Authors: Mariah Stewart
“Too strong,” Stef muttered, and screwed the lid back onto the jar of honey she’d tasted, then crossed it off the list in front of her. Reminding herself that the darker the honey, the stronger the flavor, she looked through her samples for something lighter. She tried the lightest in color that she had.
“Still not right. Back to square one.”
She turned on her laptop and searched the web for a source of honey that might be lighter. She knew she was just about out of time. Dallas’s party was on Saturday. That gave her five days, not counting Saturday, though conceivably she could be making ice cream right up until the party, which was to begin at six.
“This place looks promising.” She reached for the phone, but a glance at the clock reminded her that it was only four in the morning on the West Coast, so she sent an e-mail instead to the website that was advertising the finest lavender honey money could buy. Okay, Stef thought as she typed, let’s put our money where our mouth is …
She’d made test batches of formulas that she’d thought were pretty darned good, but after she’d tried
them a few days later, she found the honey flavor stronger than she remembered and the texture of the ice cream was too crumbly. Panicking as Saturday drew closer, she’d gone back to her recipe file to start again.
She’d abandoned her idea to add edible lavender flower buds to the mix. She’d tried that, and while the batch right out of the ice-cream maker tasted pretty good, once the flowers froze solid, they were like tiny flavored balls of ice in her mouth and the flavor of lavender was, well, odd.
“Pity.” She sighed. “The ice cream looked so pretty with all those purply specks in it.”
She put Dallas’s birthday ice cream aside and made what she’d need for Scoop that day plus two batches of her homemade cones. She was halfway through the cones when the owner of Lavender Hill Farm in Shelter Bay, Oregon, called and assured her that their lavender honey was indeed light in color and delicately flavored. Once Steffie told her what she needed it for, the owner, Sofia, offered to overnight a sample.
“That would be perfect, thank you so much. I’ve really gotten myself into a jam here.”
She hung up the phone after three more “thank-yous” and returned to the task at hand: deciding which flavors to feature that week. The chocolate monster mash was still popular, so she chopped some solid chocolate and put it in the double boiler to melt over a low heat. She checked the fridge and found she had enough eggs for only a few batches, so she sent Tina to the farm where they usually purchased their eggs to pick up the week’s supply plus extra for the weekend.
All of the ice creams with maple flavor were also a hit this time of the year, so she checked her supplies
before adding maple walnut to the menu board. Because of its high water content, pure maple syrup had a tendency to dilute the butterfat, so she needed to make sure she had enough of the cream with the highest butterfat content for more than one batch. She had just enough for three or four batches, so she made a note to call her supplier—an organic dairy farm three miles outside of town—and request an early delivery this week. She felt like an idiot calling him again—she’d already called once this week to triple her order in anticipation of the ice cream she’d be making for Dallas’s party, and that was before Grant had called to let her know the guest list had grown.
“It’s the damnedest thing,” Grant had told Stef. “Everyone who got an invitation must have told other people about it, because Dallas’s agent has been fielding calls from people asking to be invited.”
“I guess the fact that she’s starting her own production company and will be making her own films is incentive enough to make the trip east,” Stef said. “Maybe people think they’ll have a better chance at scoring a role in one of her films if they come to her birthday and bring a big present.”
“Uh-uh. No gifts. Dallas put that on the invitations. She asked for donations to ‘an animal rescue shelter near you’ instead.”
“That’s nice. I like that. But of course, the no-gifts thing doesn’t apply to you.”
“What do you mean?”
“Well, she can tell everyone else not to bring her something, but you’re her honey. You have to give her a present.”
“I arranged for her to have an ice-cream flavor created just for her,” Grant reminded Stef.
“Yes, but I’m the one who’s making it. I’m the genius who’s doing the creating, so it could be said that the ice cream really is from me.”
“It was my idea,” he protested. “And I’m paying for it.”
Steffie smiled sweetly. “I’ll be sure to mention that when she’s thanking me.”
“So how’s the ice cream coming along, anyway?”
“It’s coming. And don’t change the subject.”
“I just want to make sure it’ll be ready for Saturday night.”
“It will be. Now, back to her gift …”
“You really think that no-gift thing doesn’t apply to me?” Grant sounded worried.
“Yup. You’re going to have to come up with a gift, and it’s going to have to be good.”
A very long silence followed.
“What should I do?” He sounded pathetically flummoxed.
“Two words, sport. Nana’s ring.”
“You’re sure about that?”
“I told you, it’s perfect. Unless, of course, you decided not to ask her to marry you. Which could be a break for her …”
“Very funny.” Grant sighed. “All right. I’ll call Mom and see what she thinks.”
“Go for it.” Steffie hung up and stuck her phone back into her pocket.
She checked the chocolate and found it had melted, so she turned off the stove and set the pot on a trivet
to cool, then checked the freezer to make sure she had enough canisters chilling.
“Hey, we missed you at coffee this morning.” Vanessa came through the back door with a paper bag in her hand. “I brought you lunch since I figured you’d be too busy to stop to get something for yourself, and knowing you, you didn’t bring anything from home.”
“You’re right, I didn’t. Thank you, Ness.”
“Aren’t you going to ask what it is? Maybe it’s something you don’t like.” Vanessa held up the bag and swung it in front of Steffie.
“I’m so hungry, I almost don’t care what it is,” Steffie told her. “And you’re my best friend. You wouldn’t bring me something I don’t like.”
“True.” Vanessa opened the bag. “It’s grilled chicken, Swiss, and tomato from the new place around the corner from Book ’Em.”
“That’s one of my two most favorite sandwiches.”
“I know.” Vanessa handed over the bag and Steffie peered inside.
“And an iced tea. How did you know I was dying for iced tea today?” Steffie hugged her, then turned to wash her hands at the sink.
“Daz told me,” Vanessa deadpanned.
Steffie shot a quick glance over her shoulder and Vanessa laughed. “Kidding. It just seemed to go with the sandwich.”
Stef dried her hands and unwrapped the sandwich, then looked back into the bag.
“There’s only one sandwich in here,” she noted.
“I know. I ate mine on the way down here. I had a really busy morning, so I had to multitask if I wanted to eat.” Vanessa rested her elbows on the worktable.
“I had one delivery after another this morning, which was a good thing because I sold out of so much stuff on Saturday. The charity run was good for business, Stef. Everyone was talking about it this morning.”
“Good. I’m glad. I love a win-win. Money for research, business for the merchants.”
“And we’re all looking forward to another big weekend coming up, with all the Hollywood people coming for Dallas’s party. Grace was saying this morning that her son told her they were totally booked from Thursday right through until Monday,” Vanessa told her. “Barbara heard the other two inns and all the B-and-Bs were booked as well. And Carlo told us that every table at every restaurant in town is reserved for Friday and Sunday nights. Someone booked Let’s Do Brunch for Saturday and Sunday—both days, for the entire time they’re open.” Nessa’s eyes were shining. “Of course, that’s only from ten in the morning until two in the afternoon, but still, that’s a lot of guaranteed business.” She sighed. “I hope there will be lots of those Hollywood types stopping in at Bling.”
“There will be if Dallas tells everyone that she shops there.” Steffie took a bite of her sandwich, thinking that she should make extra ice cream as well. The forecast was for unseasonably warm weather. She knew from experience that the warmer temperatures alone would increase her business. Add an extra hundred people to the mix and she would run out early if she didn’t prepare in advance for the increase in foot traffic. “This is delicious, thanks. I appreciate it.”
“What are friends for?” Vanessa paused before adding, “Besides, I promised everyone I’d pump you for info on Saturday night.”
“I told you, I didn’t have a date with Jesse. Didn’t you tell everyone that?”
“Yes, but apparently half of St. Dennis was in Walt’s on Saturday night. The other half was in the parking lot.”
“Oh. That.” Another exercise in frustration that she didn’t feel like reliving right then.
“So …?”
“So he walked me out to my car and he caught me in a lip-lock.”
“And …” Vanessa rolled her eyes. “Am I going to have drag every little detail from you?”
“Depends.”
“On what?”
“On what you’ve already heard.”
“Brooke stopped in at Bling this morning, and she said that her brother and Wade were eating at the bar and they saw you with Jesse, and Wade looked put out about it.”
“She said that? Wade was put out because I was with Jesse?”
Vanessa nodded.
“So what else did she say?”
“She said that you and Jesse stopped at the bar on the way out, and she got into a conversation with him about something to do with her will, and that when she looked up, you and Wade were gone.”
“True enough. Brooke did seem interested in Jesse, and he sure seemed interested in her,” Stef told her.
“That’s not the way it’s supposed to happen.” Vanessa frowned.
“The way what’s not supposed to happen?”
“Unless …” Vanessa bit her bottom lip. “Unless somehow Brooke was walking past the house …”
“What are you talking about?”
“The”—Vanessa looked around, then lowered her voice—“incantation wasn’t intended to draw anyone into Brooke’s life. It was supposed to draw them into yours.”
“I’m having a really hard time keeping a straight face right now, Ness.” Steffie looked up from measuring ingredients. “I just thought you should know.”
“Skeptic.”
“Well, at least you can feel vindicated that Brooke and Jesse really hit it off.” Stef bit back a grin. “So even if your … incantation went haywire, at least you know it hit home somewhere.”
“Very funny.”
“I guess it was the universe that brought everyone together at Walt’s on Saturday night,” Stef said. “Clay and Wade were at the bar after I sat down at my parents’ table, then Brooke joined them. I wondered what they were talking about. They had their heads together for a long time.”
“Beer.” Vanessa took another swipe at the chocolate. “They were talking about beer.”
“Why?”
“Brooke said Clay might be interested in starting his own brewery here in St. Dennis.”
“And he wanted to hire Wade to work for him?”
Vanessa shook her head. “He wanted Wade to tell him some of his beer-making secrets, I think. Since Wade will be leaving next week to go to his new job, he and Clay wouldn’t be in competition.”
Steffie put her sandwich down on the paper it had been wrapped in.
“He’s leaving next week?”
“So he told Clay, and Clay told Brooke.” Vanessa and Stef stared at each other. “He didn’t tell you, did he.” It wasn’t a question.
Stef shook her head.
“Crap. I’m sorry. I thought you knew.” Vanessa frowned.
“No big deal.” Stef waved it off. “What difference does it make if he goes next week or next month? The bottom line is that he’s going.”
“Still …”
“It’s okay. Really.” Steffie took a sip of iced tea and checked her watch just as the timer went off.
“What’s the timer for?”
“The chocolate’s ready.” She removed a cold canister from the freezer.
“I have to get back to the shop and you’re busy.” Vanessa hiked up her shoulder bag. “Stef, I’m really sorry.”
“Ness, it’s fine.”
“Maybe some night this week we could have that sleepover we talked about,” Vanessa said from the doorway. “Grady took a group hiking in Idaho and he won’t be back until Friday afternoon.”
“Sounds good to me.” Stef looked up and smiled. “The sleepover, not the hiking.”
“I’ll talk to you later.”
Steffie nodded. “Thanks again for bringing me lunch.”
“Anytime.” Vanessa looked about to say something else, but apparently had second thoughts. She closed the door behind her without another word.
Stef put the pot of chocolate on a trivet on the table and wondered how long she’d feel as if she had a
stake through her heart. She heard the bell ring in the shop several times and was glad that Claire was there to serve her customers, because she really didn’t feel like seeing anyone right then.
Get a grip
, she told herself.
You had no reason to believe he’d be sticking around
.
She almost wished there was something to that spell of Vanessa’s. It would certainly make life easier, one way or another. Either Wade would be falling at her feet, or else she’d be able to wave good-bye to him knowing that something better was right around the bend, and it wouldn’t hurt so much that he was leaving. And it did hurt that he hadn’t told her himself that he’d be gone soon. Just as it had hurt when he’d pulled away right as she was thinking about dragging him home with her, though now she was beginning to think she understood why.
Secretly, she’d thought that maybe this time, he’d stay around for a while, at least long enough for her to get him out of her system once and for all. And secretly, in her heart of hearts, she’d harbored the belief that he was the one. Somehow she must have projected that, he’d picked up on it, and he’d decided to put the skids on things before they went any further. She supposed she should thank him for that.