Authors: Peg Cochran
Monica clicked off the call with her mother, punched in the number for the Cranberry Cove Inn and waited, her back to the wind, while the call connected. But instead of getting the cheery voice of the receptionist, she got a busy signal. The Inn wasn't that farâshe'd walk over and make the reservation in person.
The wind grew even stronger as Monica approached the Cranberry Cove Inn. Its position on a bluff overlooking the lake gave it little protection from the weather. She felt something stinging her face and looked up to see lazy snowflakes drifting down from the leaden sky. It looked as if Preston Crowley would get his wish after allâthere would be snow on the ground in Cranberry Cove for the first Winter Walk. Preston was the sort of person who was used to getting his own way, so Monica wasn't surprised. Even Mother Nature was prepared to oblige him.
Monica walked past the picket fence that would be
covered in dusty pink climbing roses come summer and headed toward the front door. The Inn's white shingles had been painted that spring and the black shutters had been touched up as well. It wouldn't be long, however, before the wind and snow of a harsh Michigan winter stripped them of their luster.
Monica was taken aback to discover that the lobby of the Cranberry Cove Inn was crammed with people sitting on the plump sofas, lounging in the deep armchairs and chatting in front of the massive stone fireplace. If her hands and feet weren't still numb from the cold she would have thought it was the height of the summer tourist season and not the dark, bleak middle of January.
The receptionist was behind the counter with the telephone pressed to her ear and a harried look on her face. She was a plump woman with graying blond hair that was pulled into a puffy twist at the back of her head. A long strand of hair had broken loose from the knot and was hanging over her forehead and along her nose. She exhaled a huge puff of air and blew the errant strand out of the way.
Monica smiled as she approached the desk, but despite her friendly demeanor, the woman looked as alarmed as if Monica were a knife-wielding lunatic. She put her hand over the telephone receiver and glared at Monica.
“If you're hoping to make a reservation, we're completely booked,” she hissed. “But if you're looking to arrange a wedding or some such affair, the banquet manager is in an office down the hall.” She pointed vaguely to the right.
Monica shook her head. “I was hoping to get a room. It doesn't matter where it is or what the view isâ”
The woman was already shaking her head, causing the pesky strand of hair to flop forward onto her forehead
again. “No room at the Inn. No room at all.” She gave a desperate laugh.
“It doesn't matter how smallâ”
“Even the old maid's rooms are booked.” The woman stared at the telephone receiver for a moment before replacing it in its cradle. “Everyone is here for the Winter Walk.”
Monica had hoped the Winter Walk would be popular, but it looked as if it was succeeding beyond her wildest dreams. Her mother couldn't have picked a worse time to come to town unless it was the height of the summer season, when Cranberry Cove was even more swamped.
Reluctantly, Monica left the warmth of the Inn's lobby. Perhaps Primrose Cottage, a bed-and-breakfast nearby, had opened for the Winter Walk? Charlie Decker, the owner, usually shut down at the end of October, reopened on the weekends during the Christmas season, and then shut down again until the spring flowers were blooming.
Monica crossed her fingers as she headed down the street. She was buoyed by the fact that Primrose Cottage was lit up like a Christmas tree, with the parking lot full for the first time since the last leaf had fallen off the trees in early November.
Monica pulled open the front door and approached the reception desk with a feeling of optimism. Charlie Decker was chatting amiably with a couple in matching ski parkas. She looked relaxed and happyâbetter than Monica had seen her since her mother's death at the end of September. Charlie smiled as Monica approached.
“I was hoping I could book a room,” Monica said as she pulled off her gloves and stuffed them into her pockets.
Charlie looked startled. “Has something gone wrong at your cottage?”
Monica had renovated the small cottage that stood on the grounds of Sassamanash Farm. It boasted a living room and kitchen on the first floor and two bedrooms on the second with a bathroom between them. The water heater produced barely ten minutes of hot water at a time and there was a leak in the downstairs hallway, but there was a fireplace in the living room and a large bay window, and Monica adored the place.
“Oh, no.” Monica hastened to reassure Charlie. “Everything is fine. I need a room for my motherâshe's on her way to town.”
“Coming for the Winter Walk, huh?” Charlie stuck the pencil she was holding behind her ear.
Monica didn't think that was the case. She didn't know exactly why her mother was coming, but she'd find out soon enough.
“I hate to disappoint you, but we're booked solid . . . with a waiting list if you can believe it. I couldn't be happier.”
“That's great,” Monica said, although the words practically stuck in her mouth.
What was she going to do? There were no other accommodations in town. There were houses for rent during the summer but not at this time of year. Besides, that would not be suitable for her mother. Her mother would just have to stay with her.
She'd better warn Gina.
â¢Â   â¢Â   â¢
Gina was standing on a ladder inside her aromatherapy shop when Monica arrived. After much discussion, and an entire bottle of champagne over dinner at the Cranberry Cove Inn,
Gina had settled on the name Making Scents for her new venture.
She was wearing leopard-print leggings, a long black sweater and suede booties. It was going to take longer than three months to get Gina to conform to Cranberry Cove's unwritten dress code of clothing chosen for its comfort and function rather than its style.
Gina climbed down the steps of the ladder. “What do you think? Enough sparkle for the mayor?”
Monica looked around the shop. “Preston will love itâit's stunning. I don't see how you could add more pizazz if you tried.” She smiled at her stepmother.
“Good.” Gina stepped off the ladder. “I started the shop at the wrong time, that's for sure. I didn't realize business would dry up as soon as I hung out my
Open
sign.”
“Cranberry Cove definitely has its seasons,” Monica said, leaning against the counter where a half dozen glass bottles with medicine droppers were on display. The scents of mint, lavender and citrus filled her nose. “But you did quite well over Christmas, didn't you?”
“I did.” Gina straightened a bow on the shelf behind her. “And I'm sure things will pick up when summer comes. If nothing else, aromatherapy will be something novel for the tourists to talk about when they get back home.”
Monica traced a circle on the floor with her toe. How was she going to break it to Gina that the two exâMrs. Albertsons were going to be occupying the same town at the same time?
But before she could say anything, Gina spoke. “I'm meeting Preston tonightâafter the Winter Walk.”
Monica looked up, surprised. “I didn't realize you were dating.”
Gina shrugged. “We're keeping it rather quiet.” She shrugged. “It's what Preston wants. He asked me to share a bottle of champagne with him tonight to celebrate the success of the first Cranberry Cove Winter Walk.”
Monica had always been told that it wasn't good to count your chickens before they hatched, but she didn't say anything. She didn't want to burst Gina's bubbleâit might make the news about Monica's mother arriving in town go down easier if she didn't.
“By the way,” Monica said with studied casualness, “my mother is coming for a visit.” Gina, who had been wiping fingerprints off the counter, stopped abruptly and spun around toward Monica. “Your mother! What does she want to come here for?”
“To see me, I guess,” Monica said, somewhat dryly. “Actually she said she's been dating a man from Cranberry Cove who she met in Chicago when he was on business.”
Gina went back to vigorously scrubbing a spot on the glass countertop, which already looked perfectly clean to Monica. “Just so she doesn't come near me. After the things she said to me . . .”
Monica knew the relationship had been quite heated, almost ugly, between her mother and Gina, but she didn't know the details and didn't want to.
Gina's mouth was open and she was about to continue when the door opened, letting in a blast of cold air and a swirl of snowflakes.
It was Tempest Storm. Her cheeks were bright red, and Monica didn't think it was because of the frigid temperatures. Tempest looked absolutely furious.
“What a bunch of narrow-minded nincompoops these people are.”
Gina looked sympathetic. She and Tempest had bonded in their roles as Cranberry Cove's most gossiped about citizens.
“What have they done now?” Gina asked.
Tempest's face became even redder, if possible. She drew the long purple cape she was wearing around her. It made her look like the high priestess of some ancient religion.
“That idiot mayor of ours, Preston Crowley, has started a petition to bar me from holding my Imbolc rite on the village green tonight.”
Gina bristled at hearing Preston called an idiot. She glanced at Monica and rolled her eyes but held her tongue.
“What is this rite you're planning anyway?” Gina reached behind her for an emery board that was stuck in a pencil holder on the counter and began to file one of her nails.
“It's not like it's going to hurt anyone,” Tempest said.
“It might even amuse the tourists.” Gina stuck the emery board back in the cup.
“It's not meant to be amusing,” Tempest said rather huffily. “The rite is believed to date back to the Babylonians. It marks the halfway point between the winter solstice and the spring equinox.” She frowned. “We're doing it a bit early, but I thought it might be something to draw the tourists in and show them that there is some culture in Cranberry Cove.”
“Greg Harper holds a book club at Book 'Em once a month,” Gina said.
“That's not what I meant. We need to show them that we're tolerant of different peoples and different practices.”
“Good luck with that.” Gina laughed.
“We'll have candles and noisemakers,” Tempest said. “It will be quite a sight.”
“I'm sure it will be.” Gina finished wiping down the counter and tossed the paper towels in the trash. “Who is going to be taking part in this ritual?”
“I'm hoping that some of Cranberry Cove's visitors will join in. I've got extra candles for them.”
The door to the shop opened again and Gina looked up, a practiced smile on her face.
A woman came in, stamping her feet against the cold. A scattering of snowflakes were melting across her shoulders and leaving wet splotches on her dark coat.
“Can I help you?” Gina glided toward her.
Tempest wandered over to the other side of the shop and began to examine a display of oil diffusers.
The woman seemed like an unlikely customer for Making Scents, although Gina had told Monica she was pleasantly surprised by the number of people interested in exploring essential oils for the treatment of insomnia, anxiety and other conditions.
But this woman didn't look as if she was intent on purchasing anything. She had a clipboard clutched to her rather flat chest, a pen in her gnarled hand and a determined look on her gaunt face.
“I'm here to ask if you will sign this here petition,” she said to no one in particular.
Gina, as owner of the shop, obviously felt it her duty to take charge. The woman eyed Gina's leggings and sweater with distrust as she stepped forward, her hand outstretched for the piece of paper the woman was brandishing.
“And what is it you're asking me to sign?” Gina arched a perfectly plucked eyebrow as she accepted the clipboard from the woman.
“It's a petition to stop that . . . woman. . . .” She seemed momentarily overcome by emotion and had to clear her throat several times before continuing. “From holding that pagan ceremony on the village green and ruining our Winter Walk. Mayor Crowley himself asked us to go around and collect signatures.” She held out the pen to Gina with a shaking hand. “Mayor Crowley has worked hard to make this event a success and nothing can be allowed to ruin it.”
“Oh, balderdash!” Tempest swung around from the display she'd been examining and drew her cloak around her with a flourish. The ends flicked outward and nearly knocked over a shelf of lavender oil. “Our Imbolc ceremony is going to do nothing to tarnish the
mayor's
”âshe said the word as if it left a bad taste in her mouthâ“precious Winter Walk.”
Monica thought she'd better do something to diffuse the tension that was crackling in the air like heat lightning.