,” CeeCee says sadly. We’re up before the sun, hiding the eggs for the Easter egg hunt in shrubs along the streets of Ashford. Sarah and Damon are helping; they’re further ahead, chatting as they walk on opposite sides of the street. “I know,” I say softly. “Feels hollow without them.” CeeCee goes to speak but chokes up. She takes a minute then says, “You know, Lil, the only thing that matters in life is having good friends and family around you. When you get to the twilight of your life, like me, you realize that. Money, fancy clothes, none of that matters. When you’re sitting alone in the dark of night, the things that make your heart happy are simple. Charlie’s smile when she bit into that cake pop. You and me laughing ourselves silly every day. My grandbabies, my kids, who all done me proud. And Janey. Our friendship’s spanned decades. There ain’t a thing we don’t know ’bout each other, and that counts for more than anythin’. I know she gonna pull through, I know it. But if she don’t, it means that God got other plans for her, and, as sad as that be, I trust Him. And I’ll be ever grateful for havin’ a friend like Janey. Life doesn’t always have a happy ending, and that makes it even more important to love and cherish what you got. So you just remember that, Lil, OK?” She wipes tears from her eyes, and nods at me before turning away and walking up the quiet street. Times like this I know she wants to be alone. Her words replay in my mind. I can’t help but wonder what else she means. My heart’s heavy as I walk the other way, placing eggs into the underbrush of plants that line the street. Things don’t often change in Ashford, but it suddenly seems as though they will. The people I look up to and respect are all advancing in years, and I just can’t picture my life without them. I try and shake the blues away. Everything is always sadder before the sun comes up. Picturing Janey and Walt about to face their biggest struggle puts the Joel fiasco into perspective. As CeeCee says, it’s only money. Once I pay him, I’ll never have to see him again, and that’s worth more than anything. My friends need me now, and I need to be strong for them, not lost inside my mind with Joel, and his toxic threats. *** Since Walt isn’t here, Damon takes over as the egg-hunt organizer. He lines the kids up along a makeshift start line, painted hurriedly at daybreak, when we realized we’d forgotten. “OK, does everyone have a basket?” he hollers above the excited chatter. Their “yes sirs’” ring out high into the fresh morning air. “Great! Now we have a few little ones here today. It’d be nice if the bigger kids buddy up and make sure they find just as many eggs as you.” The line wobbles as the tweens move places to stand next to the younger kids to shadow them. “On your marks, get set, GO!” We watch them race every which way, their yelps punctuating the morning. CeeCee and I head on into the caf?, and get to making gingerbread coffee for the parents, who stumble in groggy from such an early start. *** The kids have all moseyed on home as I close up shop for the day. CeeCee tallied up the takings, including the festival, and it looks as though we’ve made more than we anticipated. All our hard work was worth it in the end. I’m just about to lock the front door when Damon pushes against it. Charlie stands behind him, gripping the edge of his shirt. “Hi,” I say, confused. We’d planned to close up and meet at home so Charlie could have a nap after running around town most of the day. I’d planned on guzzling a big glass of wine. “I forgot to give you something,” he says, stepping into the caf?. He hands me a small silver-wrapped egg. “Hey!” I say. “We didn’t have silver eggs. Where did you get this one?” “We made it. Go on, see if you like it.” I take my time unwrapping the egg, which is not like me at all but I figure if Charlie, a seven-year-old, can be delicate, I can certainly try. Once the foil is off I see a smattering of letters embossed into the chocolate. “What does it say?” I peer closer. They stand silently. And then I see it. I feel my cheeks color, and I do the silly jump-clap dance again. The teeny, tiny words spell: Will you marry me? “Yes!” I scream and collapse into Damon’s arms. Charlie looks up, her smile dazzling as I pull her into the hug. Damon’s face shines as he says, “Open the egg.” I go to smash the egg in my palm as I normally do, when he grabs my hand to stop me. “Maybe just bite the top off first.” Why can’t I be ladylike, just once? I take a small bite and the shell crumbles. Amidst the chocolate rubble lies an antique-looking diamond ring. It’s so feminine, and delicate I immediately love it. He reaches for the ring, and slides it on my finger. I hold my breath, hoping it’s not too small; he inches it over my knuckle — a perfect fit. In fact, it looks as if it’s always been there. I can’t help grinning at my finger, which I’m sure looks downright silly. “I knew the very moment I met you, I was going to marry you,” Damon says softly. I bite my lip as I think of all the things that spun through my mind when I first clapped eyes on Damon, and, if I’m honest, I thought he was as delectable as one of CeeCee’s pies, but wouldn’t have thought of telling a soul. “Is this why you’ve been leaving the house before daybreak?” “Surely was. I had to enlist CeeCee’s help to make the egg, and then there was the matter of getting her approval on the right ring…” Charlie toddles off to help herself to a snack. With one last look at the ring, I put my hands in Damon’s back jean pockets and pull him close. “I thought it was my bed hair that had you running scared in the mornings.” “There’s not one thing I don’t love about you, Lil. Not even the way you choke over the coffee I make you in the mornings…” “Oh, you noticed that?” He throws his head back and laughs. “It’s like you’re forcing yourself to down a cup of poison.” I feel myself color and I laugh. “OK, so I can go back to instant coffee now.” Damon’s coffee machine is like his other child; I didn’t have the heart to tell him how bad it tastes to me. He nods. “I can’t wait to tell the world you said yes.” “I can’t wait either.” He leans down and kisses me, and I feel as though my life has just begun. I was only practising before. This is the real deal. We stand back gawping at each other, mirroring the same goofy look. CeeCee pokes her head through the door. “Is there a Mrs Guthrie here?” she asks, pretending to be someone else. And that’s when I lose it. I’m a laughing, sobbing, shrieking mess of happiness. Chapter Twelve (#ulink_d0858da6-116d-5256-96a5-dbcf3bfe5025) I flick the bedside light off, and tiptoe from Charlie’s room. Back in our room, Damon’s propped up in bed reading a book. “Hey,” he says, smiling. He closes the book and pats the bed. “You sure you’re OK reading to Charlie every night?” I creep under the covers next to him, and slide up against his warm body. “I’m sure. How can I refuse those big blue eyes of hers?” He laughs. “I know that feeling. But maybe we’ll take it in turns. Don’t want your wolf voice to burn out.” “Oh, you heard? She said I had to sound gruffer, and more snarly when the wolf speaks.” “Wait until you read the dinosaur one. She’ll make you act out their roars.” We lay back on the pillows, facing each other. “I think I better get Sarah to order me some princess books, pronto.” “Mmm.” Damon traces my lips with a finger. “Lil, do you believe in soulmates?” I think back to when I met Damon at Christmas time. I had the strangest sensation, as if we already knew each other, and that he’d come back to Ashford just for me. “Do you?” I ask, not willing to be the first to say it. “I didn’t before I met you. I know this is going to sound corny, but I get this whole body-melt sensation when I’m near you. It’s not just how pretty you are, or your gorgeous curves, or your goofiness, it’s something more than all of that combined. Like there’s an energy around you that pulls me in your orbit. It’s the strongest feeling, like my soul recognizes yours. Gosh, that sounds stupid.” “No, it doesn’t.” Before a blubber-fest happens I cup his face, close my eyes, and kiss him as if we’re the last people on earth. *** After the excitement of the weekend, there’s not much that can steal the smile from my lips. I tell Cee I have to run errands, so I can nip off to the bank, and withdraw the money for Joel. With my savings and the weekend takings I have almost six thousand. I’ll apply for the credit card, and do whatever I can to pay him and get his noxious presence out of my life. Picking up my handbag, I see my engagement ring sparkling under the light. Excitement sweeps me over every time I think of marrying Damon. We stayed up late discussing what kind of wedding we’d like and both agree on something simple. I may even wear gloop, just that once. I say goodbye to CeeCee and walk outside. It’s just after nine, and people mill lazily about on the streets. Everyone is probably pooped after yesterday’s celebrations. Funny how my weariness has been replaced with wonderment. The bank is quiet as I walk to a teller. “Hey,” Alyssa greets me. “We were just talking about you.” “Oh, yeah? Good or bad?” I joke as I reach for my bank card. “I was raving to Marlene here about the pie CeeCee brought in. She said it was a secret recipe…” “A secret recipe? You must have had the orange-kissed strawberry and rhubarb pie, then. Tastes as good as summer holiday.” “It surely does. Didn’t last too long, I can tell you.” “They never do when it’s one of CeeCee’s.” Alyssa smiles. “What’s going on with Cee? Is she moving or something?” “No, why do you ask?” I frown remembering her spiel about friendships, and the importance of them, the morning of the egg hunt. A lump forms in my throat, I hope CeeCee isn’t planning on moving. Her kids live out of town — maybe she wants to be closer to them. Maybe finding out about Janey has made her rethink her priorities. I couldn’t imagine my life without CeeCee. Alyssa continues, “She took out a bundle of cash. We can’t think of where she’d spend so much money in Ashford. But she wouldn’t tell. She closed her account and everything.” Grabbing my bank card, I race for the exit. Alyssa yells out behind me, “You OK, Lil? What’d I say?” I lift an arm to wave and head out to the street back to the Gingerbread Caf?. Out of breath, I spill inside the caf?. CeeCee is alone, mixing something over the stove. She turns when she hears my clumsy footsteps. “Lil, you beetroot red. What…you taking up running now? You already too skinny!” “CeeCee, you can’t do it. That money is for your retirement.” I know Curtis, Cee’s husband, left her a modest amount of money when he passed. Money he’d saved for exactly that reason, so she would have a nest egg and wouldn’t need to work if she chose not to. Her face tenses. “Do what?” I tilt my head. “I’ve just been to the bank, Cee.” She clucks her tongue. “Mother o’ Mary, no one can have any secrets in this town. They had no right telling you that!” Her face darkens. “It’s my money, and it ain’t up to you how I spend it.” “But, Cee…” She holds a hand up. “No, Lil. I don’t need that money. And that snake was never goin’ to leave you alone. He’s gone now. The loan’s paid off and all done right. Mr Jefferson made it so. Joel won’t bother you again, and of that I can be certain.” “Is that what you talked about the day he turned up over the road?” She waves a hand. “Can’t remember.” I gulp back tears. “So you paid him already?” “I surely did. Couldn’t get there quick enough.” “I’ll go to the bank. I can pay some of it back right now, Cee. Then I’ll…” She shakes her head. “I don’t need it, Lil. It wasn’t a loan. It was a gift. Because that’s what friends do. When Curtis died I figured my whole life was finished. I couldn’t jump over that grief, Lil. But then you came along. Dragged me outta that house, and into the caf?. Made up some pretense about needin’ help, when you surely didn’t. Even made me take a wage when you were so broke you couldn’t pay attention! Well, things like that I ain’t never gonna forget. So now we even.” She shuffles to a table and sits heavily, motioning for me to join her. “But, Cee…” “Hush. It ain’t important. You ever wonder why people trying to help you, Lil?” I go to respond but she holds a hand up. “Because you always helpin’ people first. You got a good heart, Lil, and it’s even better cause you don’t know it. You just think that’s how things should be. So take it when it comes back to you.” I’m lost for words, wondering how she could be so generous. I’m going to have to plot some clever way for her to take the money back as soon as I get it. “I’m going to go visit Janey today. You be all right here without me?” Her mask of composure cracks for a moment, as I see such pain in her eyes. I quickly reassure her. “I’ll be fine. I think it’ll be quiet after such a big weekend.” “OK, maybe I’ll call Walt, and see what he needs.” I nod, knowing Walt will be happy to have CeeCee’s effervescent presence around at such a sad time. And as they say, laughter is the best medicine. “Why don’t you stay a while with Janey? I can get someone to help me here. Don’t think there’s anything more important than that right now.” “You sure, Lil?” “More than sure.” “There’s a change on the wind, ain’t there?” I know exactly what she means: things seem so different from how they were just a few days back. “Seems like it, Cee. I feel blazing happiness one minute, then so sad the next.” “Sugar plum, I know, but you gotta enjoy every moment with that fine-looking thing… Time goes so fast, Lil. So fast…” She breaks off, her eyes glazing over, as she stares across the road. Damon’s sitting on the bench out front of his shop reading a newspaper. CeeCee looks sharply back to me, then over at Damon again. She jumps up suddenly and claps a hand over her heart. “I seen it! I seen it!” she says, her hands shaking. I glance quickly at Damon, but can’t see anything unusual. “What, Cee?” “A baby! You gonna have a baby!” She scrunches her eyes closed. I roll my eyes dramatically. “Oh, Cee! We’re not even at that stage yet!” Her eyes snap open. “It’s the second sight! Was I wrong about you and Damon?” she screeches. “No, ma’am.” I grin back. Butterflies swarm in my belly at the thought of having children, but I don’t say anything. I just smile, and shrug. “We’ll see.” “It’s gonna be a little boy, oh, he as cute as a button,” she says. “We better hurry up and get you married. I had this idea for your wedding cake…” I watch CeeCee scramble from the table, her eyes bright with excitement. I rub my belly once, just in case she’s right. Christmas Wedding at the Gingerbread Caf? (#ulink_ab1c0ca0-39f3-5d56-a313-0e256f97a06b) You are invited to the wedding of the year! Snow is falling thick and fast outside the Gingerbread Caf? and, inside, its owner Lily is planning the wedding of the year. Her wedding! She never dreamt it would happen, but this Christmas she’ll be marrying the man of her dreams — in a Christmas-card-perfect ceremony! The gingerbread is baking, the dress is fitted and the mistletoe’s in place — for once, everything’s going to plan. That is until her mother-in-law arrives… Suddenly, Lily’s famous cool is being tested like never before and her dream wedding is crumbling before her eyes. In the blink of a fairy light, the Gingerbread Caf? has been thrown into chaos! Lily thought she had this wedding wrapped up, but with so much to do before she says ‘I do’, can Lily get to the church on time — and make this Christmas sparkle after all? Praise for REBECCA RAISIN’s Gingerbread Caf? series (#ulink_829ddaf8-cbeb-53a5-bc72-9a52b2700c86) ‘Christmas at the Gingerbread Caf? is a lovely, cheery festive read, a good old-fashioned feel-good romance to warm the cockles of your heart. This is one of my favourite Christmas reads of the year.’ Books with Bunny ‘This is a great novella that I really enjoyed reading and found that I didn’t want to put it down. It is the perfect read to get you in the mood for Christmas and my mouth was watering after reading about all of the delicious-sounding baking. If you are looking for a Christmassy romance then don’t look any further than Rebecca Raisin’s brilliant debut.’ Bookbabblers on Christmas at the Gingerbread Caf? ‘Raisin not only excels in creating a festive mood — the tone of family and friends coming together is sweet — but also portrays a lovely winter-wonderland setting, where things are covered in snow. This makes the book feel cosy and safe. It’s definitely an uplifting read.’ Sam Still Reading on Christmas at the Gingerbread Caf? ‘This is a short and incredibly sweet novella that explores a very endearing and unexpected romance. It is definitely one that will make you laugh and warm your heart, and one that can be happily devoured in one sitting.’ Louisa’s Reviews on Christmas at the Gingerbread Caf? ‘If you love Christmas, romance and HEA then you will love this sweet novella. This one gets an A!’ Clue Review on Christmas at the Gingerbread Caf? ‘Wow — loved it, loved it, loved it! … It was just like I was visiting with old friends. Rebecca’s descriptions are so vivid I could very well have been stood in the caf?, hugging CeeCee and waddling out after sampling all the different chocolatey delights on offer. My mouth literally watered with every turn of the page. … I don’t know what I’m going to do whilst waiting for the next book — Christmas is so far away!!’ Crooks on Books on Chocolate Dreams at the Gingerbread Caf? Êîíåö îçíàêîìèòåëüíîãî ôðàãìåíòà. Òåêñò ïðåäîñòàâëåí ÎÎÎ «ËèòÐåñ». Ïðî÷èòàéòå ýòó êíèãó öåëèêîì, êóïèâ ïîëíóþ ëåãàëüíóþ âåðñèþ (https://www.litres.ru/darcie-boleyn/christmas-at-the-cafe-christmas-at-the-gingerbread-cafe-choc/?lfrom=688855901) íà ËèòÐåñ. Áåçîïàñíî îïëàòèòü êíèãó ìîæíî áàíêîâñêîé êàðòîé Visa, MasterCard, Maestro, ñî ñ÷åòà ìîáèëüíîãî òåëåôîíà, ñ ïëàòåæíîãî òåðìèíàëà, â ñàëîíå ÌÒÑ èëè Ñâÿçíîé, ÷åðåç PayPal, WebMoney, ßíäåêñ.Äåíüãè, QIWI Êîøåëåê, áîíóñíûìè êàðòàìè èëè äðóãèì óäîáíûì Âàì ñïîñîáîì.
Íàø ëèòåðàòóðíûé æóðíàë Ëó÷øåå ìåñòî äëÿ ðàçìåùåíèÿ ñâîèõ ïðîèçâåäåíèé ìîëîäûìè àâòîðàìè, ïîýòàìè; äëÿ ðåàëèçàöèè ñâîèõ òâîð÷åñêèõ èäåé è äëÿ òîãî, ÷òîáû âàøè ïðîèçâåäåíèÿ ñòàëè ïîïóëÿðíûìè è ÷èòàåìûìè. Åñëè âû, íåèçâåñòíûé ñîâðåìåííûé ïîýò èëè çàèíòåðåñîâàííûé ÷èòàòåëü - Âàñ æä¸ò íàø ëèòåðàòóðíûé æóðíàë.