Five-Alarm Fudge (42 page)

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Authors: Christine DeSmet

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For Cinderella Pink Fudge, I’d married the best white Belgian chocolate with tart red cherries that grow in the orchards surrounding our little town of two hundred or so permanent residents.

Rainetta Johnson now lived in Chicago, having retired from films years ago, but everybody my parents’ age remembered her movies with Elvis and Cary Grant. I’d spent a few years in Los Angeles before moving back to Door County recently, and I knew that Rainetta put money behind plenty of upstart indie filmmakers. So why not my Fairy Tale Fudge line? I’d never met her, but I’d heard she liked vacationing in quaint Door County, called the Cape Cod of the Midwest.

I felt bad about our inhospitable-weather welcome for Rainetta. On this first Sunday in May, the day had started in the fifties. Trust me, it really did. Now, nearly noon, snow spit past my fudge shop windows. Tulips alongside buildings bent under the frozen betrayal. The sudden storm on Lake Michigan was churning our bay with wind gusts up to forty knots, enough to shred the flags outside on their posts. Whitecaps splashed foam and spray over the dock in front of my fudge shop.

My just-opened fudge shop was the last stop on the docks of Fishers’ Harbor before you boarded a boat or your first stop after you disembarked following a day spent sightseeing among the ten lighthouses dotting the shorelines of our peninsula county. Lighthouses attracted people who loved to buy souvenirs, including homemade, handmade fudge. I figured my location would give me a pretty good chance of success.

My place used to be called Oosterling’s Live Bait, Bobbers & Beer. In Wisconsin everything ends with “& beer.” But when I moved home a couple of weeks back, my grandpa let me tack up a temporary sign and share his space. He moved both his live minnow tank and the apostrophe on “Oosterling’s.” We’re now Oosterlings’ Live Bait, Bobbers & Belgian Fudge. There wasn’t enough room on the building to keep “& Beer.” In these parts, beer is assumed to be on the shelves and in the coolers.

I said good-bye to Pauline, then tried Grandpa Gil’s number again. Still no answer. My stomach bottomed out. I took out my worry on the pink fudge cloud, working it with the wood paddles, watching for just the right sheen and mirrorlike look before the final loafing.

It was my fault Gilpa had taken the chance to go out today. He wanted to be out of the way so that I could have my fudge debut all on my own. I’m thirty-two, and he feels sorry for me not finding my “thing” in life yet. He was the first to warn me about my ex-husband, too. To say he doesn’t have faith in my fudge fantasies and judgment is an understatement.

My assistant, Cody Fjelstad, startled me by calling from across the small room, “Miss Oosterling, hurry up. We got only ten minutes! This isn’t La-La Land!”

Cody always called me “Miss,” which made me feel old or like my schoolmarm friend, Pauline, who was forced to wear thrift shop dregs that kindergarten kids could throw up on with impunity. I didn’t think I looked particularly like an old-maid “Miss.” Or did I? My brown ponytail was put up in a twist with a wood chopstick hung half undone over one shoulder of my faded yellow blouse and my long apron. My jeans were ripped from the real wear and tear of fixing up my shop and not the fake tears you buy in the store. I always wore work shoes now—boots, really—with lug soles for safety’s sake, in case I needed to step out onto the wet docks or help Gilpa haul equipment onto a boat. And then there were my copper kettles—don’t dare drop them on bare feet!

Cody was eighteen and challenged with a mild form of Asperger’s and obsessive-compulsive disorder, according to what Pauline knew. He’d worked long and hard on his speech patterns, eye contact, and his sense of humor and sarcasm. Calling me “Miss” made him happy, so though it made me feel old, I also knew it was a sign of him working on his goal to be a happy and well-adjusted adult someday. He was sweet and sincere and ten times as good as any intern I’d had to deal with in Los Angeles, or La-La Land.

Cody had red hair and freckles and liked to be called “Ranger” because he dreamed of being a ranger at a local park, particularly at the Chambers Island Lighthouse, where Gilpa was supposed to have taken those four guests of the Blue Heron Inn. That lighthouse was seven miles into the bay, smack-dab in the middle of the shipping lanes and this upstart storm.

“Sorry, Ranger. My mind is racing today.”

“You should race faster or you’ll miss your party and we won’t be famous after all.”

I sped up my fudge-loafing operation. “How’s the wrapping going?”

Pink cellophane crinkled and squeaked.

He said, “I’m catchin’ up to ya. Hurry up, Miss Oosterling.”

He came over to take the pan of fudge I’d cut into pieces and moved it to the register counter, where he was wrapping. “I’m gonna make it beautiful for you. Fairy Tale Fudge is the best!” he crowed. “Divine, delectable, delicious!”

“Pauline would love those D’s. Go easy on the fairy dust.”

“You got it.”

He did a fist pump in the air to make an invisible exclamation point.

Fairy Tale Fudge was my girlie brand of fudge. I was also developing ideas for a Fisherman’s Catch Tall Tale Fudge line—male fudge (fudge with nuts!).

For the Cinderella Pink Fudge, I made tiny bite-sized and edible marzipan fairy wings and glass slippers, which Ranger and I placed atop each piece. Ranger loved sprinkling on the fairy dust—edible pink sugar glitter—before wrapping each piece.

I reached for my lightweight red spring jacket, already feeling chilly. I should’ve watched the weather earlier that morning and brought my winter coat and gloves, but that’s how I was about too many things—spontaneous. It’s not good advice for getting married, by the way.

Snow flew thicker now outside the big glass windows, obliterating the docks and bay. I called the Coast Guard; the guys assured me they’d look for Gilpa. The fishing season had officially opened yesterday in Wisconsin. Every year we had people overboard on the first weekend. They didn’t always come back alive. At this time of year, hypothermia developed in a person within minutes.

I forced such thoughts away as Ranger flipped the lid shut on the big box that held Cinderella Pink Fudge for fifty. He offered to carry it up the hill to the Blue Heron Inn.

After declining his offer, I said, “When Gilpa comes in, you take the people by the hand to help them off the boat. Wait until each one is steady before assisting the next one.”

I had to be exact and literal with Ranger. Sometimes he hurried too much with his tasks; a guest could end up being flung by him from one side of a pier into the water on the other side.

When I burst into the blustery outdoors, the wind nearly whipped the heavy fudge box right out of my hands. The coat I’d put on but failed to button flapped all over the place. Snowflakes stung my cheeks and pecked at my eyes, making me bend my head as I walked blindly up the narrow blacktopped street that threaded up the steep hill. The Blue Heron Inn was only a couple of blocks away, but with it sitting on a small bluff, the street had a pitch that made me step half sideways like a skier travailing up a snowy slope.

As I drew closer, my heart began to pump faster. Besides Pauline and Ranger, no grown-up had yet seen or tasted my Fairy Tale Fudge, each sumptuous, sugary piece dressed with slippers or wings and glitter. Was it too silly? Was it tasty enough? Would it impress Rainetta?

I had hopes after Isabelle Boone—owner of the Blue Heron Inn—had stopped by earlier.

“I can smell the vanilla all the way up the hill to my inn!” she’d declared.

I had shooed Isabelle to the back room, where she’d picked up her usual supplies for the next week of cooking at the inn for her guests. We shared the same delivery service, which brought bulk sugar, flour, and other ingredients to the bars and restaurants in the area. The drivers didn’t always like going up the steep, narrow, winding street to the inn when conditions were slippery. Even rain freaked out some drivers.

Ranger’s social worker, Sam Peterson, had also come by earlier, offering to help. Sam and I went way back; Ranger didn’t understand why we weren’t married. Sam had never liked my ex-husband, and I was still embarrassed from the experience even though eight years have passed since the debacle.

I had intended to marry Sam eight years ago, at the end of the summer, but the day before my wedding, I got cold feet and ended up with another guy I’d met in college. He was like a prince whisking me off to a castle. We did the Vegas-wedding thing and settled in Las Vegas, where he pursued his career as a stand-up comic. I worked as a waitress at a casino, then got a job making the desserts for its buffet. It wasn’t but a month after our wedding when two women informed me that they believed they were also married to Mr. Dillon Rivers. Bigamy puts a damper on a marriage. I got a divorce and an annulment soon after. I had become enamored enough of the bright lights that I went to Los Angeles, where I worked as a waitress and then a baker in Jerry’s Deli while writing my experience with Dillon into scripts. After a year, I submitted a couple of scripts to a new TV series on a little-watched cable channel. I toiled at my writing craft, hoping for fame, but I worked for an anxiety-ridden executive producer. I wasn’t his favorite writer on the staff. Mostly he favored the guys and their ideas. I hung on to pay my college debt and to pay back everybody here for the wedding expenses, including Sam for his tuxedo rental.

Sam was going to be at the party. I had to expect people to talk. In small towns, people tried to pair you off with the same vigor they used for betting on Packers-Bears games.

The Blue Heron Inn’s lights were particularly inviting by the time I reached it. My fingers had become frozen wires bent around the edges of the cardboard box.

Isabelle Boone’s cream brick and powder blue–trimmed B and B was two and a half stories of history. The original wood boardinghouse had burned in 1871 in a great fire that ravaged the peninsula, killing more than a thousand people. The inn was rebuilt of Cream City brick hauled here by ships from Milwaukee. The brick comes from the clay soils in that area of Wisconsin. The high levels of lime and sulfur in the soil turn creamy colored when fired. The firing of bricks interested me as much as the chemical formula for fudge; I’d taken chemistry classes in college just for the fun of it.

I’d been in the house only once since I’d left town eight years ago in a hurry, but that visit had been a quick nighttime errand in low light. I’d heard customers rave about the collection of Steuben glass Isabelle had assembled. The famous Steuben glass artists out in New York had ceased operations in 2011, so I knew the value for Isabelle’s collection must have gone up considerably. I was eager to see it all under bright lights.

As I reached to ring the doorbell, I heard heated debating from within.

When Isabelle opened the door, her normally sophisticated gamine looks were pinched and she was out of breath.

I asked, “What’s going on?”

“Rainetta.” She took the box. “I leave for a minute to go upstairs to turn down her bed and put chocolates on her pillow and come back down to find Rainetta has everybody arguing over what needs money first in Fishers’ Harbor.”

I stripped off my jacket and shook off the snowflakes before hanging it on the coat tree. “How about you put my fudge on their pillows from now on? And how about she invest in my fudge?”

“She’ll love your idea. Fairy tales and Hollywood? A perfect match. And I’m tired of hearing Al Kvalheim talk about spending Ms. Johnson’s money on new storm sewers and grates.”

I laughed. I eagerly sent my gaze searching for the famous actress. I didn’t see her at first amid the throng of at least a hundred townspeople wearing their Sunday church clothes and enough aftershave and perfume to scare even a skunk. Panic set in. I couldn’t breathe.

I whispered, “I didn’t bring enough fudge, and the new batch isn’t quite done.”

Isabelle whispered back, “We’ll make sure Rainetta gets the first piece. Others will just have to bid for the rest. I’ll tell everybody it’s part of the fund-raiser.”

“You’re a genius, Izzy. Thanks!”

I still couldn’t breathe much, but now it had to do with the beauty around me. The two-story-high reception hall was packed with displays of expensive glass. Everybody kept their elbows tucked in and barely moved while talking.

Glass is made of amorphous crystals, which means they’re random molecules and light can go through them. Glass sparkled from every surface high and low, with rainbow chips of light in flight under the overhead chandeliers. There were crystal birds and animals—many life-sized, including a seagull. Other items were smaller abstracts or vases, swirls of fire-roasted molecules of sand that bent the light into colorful beams splashing on the cream-and-blue wallpaper. Making glass was probably like making fudge—only a few thousand degrees hotter.

But my appreciation of Isabelle’s collection was interrupted by the loud discussion near the magnificent blue-carpeted staircase dead center in the house.

“That’s Rainetta Johnson,” whispered Isabelle, nodding with raised eyebrows toward an impeccably coiffed blond woman of a regal age wearing an expensive lavender pantsuit.

To my surprise, the object of Ms. Johnson’s animated discussion was Sam Peterson.

I asked Isabelle, “What’re they arguing about? Seems like Sam’s taking the wrong tack to get his donations.”

This party wasn’t just the opening of the refurbished inn or my fudge debut; it was a fund-raiser to help purchase and redo another historic home in town. It would become a group home for people like Ranger who wanted to live independently. So Sam’s being here was logical, seeing as how he was a social worker. I’d never known Sam to raise his voice. I could see that the arguing was mostly one-sided, though. Rainetta was smiling and embracing others with some funny asides even as Sam kept pressing some point with the actress.

“Let’s not worry about it,” Isabelle said. “Sam’s overly eager, perhaps, to sell her on the group home.”

“Poor Rainetta. Sam should relax. You told me she loved Door County.”

“She does, but she’s a shrewd business lady. Come with me and I’ll show you.”

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