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Synopsis
Bailey King is living the sweet life as assistant chocolatier at world-famous JP Chocolates in New York City. But just when Bailey's up for a life-changing promotion, her grandmother calls with news that her grandfather's heart condition has worsened. Bailey rushes to Harvest, Ohio, where her grandparents still run Swissmen Sweets, the Amish candy shop where she was first introduced to delicious fudge, truffles, and other assorted delights.
She finds her grandfather is doing better than she feared. Unfortunately, the same can't be said for a local Englisch developer, whom Bailey finds dead in the candy shop kitchen—with Jebediah King's chocolate knife buried in his chest. Now the police are sweet on her grandfather as the prime suspect. Despite the sincere efforts of a yummy deputy with chocolate-brown eyes, Bailey takes it on herself to clear Jebediah. But as a cunning killer tries to fudge the truth, Bailey may be headed straight into a whole batch of trouble . . .
Release date: August 29, 2017
Publisher: Kensington Books
Print pages: 352
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Assaulted Caramel
Amanda Flower
I held the phone away from my face and imagined my best friend standing in the middle of Jean Pierre’s test kitchen in the back of JP Chocolates in Midtown, New York. She’d be in her chef whites and have her short, purple and black hair pinned behind her ears to keep it out of her eyes. I prayed that she was alone, considering the direction of our conversation. The fewer people who knew I’d left the city, the better.
While Cass continued to tell me all the reasons why I should immediately return to New York, I parked in the first spot I could find on Apple Street, which ran perpendicular to Main Street. Apple trees lined either side of the narrow lane. In the spring, they looked like flowering white torches marching up the road, forming a beautiful canopy. When I was a little girl, I had asked my grandfather why the apple trees never had any apples. He replied that the English residents of the village didn’t like the apples because they made a mess on the street and sidewalk, so the Englishers made the trees sterile. At the age of five, I had no idea what sterile meant, but it sounded bad. “It is the Englisch way,” he had said. “To change what Gott created into something more convenient.”
This late in September, the tree’s leaves had turned yellow-gold, and a few fell to the sidewalk in the breeze that rolled over the green hills surrounding the village.
“Bai, are you listening to me?” Cass demanded.
I took a deep breath. “I explained to Jean Pierre before I left. This is a family emergency. My grandfather is sick. Jean Pierre understood. Besides, it’s only Thursday. I’ll be home in time for the announcement on Monday morning.”
“Jean Pierre might understand, but the selection committee will not. They’re looking for any excuse to give that skunk Caden the head chocolatier job. Just because he’s French, and they think it goes better with the brand of Jean Pierre’s empire. Do you think I should run the mob just because I’m Italian?”
“You probably wouldn’t be bad at it.”
“First of all, that comment is both flattering and insulting. Second, you are completely missing my point.”
“What would that be?” I asked, rubbing my forehead and staring out the windshield of the rental car I had picked up at the tiny Akron-Canton Airport. There hadn’t been much selection, and the inside of the car smelled faintly of stale cigarettes. The smell was giving me a headache. As I stared out the window, an Amish buggy clopped down the cross street. Inside, an Amish man with a long dark beard chatted with the Amish boy in the passenger seat. The boy was laughing. I couldn’t be farther from Midtown if I tried.
“Are you listening to me?” Cass asked.
I blinked. I hadn’t realized she was still talking. As much as I loved my best friend, she had a tendency to ramble when she was really passionate about a subject. “I’m listening,” I lied.
“You not being here the week before their final decision as to who will be Jean Pierre’s replacement only makes it easier for them to give it to that jerk. Is that what you want?”
“Jean Pierre won’t let them do that.” I had been Jean Pierre’s first chocolatier and protégé for so long, that everyone, even me, assumed that I would be appointed as head chocolatier at JP Chocolates when Jean Pierre retired.
“It’s not Jean Pierre’s decision,” she argued. “When the chocolate company went public, all the power went to the board of directors, which is the selection committee. Sure, they may listen to Jean Pierre’s suggestions, but they can do whatever they want.”
She wasn’t telling me anything I didn’t already know. I rubbed my temples. I had to get out of the car. “Cass, I’m not going over this again with you. My grandfather is ill. He’s more important than some job.”
“It’s not just some job, Bailey. You’ve been working for this for six years. Six years. Do you want to throw away all the thousands of hours you spent on perfecting your craft?”
I drummed my fingers on the steering wheel. “Of course not.”
“Then, come back—”
“Oh, Cass, can you hear me? You’re breaking up,” I said. “I’m way out in the country now . . .”
“Bailey? Bailey, can you hear me? Bai?”
I hung up the phone. As a native New Yorker, Cass questioned cell phone reception anywhere west of Manhattan.
I scrolled through my text messages for a response from Eric Sharp. Nothing. The last text messages had been from me to him, telling him I was heading to Ohio to visit my ailing grandfather, telling him I was at the airport, and telling him I had landed in Akron. No response to any of them. I reminded myself that between his two pastry shops, television show, and thousands of other obligations, Eric didn’t have time to text his girlfriend, especially since he and I were the only ones who knew we were dating. I threw the phone into my purse. Despite Eric’s impossible schedule, a short “thinking of you” text would have lifted my spirits considerably, because I was pretty certain Cass was right. My rash decision to drop everything and fly to Ohio did put my promotion to head chocolatier at JP Chocolates at risk. I shook my head. I’d had no other choice. When my grandmother had called to tell me my grandfather was ill, I had to go. My grandmother only called if it was an emergency. The Amish didn’t use the telephone for chitchat.
Through the windshield of my rental car, I watched as a second horse-and-buggy rolled by. I had told Cass that I was in the country; I hadn’t told her I was in Amish Country. The village of Harvest in Holmes County, Ohio to be specific. I wasn’t sure what my fashionable coworker would have said if she knew I had Amish relatives. She’d probably wonder if I had a bonnet hidden somewhere in my apartment.
My grandparents might be Amish, but I wasn’t. Neither were my parents. My father had grown up Amish and then left his district to marry my mother. Right now, Mom and Dad were having the very un-Amish adventure of traveling through Europe to celebrate their thirtieth wedding anniversary. Judging by the number of vacation photos in my email inbox, I could safely say that Mom and Dad had mastered the selfie and were on a personal mission to snap a photo of themselves with every major landmark in Europe. The last one I had received included the Leaning Tower of Pisa.
I took a deep breath and stepped out of the car. I would have to buy an air freshener if I was going to spend any significant amount of time in the rental car, or risk asphyxiation. As I walked to the corner of Apple and Main Street, I hoped that Daadi and Maami would be happy to see me. My grandparents didn’t know I was in town. My grandmother had called to tell me Daadi was ill, but she’d asked me not come. She said Daadi would not wish me to leave my work on his account.
I turned the corner onto Main Street, passing an Amish woman pushing a double stroller. Two plainly dressed toddlers sat in the stroller, kicking each other with their small feet. The mother said something to them in Pennsylvania Dutch. The children giggled, and I felt myself relax. I had made the right decision. The selection committee members wouldn’t change their minds about choosing me as the head chocolatier just because I took a couple of vacation days that were owed me. I hadn’t taken a single day off from work since last year, when Jean Pierre had announced his planned retirement.
Main Street was the primary shopping district in the tiny village of Harvest, Ohio. Gas-powered lamps marched down the street, alternating with more apple trees, and store fronts advertised Amish-made products—everything from quilts to baskets to pretzels and brooms. Returning here felt like stepping back in time. Not into a former century, as many people misperceived the Amish culture, but into a bustling community of shops and merchants, where clothes and home goods and foods were locally harvested and handmade. Cass would be horrified—there wasn’t a Starbucks or a department store in sight. Me, I rather liked the simplicity and authenticity. I specialized in chocolates, so it made me smile to think that people specialized in furniture and cheeses and even blank-faced Amish dolls.
My grandparents’ store—Swissmen Sweets—was in the most coveted spot on the street. It was right across from the town square, where the village held the Apple Blossom Festival in the spring, community picnics in the summer, farmers’ markets in the autumn, and ice-skating in the winter. Everyone in town wanted Daadi’s location, but he had owned it for well over fifty years, and he was way too smart to sell.
I was about a block from Swissmen Sweets when I spotted my grandfather leaning on a walker in front of his candy shop. His snow-white Amish beard hung to his chest, and his black felt hat sat primly on the top of his head. He spoke to a non-Amish man wearing a business suit that could have been sold in any number of the New York department stores Cass loved to frequent.
I took a deep breath, happy to see Daadi was no longer in the hospital as he had been when my grandmother called, but the walker frightened me. Daadi was a proud man, and he must hate having to rely on the contraption to keep him from toppling over.
I started to wave to attract my grandfather’s attention, but stopped myself when I was close enough to overhear their conversation.
Daadi gripped the sides of his walker until his knuckles turned white. “I have told you before, we’re not interested.”
The man in the suit appeared to be in his late forties. He wore his brown hair combed back in a wave and his tan had the slightest hint of orange. “You’re a fool. No one is going to make you a better offer than I am.”
“That is gut,” Daadi said. “Because I do not want any more offers. I’m happy with what I have. More importantly, Gott is happy with it. Now, if I cannot interest you in any fudge, I must ask you to leave.”
The man pointed at my grandfather. “You’re just prolonging the inevitable. When you’re gone, this property will belong to me. There’ll be no one to stand in my way. You don’t have any family to take it over.”
My chest constricted. Daadi did have family. He had Maami, and he had me. I clenched my teeth and started walking toward the pair at a fast clip.
The man spun around and headed directly for me. Not watching where he was going, he ran smack into my shoulder. “Hey!” I shouted at him, so loudly I wouldn’t have been surprised if they heard me back in New York.
He blinked at me. In Harvest, pedestrians didn’t yell at each other like they did in the city. I could use this to my advantage. “Watch where you’re going.”
He straightened his jacket. “Get out of my way.”
I was going to say something else, but then I saw Daadi over the man’s shoulder. Daadi was bent over his walker. He held his chest and crumpled to the sidewalk.
I ran to him. “Daadi!” I held him in my arms and looked back up the sidewalk. The man glanced at me, shock registering on his face, before he turned the corner onto a side street and disappeared.
“Bailey.” Daadi touched my cheek. “What are you doing here?”
Before I could answer, he lost consciousness.
My grandparents’ family doctor was an English man in his late fifties with a wide, kind face that immediately put me at ease. He put his blood pressure cuff in his medical bag and adjusted his wire-rimmed glasses on the long bridge of his nose. “Jebidiah, I do think you should go to the hospital for some additional tests.”
Daadi shifted his position on the nest of pillows my grandmother had made for him on their bed in the small apartment above the fudge shop. “Nee, I have been to the hospital too many times. They always tell me the same. My heart is weak. I don’t have much more time. I do not need to hear this again. When Gott calls me home, I will be ready. Going to the hospital won’t change that.”
It felt like someone reached into my chest and squeezed my own heart in a vise when my grandfather stated this so matter-of-factly. I agreed with the doctor. Daadi should go to the hospital. After he had collapsed on the sidewalk, I started to call 911 when my grandmother asked me to stop. She said Daadi didn’t want the ambulance called. Instead, she called their family doctor, Dr. Brown, who had an office on the other side of the square and was there in a matter a minutes. During that time, Daadi had come to, and Dr. Brown and I half led, half carried Daadi up the stairs to his room.
The doctor sighed. “I expected you to say that.” He glanced at my grandmother, who stood on the opposite side of the bed, holding Daadi’s hand. “Clara, please call me day or night if you need me. I’ll be here as quick as I can.”
My tiny grandmother nodded. “Danki, Dr. Brown.” The white prayer cap on her head blended in with her soft, silver hair. Her hair had once been brunette like mine, but it had been silver for as long as I had known her.
The doctor nodded and headed for the door.
Before he reached the bottom of the back stairs, I rushed out of the room. “Doctor, what’s wrong with my grandfather?”
Dr. Brown looked up at me from the middle of the narrow staircase. The gas-lit wall sconce illuminated his broad face. There was a sadness in his eyes that I hadn’t noticed when he had been in the bedroom with my grandparents. “Congenital heart disease.”
My chest tightened as if an unseen hand had cranked the vise just a little more tightly, and even though I didn’t want to, I asked, “The prognosis?”
He only shook his head. Then he turned and descended the stairs to the shop’s main floor.
I stood there, staring down the narrow stairwell with a hand covering my heart. I didn’t know if I was covering it in protection or prayer. I glanced over my shoulder at the doorway that led to my grandparents’ bedroom. Maybe now was a good time to start praying, assuming I still knew how to do it. I dropped my hand and headed back to the bedroom.
“No, Clara,” Daadi said. “I am not going back to the hospital. They have told us before there is nothing more to be done. Let it be. I would rather spend what little time I have left on this earth with you, here in our home.”
Tears gathered in my grandmother’s blue eyes, the same color as my own. “Ya, you are right, Jebidiah.”
He gave her a weak smile. “I will savor that, because it is a rare thing, indeed, for you to tell me I am right.”
She frowned. “Do not joke at such a time.”
“Jokes are always welcome. Even the gut Lord laughs.” He noticed me standing in the doorway. “There’s my girl. Come closer and tell me why you are here.”
I sat on the edge of his bed, careful not to disturb him. “I came to see you. I heard you were unwell.”
Weakly, he shook his finger at Maami and me. “I think the two of you have been up to something.”
Maami lifted her chin. “I called Bailey when you were in the hospital. She is your granddaughter and has a right to know.”
“I agree. Bailey has a right to know,” Daadi said, and then turned his head on the pillow toward me. “But you should not have come. Don’t you have the chocolate man vote this week?”
I smiled, touched that my grandfather would remember the pending head chocolatier announcement at such a time. “I’ve never heard it called that before, but yes, the selection committee is voting on who will be the next head chocolatier at JP Chocolates. The announcement will be made Monday morning.”
Daadi tried to sit up, but Maami and I both pushed him back onto the pillows. “Then why are you here?” he asked. “You should be in New York, making chocolate castles to wow the committee. Don’t give them any reason to consider another chocolatier.”
My hand remained on his shoulder. “It’s not as important as being here with you.”
“Hogwash,” Daadi snapped, some of the fire back in his eyes. “It’s all you have written to us about for the last five years. You can’t fool me into thinking it is no longer important to you, now that I am under the weather.”
“You’re more than under the weather, Daadi.” I held his cold, wrinkled hand in mine. “And you’re more important than a silly job.”
He grunted, but his face broke into a smile. I found myself smiling too.
Maami stood up and smoothed a wrinkle out of her plain lavender dress. “I’ll let the two of you argue about this and make some tea. I’ll put double sugar in yours, Bailey.” She winked at me. “Don’t think I forgot your sweet tooth.”
I smiled my thanks.
Maami closed the door after her. When I heard her footsteps fade, I asked, “Daadi, before you fell, you were talking to a man. Who was that?”
Daadi opened his eyes and stared at me like he was looking through me. It was almost as if he was searching his mind for the memory. That frightened me, because the incident in front of Swissmen Sweets had been less than three hours ago. He smiled. “Oh, ya, that was Tyson Colton. He’s a developer in the county. He wants to buy the candy shop. He’s already bought the two shops on either side of me.”
There was a cheese shop on the right of Swissmen Sweets and a tiny pretzel shop on the left.
“What? Why?” I wondered if I should be questioning him about this Tyson Colton character at this time.
My grandfather focused on me. “Because he wants to make money. What other reason do Englischers need to take away Amish property? He knows that I have the best location in the village, and since it is the best, he wants it.”
“How much is he offering?” I held my grandfather’s hand a little more tightly.
“More money than I would ever have a use for, or want. I told him he could double his amount, and I still wouldn’t sell.”
I knew he wouldn’t like to hear what I had to say next, but I had to share it. “If he is offering you a significant amount of money, then you could retire and take it easy. You could take better care of your health. You work too hard.”
My grandfather frowned. “Gott made us to work for His Kingdom. I will rest when I pass on.”
I bit the inside of my lip. I didn’t like the sound of that. My grandfather’s mind was made up, and arguing the point with him would only upset him more, which wouldn’t be good for his failing heart.
He covered my hand with his. “Do not worry, my girl. All will work out as it should. Gott has had this moment planned from the beginning.”
What moment did he mean? The offer from Tyson? Or Daadi’s failing health? All will work out as it should? To quote my grandfather, hogwash! If the doctor’s frown had been any indication, that was not to be.
“Do you want me to email Mom and Dad?” I asked. “They’re somewhere in Italy right now, but they would want to know you are ill.”
He struggled to sit up some more. “Nee. Don’t bother them. They have waited for their trip for a very long time. Your maami should not have bothered you either. I will be fine. You go back and make those fancy chocolates. It’s your dream. I’m not going to get in the way of what you’ve worked so hard for. I like to think it’s a little bit of me that makes you so gut with chocolate.”
“It’s more than a little bit,” I whispered.
“Then go back and get that head chocolate person job for me, if you can’t do it for yourself.”
Tears sprang to my eyes. “If your strength is up, I’ll leave the day after tomorrow, but I’ll be back just as soon as I can after the head chocolatier is announced.”
He smiled. “All right then, if returning will make you feel better, you have my blessing.”
Maami pushed opened the bedroom door and came in with a tea tray. “I brought you some hot broth too, Jebidiah.”
My grandfather grimaced.
Maami squinted her blue eyes at him. “Don’t you make that face at me, Jebidiah King! You will drink this broth. Nothing warms you all the way through like hot chicken broth.”
Grandfather winked at me. “She is always telling me what to do.”
Maami set the tray on a side table and cupped the bowl of broth in her hands.
I reached for it. “Let me.”
She smiled and gave me the bowl. I dipped the spoon into the hot broth and held it up. “Here, Daadi.”
He smiled. “Clara, did you see how beautiful our Bailey has become?”
“I did,” my grandmother said.
I felt myself blush, and I fed my grandfather the broth.
A little while later, after Daadi had drunk enough broth to satisfy my grandmother, he dozed off.
I picked up the tea tray and crept down the stairs. The stairs from the living quarters ended in a short hallway that opened directly into the candy shop. I stood there for a moment, admiring the room in which I had fallen in love with chocolate as a little girl. Along the walls, maple shelves held glass jars filled with every kind of candy you could imagine, from mints to licorice to caramels.
However, the pride of the shop was my grandfather’s signature fudge, and it was displayed front and center in a ten-foot-long glass case that doubled as the sales counter. Inside the display case there were dozens of trays of fudge: milk chocolate, rocky road, Neapolitan, maple, pumpkin, blueberry, peanut butter, and so many more. Even though I worked with chocolate every day, my mouth still watered when I saw all those trays of fudge, and the memories of my grandfather sneaking me pieces of fudge on summer evenings before dinner when Maami wasn’t looking brought a smile to my face. As many times as I tried to duplicate my grandfather’s fudge in New York, it didn’t taste quite the same as that made by his own hand. I bit the inside of my lip. How much longer would he be able to make it?
Maami smiled at me over. . .
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