banner banner banner
The Tea Shop on Lavender Lane
The Tea Shop on Lavender Lane
Оценить:
Рейтинг: 0

Полная версия:

The Tea Shop on Lavender Lane

скачать книгу бесплатно


She should derail this train before it went any farther down the track. Instead, she said, “All right. Zelda’s, and a movie after. With popcorn. Don’t cheap out on me.”

“I wouldn’t dream of it.” He put his hand to the small of her back and gently steered her toward the front door. “Come on, Beauty. Let’s get you out of here before the beast ravishes you.”

And before her nerve endings betrayed her.

Who was she kidding? They already had.

The ride back to The Man Cave on his Harley didn’t calm them down any. Todd Black in leather, seated astride a big rumbling machine, was like a romance-novel cover come to life, and the minute she climbed on behind him, her zing-o-meter took another hit. What was she doing? Who was in charge here, anyway, her brains or her hormones?

As if she needed to ask that question? Oh, boy.

* * *

Bailey’s bank account was dwindling, and she was down to her last catering job.

The detective hired by her L.A. lawyer had learned that the doctors found no evidence of food poisoning when Samba Barrett came in and played her General Hospital scene. Big surprise. Bailey’s lawyer had sent Samba a letter threatening to sue her for slander and that had been enough to shut up her collagen-plumped mouth as she made the late-night talk TV circuit. It was one thing to be a tragic victim. Quite another to get taken to court for being a fake.

Sadly, it was all too late to bring back Bailey’s customers.

You still have the Amora Bliss baby shower, she reminded herself. That would have several Hollywood people at it, and if all went well, maybe she could rebuild her reputation.

Or not. Saturday morning, the day before the shower, Melinda Spooner, the hostess, called her. “It turns out we’re not going to need you,” she said.

Seriously? She was canceling the day before the event? After Bailey had purchased the food, begun making preparations? “But I’ve already started on the baby bootee cakes,” Bailey protested. “And they’re adorable.”

“I’m sure they are, but we won’t be needing you.”

This woman was an actress friend of Bailey’s high school pal Bitsy (also an aspiring actress—in Los Angeles, who wasn’t?). It was enough of a connection that Bailey felt she could fight to keep this gig. “Melinda, does this have anything to do with what happened at Samba Barrett’s party?”

There was a betraying moment of silence before Melinda spoke. “No, of course not.”

“You know Bitsy wouldn’t have referred you to someone incompetent,” Bailey pushed. “And you know you can’t believe everything you read in the Star Reporter.”

“I know. It’s just that, well, uh, Amora’s having labor pains, and we’re not sure if she’ll even be around for the party tomorrow.”

“I thought she wasn’t due for another two months.”

“They’re premature.”

Right.

“I’d better go,” Melinda said. She ended the call before Bailey could say anything more.

Bailey looked around her rented commercial kitchen at the piles of fruit, waiting to get made into salad, the fresh herbs, the half-decorated little cakes, and burst into tears. And then she called her big sister.

Samantha answered on the first ring. “How are you doing?”

“Horrible,” Bailey sobbed. “I lost my last client.”

“Okay, that’s it, end of story. You’re coming home.”

“I can’t afford to come home.” She also couldn’t afford rent. Or food. Heck, she couldn’t afford to breathe.

“Oh, yes, you can,” Samantha said briskly. “I’m going online and buying you a ticket. You can stay with Cec.”

That was her big sister, making decisions for everyone. It was in Samantha’s nature to take charge.

But that was exactly what Bailey needed right now. It seemed she was no longer able to run her own life.

“I’ll call Cec. You start packing. Okay?”

Bailey had so wanted to make a success of her catering business. She’d had everything all planned. She’d begin as a caterer to the stars and move from there into having her own restaurant and becoming a star herself, a celebrity chef with restaurants in L.A. and Vegas. That dream was dead.

“We’ve all missed you,” Samantha said. “You belong in Icicle Falls. Come home.”

Home. Suddenly, that was the sweetest word in the English language. Her family would dress her emotional wounds with encouragement and wrap her in love, and she desperately needed a dose of love.

She sure wasn’t feeling it in L.A. “Get me out of here as soon as you can,” she said. Dorothy was right. There was no place like home, and the sooner Bailey got there, the happier she’d be.

* * *

“Todd, I don’t know what we’d do without you,” Millie Halverson said, handing Todd a glass of iced tea.

He took it and wiped his sweaty brow. “Aw, Mrs. H., there you go, swelling my head again.”

“I don’t think that’s possible,” the old woman said with a smile. “I really do appreciate you coming over to help me. That lawn is too much for me with my darned hip.”

Not just the lawn—the whole house, he thought, but he didn’t say anything. Sadly, the time would come soon enough when the Halversons would have to admit defeat and give up the place. And now that her husband had had a stroke, Todd expected it was imminent. So far, the Halversons had been holding on with all their might.

He didn’t blame them. It was a great old place. And talk about a perfect location. The house was on a street that was now zoned commercial, and it sat right around the corner from the block the locals called Foodie Paradise, which housed everything from Sweet Dreams Chocolates and a spice shop to Bavarian Brews, the town’s favorite coffee shop.

Once upon a time this had been a neighborhood filled with families raising their children, but the families had moved on. Some had left during the years the town was struggling economically; others had relocated farther out when Icicle Falls began to prosper, building bigger houses in other parts of town, selling their places to businesspeople anxious to open shops and take advantage of the tourist boom.

Like his house, this one had been around for at least a century and was showing its age. Over the past couple of years, since he’d gotten to know the couple, he’d done some minor repairs, but the kitchen needed updating and the whole place needed painting. Although Todd had offered to do that, Millie and Mike had declined. He suspected it was because of money and had wanted to pay for the paint, but they’d still said no. Hard to accept help, even from someone who’d become a friend.

“If we’d had a son, I’d have wanted him to be just like you,” Millie said.

Too bad his old man wasn’t around to hear that. He looked at her in mock surprise. “I’m not?”

She smiled at him, shaking her head. “You’re such a cutup. But I do want to talk to you seriously when you’re done. If you’ve got a minute.”

“For you? Of course.” She nodded briskly and hobbled into the house, while he went back to mowing her lawn, wondering what she wanted to talk about.

He found out half an hour later when he’d finished, and she invited him inside to sit on her worn, blue velvet sofa.

“Mike and I have been talking. We think it’s time for assisted living, for both of us.”

“Aw, crap.” They’d wanted to stay in this place until they died. Not practical, of course, but Todd still felt bad for them.

He remembered how his grandpa had fought the whole business of aging, tootling around in his Caddy, trying to take out half the population in his small town. After Gramps had run a stop sign and T-boned a truck, Mom had finally convinced him to turn over his car keys, but it had sent him into a depression that lasted for three months. The only thing that pulled him out was getting rides to the senior center from the widow down the road who drove a 1950 MG. Cruising around in a sports car with a sexy seventy-year-old had eased the pain.

What was going to ease the pain for the Halversons? They didn’t have any kids. All they had was each other, and with Mike barely recovering in the nursing home, Todd wasn’t sure how long that would last.

“We were hoping you might like to buy the house,” Millie said timidly.

Just what he needed—another old Victorian to fix up.

She must have seen his hesitation. “We’ll give you a good deal.”

“Millie, I don’t want to screw you guys over. But, well, I’ve got a place.”

“I know,” she said. “But only last fall you were talking with Mike about finding some more business investments. And this is commercially zoned.”

Except that he couldn’t see himself setting up some fussy little shop. “Aw, Millie, I appreciate the offer but...”

“Prime location. You could rent it out to someone wanting to have a shop.”

Of course, she was right. He’d be a fool not to scoop this place up. “What do you want for it?”

The number she gave him was pathetically low. Good Lord, did the woman have no idea what property values were in Icicle Falls these days? “Uh-uh. I’m not out to steal from you.”

“Well, then, make me an offer.”

He did.

She shook her head. “Too high.”

He had to laugh. “Mrs. H., you do know that this isn’t how you do a real-estate deal? The idea is to get the most money you can.”

“You’ve been awfully good to us since Mike had his stroke—even before. We’ve talked it over and we’d like to help you a little.”

“You’ll need that money,” he said. “Assisted living isn’t cheap.”

“We have money, dear,” she told him. “We just need to unload this house.”

Yeah, right. Who did she think she was kidding? He named another figure, and she countered. At last he threw out a final number he thought he could live with. It was still a bargain, but at least not so much of a steal that he’d feel like a robber. “And that’s my final offer.”

She nodded. “Done.”

“Do you want to talk to your husband about my offer?” Not that Mike could talk so well these days.

“No, I have power of attorney. Anyway, we’ve already discussed this. He’ll be relieved. I’ll have our lawyer draw up the papers. If you can arrange financing, we can get this settled pretty quickly.”

“There’s no rush,” he assured her.

She smiled sadly. “Oh, yes, there is. My sister and her husband are coming here next week to help us move. We found a lovely place in Bremerton.”

“Oh.” He sat back, shocked.

She smiled sadly at him. “Mike’s not getting any better. There was no point letting grass grow under our feet.”

“I’d have kept mowing it,” he said, trying to lighten the moment.

She patted his arm. “I know. You’ve been a good friend to us. Mike sure loved going over to The Man Cave on Thursday nights and playing pool with you. It was something to look forward to.”

“Same here,” Todd said. Mike had reminded him a lot of his grandpa, and he’d enjoyed the old guy. “I’m gonna miss you two.”

“Life moves on, dear,” she said. She gave him another pat. “Do something wonderful with this place and make us proud.”

He nodded, fighting the urge to go all wimpy and cry. “I will.”

“I know you will. You’re a smart young man.”

“That’s what my mama always says,” he cracked. Too bad he’d never heard those words from his dad.

He and Millie shook hands, and then he left, mentally adding a visit to the bank to the day’s to-do list. As he walked to his Harley, he glanced around the street, looking at the various shops. Yep, this was a sweet location. What could he put in that house? Something food-related? He didn’t yet know what the old Victorian would become, what should be done with it, but he’d know when he saw it. Oh, yeah, the Halversons had given him an incredible deal.

He smiled. A new business acquisition this morning and a date with the delicious Cecily Sterling tonight. Life was good.

Chapter Three (#u41e1ead5-8ff4-59a5-a7f7-76ae0b53d248)

Cecily was poking around in her closet, trying to decide what to wear on her date with Todd, when Samantha called to tell her their little sister was coming home.

“Thank God,” Cecily said. “She needs to be here with people who care about her.”

“She also needs a place to stay. Mom’s is too small.”

“She can stay with me.” Cecily had bought Samantha’s condo when Samantha married Blake Preston. The condo had two bedrooms, and she wasn’t really using the spare one other than as a catchall for her extra clothes and some of her craft supplies.

“That’s what I told her.”

“You did?” Their big sister would have made an excellent dictator.

“I knew you’d offer,” Samantha said in her own defense.

“Oh, so you’re psychic. For a minute there, I thought you were just being bossy.”

“That, too,” Samantha admitted. “Really, I knew you’d offer to take her in. But she can also stay with Blake and me for a while.”

They did have three bedrooms. One was an office, but the other they used as a guest room. Now that she thought about it, Cecily was surprised her sister hadn’t insisted Bailey stay with them. What was up with that?

“No, it’s okay,” Cecily said. “I’m fine with having her.”

She and Bailey had hung out often when they were both in L.A. Bailey had even catered some mixers for Cecily’s matchmaking company. Their relationship, Cecily supposed, had the same ebb and flow as that of most sisters. As kids they’d had their squabbles, but just as often they’d banded together against a common enemy—their older sister. As they moved toward puberty they’d fought more, and sharing a room hadn’t helped. But as they’d settled into adulthood and set aside teenage pettiness, they’d come full circle to the camaraderie they’d enjoyed as little girls. It would be fun having her sister stay with her now that they didn’t have to share a room, Cecily decided.

“I booked her flight home,” Samantha said. “She’ll come in on Friday. Want to go to the airport with me to pick her up?”

“You’re leaving the office?” Cecily teased.