Life is Sweet
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Synopsis
Three years ago, Becca Hudson threw a dart at a map, hit Leesburg, Virginia, and decided it was the perfect place to start over. Now she has her own bakery, The Strawberry Cake Shop, loyal customers, and close friends. She also has something that success as a Hollywood child star couldn't give her: a mostly normal existence. Not that it's without complications. One best friend, Pam, is in the wary early days of a new relationship; another is fighting to save her marriage in the midst of infidelity. And then there's Becca's growing attraction to Matthew, surrogate stepdad to Olivia, a smart, sensitive ten-year-old who's become a fixture in the bakery and in Becca's affections. Still, Becca is content to live in the present and ignore the "Whatever happened to?" speculation and occasional curious fan--until her past barges in again. Amid revelations and unexpected dilemmas, Becca must confront the life she stepped away from and the love she struggles to accept. It's the only way she'll truly find what she needs: a recipe for living that's honest, messy, sweet, and true. In an eloquent novel as moving as it is funny, acclaimed author Elizabeth Bass tells a story of forgiveness, resilience--and the unexpected detours that shape every journey to happiness. Praise for Elizabeth Bass's Miss You Most of All "An exuberant celebration of life, love, family and friendship, told with a sassy Texas flair." --Susan Wiggs
Release date: September 30, 2014
Publisher: Kensington
Print pages: 352
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Life is Sweet
Elizabeth Bass
I do not need this today. As subtly as possible, Becca performed a three-quarter turn to face away from the gawker and continued with what she was doing, which was icing a cake.
Pam, her oldest friend in Leesburg and a helper at the shop, had a harder time ignoring the person outside. Unacquainted with the reality of goldfish-bowl living, she edged toward the door.
“We don’t open for another ten minutes,” Becca said before Pam could flip the Closed sign to Open.
Pam halted, tense from the pressure vibes the gawker was sending. “But there’s a customer.”
“That’s not a customer, that’s a . . .” She almost said parasite, which would have been mean. Accurate, but mean. Pam already faulted Becca for having a cold, shriveled heart because she’d bailed on her marriage after six months. No need to hand her more character critique ammo. “. . . a nostalgia pilgrim.”
“How are you going to sell this stuff if you turn away people at the door?” Pam nodded to the display case of cakes, cupcakes, and brownies that they had worked all morning getting ready. It was almost full, and would be packed as soon as Becca finished icing the latest batch.
“I never turn away anyone during business hours,” Becca said. “And I don’t have trouble selling.”
“Right. So tell me again why we both have freezers full of day-olds?”
Becca didn’t let the dig bother her. “We’re turning a profit.”
Finally. It had taken her a long time to be able to claim that. Eighteen nervous months of outgoing payments being higher than incoming cash. The shop’s setup costs had been more than she’d estimated, mostly because the building—a defunct hardware store downtown—had required unforeseen repairs and alterations. A burst pipe during month two had nearly scuttled the entire enterprise. Lately she’d been letting a few things go—carrying pans upstairs to her apartment’s dishwasher instead of getting the shop’s fixed, for instance. She also could have used a handyman to fix all the wobbling tables and sticking doors around the place. But for the present, she was pleased with the turnover of the baked goods themselves.
Besides, the leftovers were usually a by-product of experimentation, not lack of customers. The orange cream cupcakes had not been a success. Neither had rum raisin—which was insane, because they were the best cupcakes ever. When Becca stuck to the classics and a few of the time-tested varieties, the store sometimes sold out before closing time.
“You’re not exactly Sara Lee yet,” Pam said. “You can’t take customers for granted.” She shot nervous glances at the human gecko at the window as she filled the cream and milk thermoses.
Becca kept her focus on the thick glob of buttercream she was gently ploughing over the golden surface of a lemon cake. “That’s not a customer,” she muttered.
“How do you know?”
She arched a brow at Pam. “Believe me, I can tell. At most, she’ll buy a token cupcake.”
“One cupcake is a sale.”
True. And usually anyone wanting to buy anything gave her a thrill. But if the tax on her psyche cost more than the sale of a two-dollar cupcake, it wasn’t worth it. She hadn’t moved two thousand miles to a small city and opened a cake store to exploit her once-upon-a-time fame. In fact, she’d run this far for the express purpose of reinventing herself. She just wanted to bake, own a business, and be somewhat normal. Was that too much to ask?
Apparently so.
Gecko Girl rapped on the door and pointed at her watch. In reply, Becca lifted a sorry-Charlie glance and nodded at the large wall clock that showed the time to be six minutes till eleven. Gecko Girl responded with an exaggerated frowny face. Becca pretended not to see it and went back to her icing.
Pam looked as if she might have a nervous breakdown. “Five minutes. What’s the harm in being a little flexible?”
Becca relented with a laugh. “Okay. Knock yourself out.”
But even as she gave the go-ahead, she braced herself.
Wiping her hands on her apron, Pam hurried to the door. She flipped the sign, and then turned the dead bolt to open the door.
The early bird nearly flattened Pam in her race across the room. For a second, it looked as though the person might attempt to bound over the counter like a high hurdle, but at the last minute physics got the best of her and she ended up draped over the glass display case, gaping at Becca.
“It’s really you! I can’t believe it! I’m so so so excited!”
Becca tried to smile. “Can I help you?”
The woman’s face lit up so that her eyes were practically shooting sparks of adoration. She was a breathless Roman candle of fangirldom. “God, yes! I’m dying to know what it was like to work with Jake Flannery. I always thought he was so cute. My first crush. Of course, I was only seven or eight at the time, but I bet he was really cute in person. You were probably in love with him, too, right? Although, I guess you couldn’t really be in love with him, since he was your dad and all.”
“He wasn’t, actually.” Becca aimed for patience and understanding, but wasn’t sure she managed either. “He was an actor playing my dad.”
“Yeah, right—plus, he was a ghost!” The woman blinked, and then laughed nervously. “I bet you still call Jake sometimes just to say ‘Good night, Daddy.’ That was always my favorite part of the show. Poor ghosty guy had to wander around his house where his family couldn’t see him anymore, and he’d try to help them with their problems—like you having to deal with that bitchy kid at school, the one played by Abby Wooten. Then you’d say ‘Good night, Daddy,’ to him at the end, and then the studio audience would go awwww.”
Could the woman handle learning that those awwwws were prerecorded? Or would her head simply explode? Becca decided not to find out.
“I haven’t talked to Jake since we got cancelled,” she said. “Seventeen years ago.”
Seventeen years. How could people care about something that happened to fictional people in a box in their living room so long ago?
The woman’s face collapsed in a frown. “Oh God, that’s so sad. But you were in love with him, right? I mean, how could you not be?” Before Becca could answer, excitement overwhelmed the woman again and she shouted toward the ceiling, “I can’t believe I’m standing here having a conversation with Rebecca Hudson! You were, like, my first best friend.”
It never took long, that leap from strained amusement and (admit it, Becca) flattery to being creeped out. “And you’re my first customer of the day,” she said, gently steering the woman back to the land of sanity. “What can I get for you?”
The woman gasped as if Becca had just asked her on a girls-day-out date. “Oh! Okay, first, can I get a picture of us together?”
Becca tried hard to keep her lips set in a smile as she gestured at her Strawberry Cake Shop apron. She was covered in flour and powdered sugar, and her hair was pulled back in a net. She could just imagine the captions if a photo of herself looking like this hit the Internet. Former Child Star Now Kitchen Worker. A few years earlier, she’d been photographed going into a strip mall where there was a family planning clinic. LITTLE TINA TERMINATES BABY!, a tabloid headline had screamed over a grainy photo, even though Becca had been headed for the nail salon next door.
“I’m not in my picture-taking clothes this morning,” she told the woman. “I’m in cupcake-selling clothes. Would you like to buy something?”
The woman had to unhook herself from the case she was plastered against to see inside the glass. She blinked at the neat rows of cupcakes and cakes as if they were a complete surprise to her. As though she hadn’t realized she was in a bakery at all. “Pretty! You make these? This is what Tina does all grown up?”
Becca’s jaw clenched, and she couldn’t help shooting a dagger gaze at Pam, who stood apart, bemused by it all.
Belatedly, their visitor peered around the shop the way most people did when they first walked in. The only objects decorating the brick walls were horsey things, old black-and-white pictures and stuff she’d found at garage sales. A jockey’s silks under glass. Ads for ancient vet remedies. Crops and hats and spurs.
“Where’s Me Minus You?”
On cable, in reruns. Becca bit back the temptation to lapse into snark. “The television stuff’s not really my thing anymore.”
The woman swung back to her, gaping in horror, as if Becca had just bad-mouthed apple pie and motherhood. “But it’s who you are.”
A volcanic mass of irritation started belching steam in Becca’s gut. “The lemon cupcakes are the freshest,” she said through a tight smile.
The woman’s eyes turned red and bulgy. She actually appeared to be on the verge of tears. “I drove all the way from Delaware to see you. Why else would I have come so far? This is just like an ordinary bakery.”
Becca bagged a lemon cupcake and thrust it across the counter. “Here—on the house.”
For a moment, the woman seemed so petulant and disappointed that Becca thought she would refuse the offering. Which, frankly, would have given her some hope for the woman’s mental health. Anger might have been a first step down the long road to recovery from old sitcom overidentification. But then her gaze met Becca’s again, and that spark of the crazy reignited. “Could you autograph it?”
Fine. Becca snatched the bag back and grabbed a ballpoint from the cup next to the cash register. Clicking it, she asked, “Your name is . . . ?”
“Megan—but could you add something personal? And could you put a lot of x’s and o’s before your signature?”
When she was done, the lip of the bag read:
Megan,
Your best friend, Tina, thinks you should get a life already.
xoxo,
Rebecca Hudson
The woman grabbed it back from her and read the words greedily. Her smile dissolved. She said nothing at first, and Becca worried she would cry. Instead, her face went red, and she flashed her outrage through bloodshot eyes. “ ‘Get a life’? Is that supposed to be a joke?”
“Not exactly.”
“You’re telling me to get a life? And who the hell are you?” Megan asked, the bag crinkling in her hands. “Some washed-up has-been working in a bakery. You don’t know the first thing about me!”
Would the word irony mean anything to this woman? Becca took a deep breath, already regretting the stupid autograph. Impulse control had never been her strong suit. “I’m sorry. The fact is, you don’t know me, either.”
“I do so,” the woman shot back. “I’ve been a fan since I was this high.” Her hand disappeared beneath the cash register. “I always thought you were a nice person, but you’re obviously just a bitch—just like your guest appearance on Malibu High School! No wonder they killed off your character.” She marched to the door but turned back, her gaze dark with warning. She raised a fist, which was still clutching the white bag with a strawberry stamped on it. “Don’t think the whole world won’t hear what kind of person you really are. I have a blog!”
She slammed the door behind her.
Pam crossed her arms. “Great PR job there, boss.”
Becca lifted her shoulders. “I tried.”
“That was trying?”
“Believe it or not.” Props to the woman for sticking the knife in and twisting it with her last snarky reference to Malibu High School, which had been a traumatic experience. Becca had played a horrible character, and the show had starred her nemesis from Me Minus You, Abby Wooten. During the run of the earlier show, Abby and Becca had been pals, although by the time of the cancellation, their friendship had cooled. After Becca got written off Malibu High School, Abby had dropped her like a hot potato. Becca’s career never recovered, and neither had her faith in Hollywood friendships.
“Megan was nuts,” she said in her own defense now.
“Well, yes. She did seem a little deranged.”
A little! But a little or a lot, what did it matter? Fandom was insane. How much did it take for a brain to flip the switch from harmless fan to Mark David Chapman? Becca didn’t want to find out. “It’s weird. Just when I assume I’ve finally been forgotten for something I did when I was twelve, some Tina-crazy person pops up.”
“Oh look.” Pam peered out the window. “Your secret admirer’s back.”
Oh God. Becca was ready to duck behind something solid and dial 911, assuming Pam was talking about crazy Megan—but that didn’t add up. The woman probably never wanted to see her again. Ducking didn’t make sense, either. Becca might be a million not-very-good things, but she’d never been a coward.
She came around the counter to investigate from Pam’s angle. Her secret admirer was sitting on the bench on the sidewalk in front of the shop. She’d seen the older man before—he was hard to miss. His shambling appearance would have been more at home in a Depression-era photograph than modern-day, gentrified Leesburg. He definitely didn’t look like a Me Minus You fanatic. . . which might be the only thing he had going for him, actually.
“He never comes in, even when we have free samples.” Becca peered at the skinny old guy, curious. “You think he’s on a diet? Diabetic?”
“Just a crazy old coot, is what I’m guessing,” Pam said.
Most likely he wasn’t a day over fifty-five, but his frayed appearance made him seem older. As always, a well-worn pork-pie hat was perched on his head, which probably accounted for Pam’s having called him crazy. Pam was old-time mainline Virginia all the way; she would battle quirkiness to her dying breath, even as it sprang up around her like dandelions.
“I wonder what he wants,” Becca said.
“Wants?” Pam snorted. “He wants what all these vagrants flooding our city want—a free ride.”
Becca tried not to laugh. Leesburg, Virginia, was hardly a pit of urban decay flooded with vagrants. But evidently inside Pam’s head there existed an alternate universe in which Leesburg’s few placid, historic streets teemed with homeless people, panhandlers, and hookers.
Having only a moment ago acknowledged her own good fortune, Becca experienced a swell of sympathy for this down-on-his-luck guy. “I can’t give him a free ride, but I wonder if he’d settle for a free cupcake.” She circled back to the other side of the counter, took a coconut cupcake from the display case, dropped it in a paper sack, and grabbed two napkins.
“Oh no.” Pam trailed her to the front door. “Don’t feed him. That will just make the problem worse.”
“There is no problem. He’s just a man sitting on a bench, who looks like he could use some cheering up.”
She stepped out of her shop onto the brick sidewalk and stopped in front of the bench, which was shaded by her shop’s awning. The stranger lurched to his feet, his curious, anxious gaze traveling from Becca to Pam hovering behind her.
“I thought you might enjoy this.” Becca held out the bag with the Strawberry Cake Shop stamped on it.
Wary eyes lingered on Becca, but her smile persuaded the man to take the sack and peek at the contents. “Damn,” he said approvingly in a low, resonant voice. “Looks good enough to eat.”
“That’s the idea,” she said.
He glanced down at her again. His height was probably close to six feet, although his lankiness and slouch made it hard to judge. He had kind, sad eyes. She also noted something that looked like oil stains on the legs of his pants.
“Thank you, thank you very much.” His voice had a leisurely timbre to it, yet not a trace of a Southern drawl. Like her, he was probably not a native, but he certainly didn’t look like the typical yuppie settlers who populated Loudoun County, most of whom were DC commuters. “I hope you didn’t think I was sitting here hoping to freeload.”
“No, but I’ve seen you out here before.”
“I just like this spot.” He pointed to the early-nineteenth-century buildings surrounding them. “Nice town.”
“The natives are friendly, too, once they get used to you.” Becca tossed a glance back at Pam, whose brows arched skeptically, as if she was still waiting for the man to produce a butcher knife and hack them both to pieces in broad daylight.
“My name’s Walt,” the man said.
“Nice to meet you, Walt. I’m Becca.”
“Becca, is it?” he repeated, as if surprised. “Becca . . . ?”
“Becca Hudson.”
The man’s smile faded a shade, but he nodded. “Thank you for the treat, Becca. I’m sure I’ll enjoy it.”
“You’re welcome.”
Without another word, Walt turned and walked away, his pace brisk. Becca felt a pang, as if she’d chased him off.
“He had shifty eyes,” Pam declared when he’d turned the corner onto Market Street. “I hope he wasn’t casing the joint. He might come back later and rob us.”
Pam’s community watch paranoia made Becca laugh. She’d thought his eyes looked more sad than shifty. And his expression when she’d first approached him stayed with her—as if he’d been afraid of something. “You think everyone looks shifty who hasn’t lived here for fifty years. I thought he was downright civilized.” Albeit in a hurry to get away from them after a few minutes.
All at once, Pam drew back, her lips breaking into a smile at something over Becca’s shoulder. Or, more likely, someone. Becca turned as her ex-husband approached. Cal always cadged free coffee when he was in town. This morning was starting to feel like a Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood parade of regulars and special visitors.
“Why, look who’s already up and about at”—Pam checked her watch—“eleven thirty!”
He smiled. “You’re wasted selling cupcakes, Pam. You should hire yourself out to the city. They could install you up on city hall like a clock on a bell tower. Then you could just shout the time at people.”
“Most people in this town have figured out how to set an alarm clock by their seventh birthday,” Pam said.
He scratched his unshaven cheek and turned his attention to Becca. If the man hadn’t inherited a horse farm, he would have shown great promise as a hobo. He could have been hanging out with Walt. “Got any coffee?”
“Help yourself,” Becca said. He always did.
“See?” Pam followed them into the cake shop. “You feed these guys and they start flocking around, expecting handouts. Like pigeons.”
Cal made himself at home, scooting around to the back to retrieve the Ravens mug he kept by the sink and then back out to the coffee station. The Strawberry Cake Shop’s rectangular room was split into two: the front half was for customers, with a few marble-topped tables for stopping . . . but not for staying forever. Becca had opted not to put in comfy furniture, to discourage one-cup lounge lizards from planting themselves in the shop all day. Behind the long oak display counter, a remnant from the hardware store, all the innards of the kitchen stood in plain view—stainless-steel appliances, mixers, a sink loaded with mixing bowls and pans, and the island where all the icing and finishing work were done. Only the storage room off the side, which contained another utility sink and shelves loaded with all of Becca’s supplies, was hidden from the front of the shop.
A mishmash of things Becca loved embellished the front half of the shop. Framed vintage photographs and posters hung on the exposed brick walls alongside horse stuff—odds and ends including photos of horses, including her own horse, Harvey. From the high, pressed-tin ceiling above hung three 1920s light fixtures with heavy white cut-glass shades that made changing light bulbs a death-defying act.
While Pam inspected a picture of herself soaring over a fence in full hunting regalia on her gelding, Crackers, Becca returned to icing duty. Wafer-thin sugared lemon slices she’d prepared in her apartment the night before stood at the ready to be used as garnish.
“You look like something puked up by a barn cat,” Becca said to Cal.
He smiled. “Poker night. Didn’t get to bed until four.”
“Four o’clock?” Pam straightened her shoulders. “I was up at seven to meet Floyd at the barn. He never showed up, by the way. Honestly, Cal, Butternut Knoll needs a new farrier. Floyd’s a no-show half the time . . . although that’s probably a blessing, because I suspect that’s the half when he’s drunk.”
“I can guarantee you he was drunk this morning,” Cal said.
Pam’s face fell and then reddened. “He was with you? You were out boozing with Floyd hours before he was supposed to be at the farm shoeing Crackers?”
“How was I supposed to know?”
“Because it’s your business, you dumb cluck!” Pam exclaimed. She and Cal had been friends forever—really forever, since preschool—despite their inability to sit together in a room for five minutes without arguing. They’d even argued during a trip the three of them had taken to Vegas, which had spontaneously turned into Cal and Becca’s wedding weekend. In retrospect, she wished they’d argued that ill-fated decision over a little more. Or had foregone the last martini that had preceded their making it.
Surprisingly, that brief wedding ceremony was probably the one time Cal and Pam were in a room together and managed to refrain from sniping at each other. Becca’s memory of the blessed event was fuzzy, but she couldn’t actually recall Pam saying anything before the officiant had pronounced them man and wife. Then she’d gathered Becca and Cal to her for a group hug, burst into tears, and passed out in the Chapel of Hope.
“I’m going to have to reschedule,” Pam complained now.
Cal smiled. “Well, you can be sure he’ll show up next time. After last night, he needs the money.”
“Terrific.” Pam shook her head. “I’ll see if I can get Floyd out to the barn this afternoon. You will be there, won’t you?”
“Of course, I’m on my way back out to the Knoll right now. Just had to loop through town to pick up some stuff.” As Pam went to the storeroom to retrieve her phone from her purse and make the call, Cal emptied his leftover coffee into the sink and grabbed a ginger-pepper brownie off a cooling rack.
“How’s business?” he asked.
“We’re one pilfered brownie away from destitution,” Becca deadpanned.
He gobbled it down. Reddish stubble on his unshaven jaw, bed head that would give way to helmet head later in the afternoon, a fleece over worn-out jeans—looking at him, she felt the mix of affection and irritation she imagined she might have felt for a brother, if she’d ever had one. When she’d first met him, his rumpled, laid-back ways made him so different from the guys she was used to. As a recent refugee from LA, she’d found his lack of ambition refreshing, even sexy. He was an earthy guy who wanted nothing more than to manage the horse farm that had been left to him, where his family had lived for over a hundred years. Her past celebrity was a novelty to him, and maybe it made him notice her at first, but he didn’t treat her any differently because of it.
She’d fallen in love with Butternut Knoll, and the friends she’d made riding there. She’d been intoxicated by her new life, by the idea of belonging to this town, these people. Just having such a tight circle of friends was a wonder to her. She had lost her mother and had felt so all alone in the world. Orphaned. Discovering and being embraced by these Leesburg friends was like having a big family for the first time in her life. Cal had been part of that, and along with romanticizing her new life, she’d romanticized him.
Until she’d flown home from Vegas and realized to her shame that she’d just married someone she liked a whole lot, but didn’t really love.
“Peevish Pam working out as a helper?” he asked between bites.
Pam was a real estate agent by trade, but the Realtor she’d worked for had folded during the last economic slump. Pam now worked part-time for Becca and picked up real estate commissions on a freelance basis.
“It’s been great. I can actually catch my breath during the day.” The first year Becca had tried to go it alone, which had been stressful. “And she’s trying to get me to improve my people skills.”
He almost choked on his brownie. “People skills? Is that what they call bullying these days?”
“She doesn’t treat everyone the way she treats you.”
“That makes me feel special.” He lingered another moment as if there was something he wanted to say. Their encounters always seemed to end this way now. Awkwardly. Because, a year on from their divorce, there was nothing left to say. They’d made a mistake, and righted it, and now it was a lucky thing they remained friends.
“Well . . . I guess I’d better go and see what else I can screw up today,” he said. “Sounds like I’ve already made a head start and I didn’t even know it.”
He gazed at her. She looked away.
“Are you coming out to the stables today?” he asked.
“I’ll be by after work, around seven.”
When he was gone, she wondered if she should have given him some personal encouragement, told him that he wasn’t as hopeless as he pretended to be. She still felt a residual protective impulse. And, pathetic as it sounded, her ex-husband was the closest thing she had to family now, real or televised.
But if she thought about that too long she would do desperate things . . . which was sort of why she’d ended up marrying Cal in the first place.
“Hurry, Matthew, I’m starving.”
Olivia’s pencil-like, ten-year-old frame long-jumped down the sidewalk ahead of him. She was the most energetic starving person on the planet.
“How can you be hungry?” Matthew asked. “I packed your noontime smorgasbord myself.”
She turned, jutting her lower jaw out so that her lower teeth protruded like a little monster. A food monster. “That was hours ago. And I gave the cookie away.”
“Why?”
“Because Grover wanted it. He never gets cookies.”
Matthew had to think twice to remember that Grover was a real child, not a Muppet or an imaginary friend. Kids these days and their weird names. Back when he was in elementary school, half his friends had been named Jason. Life had been simpler then.
“Why are you smiling?” Olivia asked him.
“No reason.”
“And why are you moving sooooo slow?” She took his hand and tugged him down the sidewalk, nearly knocking them into a woman maneuvering a baby carriage out the door of the card shop.
Matthew murmured an apology and, too late, darted to hold the door for the harried mom, with whom he felt a newfound kinship. Before, he’d often wondered why Nicole wore a hunted look some evenings, but now he knew. Dealing with your own messy work-life problems was exhausting enough without another little person’s schedule and headaches to squeeze in, too. To Matthew, Olivia had always seemed like an easy-care kid. But that was before she’d been left in his sole care for longer than, say, a trip to the hairdresser’s.
A month. He pushed the thought out of his mind when Olivia dropped his hand and skipped the last ten feet to the door of the bakery, ending with an impatient hop. “This is the best place!”
She’d been rattling on about it all week—every day after school she’d begged to go to the Strawberry Cake Shop. According to Olivia, other kids got to go all the time, but apparently Nicole wasn’t as keen on the place. As Matthew opened the door and found himself stepping into a warm world where the smells of butter and baking chocolate wrapped around him like a comforting, aromatic blanket, he could see why Nicole wouldn’t be a fan. He couldn’t imagine any of the desserts behind the glass case passing her lips. She wasn’t big on sweets.
If the mouthwatering smell had left him in doubt whether the creations behind the case were good, the line inside would have convinced him. The clientele today was heavy on perfectly made-up moms and girls in ballet clothes, all of whom seemed to know exactly what they wanted. Cupcakes flew off the shelves. There were also double cupcakes—more like mini cakes—and full-sized cakes that were available either as whole cakes or by the slice. Iced brownies cut into wedges sat under a cake cover, and next to the cash register were two glass jars—one filled with peanut butter cookies, one with chocolate chip.
Aside from the food offerings, he saw at once what attracted Olivia to this place, and kept Nicole away. There were horses everywhere—pictures of horses, figurines, a bridle hanging on the wall. (Is that sanitary? he wondered.. . .
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