From Scratch (8 page)

Read From Scratch Online

Authors: C.E. Hilbert

Tags: #christian Fiction

BOOK: From Scratch
11.6Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

~*~

He stood from his crouched position, brushing the dead leaves from his dark jeans. He hopped the four-foot wooden fence enclosing the dimwitted cop's backyard, then tightened the blue scarf at his neck, and tugged his ball team's hat low on his brow more out of habit than fear of being recognized.

This morning was too close. He couldn't stay in this rundown town. He needed to take a break. Go back to Maryland. Regroup. The pieces hadn't fallen into place as he'd strategized. He would have to wait a little longer. Patience wasn't a natural virtue, but he had learned to wait as he pursued God's gift to him. He anticipated a few bumps in the road, but he forgot how small towns worked. They all had a busy-body. He should have anticipated her. And yet, he was caught unaware when he glimpsed her telephoto lens between the drapes of her ill-kept home. Not that the nosy old lady was a big obstacle. But, her gossipy ways reminded him. No one could hide in a small town.

He tugged a crumpled pack of cigarettes from his jacket pocket and clamped a stem between his lips and flashed his lighter to ignite the revolting bi-product of his time away from society. He sucked in a lungful of smoke and then released the cloud of nicotine gray through his lips and nostrils as he paused to admire his gift.

His lovely Mary Margaret lifted chairs from tables. Fury burned in his belly at the thought of her sweet, soft hands being laced with unsightly calluses. When they were married, as God ordained, she would never work again. The police and that meddling godfather of hers had driven her here to a life of servitude and menial labor. If they would have left them alone, Mary Margaret would be presiding over the Georgia mansion his grandmother bequeathed him, singing him private concerts in the conservatory on the second floor.

His eyes fluttered shut as the image of his most treasured fantasy floated into his mind. She was leaning against the gleaming, black grand piano, the moonlight sparkling through the bank of windows, draped in a silky, white dress. He clutched at his flannel shirt as he swayed to the music only he could hear. His angel. Singing only for him, the way God intended.

He had been listening to her sing this morning, standing at the base of the back stairwell. A preview of what would one day be. Then the cop rudely interrupted the concert, forcing him to slink away into the darkness, like the criminal so many had unjustly accused him of being. He would not allow another such interruption. He had been raised to know how to deal with uninvited guests.

He shifted his attention away from the shop, and his lips lifted to a sneer as he admired the clumsy patchwork over the broken police station window.

The previous evening, he should have had more control, but the burning vision of that cop's hand touching his gift exploded in a billowing rage through his body. Before he could fully comprehend his actions, a loose brick from the sidewalk released through his fingers with the accuracy of a Sunday afternoon quarterback. He had to think quickly, relying on one of the lessons he'd learned from his fellow inmates. Distraction was always the best strategy.

He stubbed the remainder of the cigarette in the palm of his hand and threw the base into the mildew-encrusted fountain behind him. Glancing down at the gold sedan, he scanned the cabin for a remnant. Overlooking details was what separated him from Mary Margaret these past years. He wouldn't be so careless again.

He had dealt with men who had interfered in the last decade.

Sean Taylor would not get in the way of destiny.

His and Mary Margaret's destiny was epic. They were ordained by God to be together. And they would be. Either in this life, or the next.

6

Glancing up at the clock above the oven, Maggie closed the box on the last of the twenty dozen bagels for the Smith brothers' breakfast meeting. She had ten minutes to spare before she had to open and someone would be by for the order. This was the second time this month the Smiths had ordered such an enormous blowout of bagels. Oh, hail the carb-lovers!

Reflecting on the morning, Maggie cringed. The day started so wonderfully, spending time baking and praising Jesus, until Sean surprised her. For all of her bravado and surly attitude, she'd pulled a knife on a cop. There would be consequences. Truce or not, she would be facing some well-deserved interrogation. Minutes, now hours, later she could admit to herself that the fear was real.

Over the last few months, the terror she'd kept in a well-insulated room in her mind, while her tormentor was tucked away in prison, had been gnawing its way free. She'd been able to keep the lock secure with the knowledge that her new life was untraceable. But, if she wasn't vigilant, her fear would escape and consume her, paralyzing her with the thoughts of what could and had happened. Shaking her head, she let out a slow, cleansing breath. She couldn't worry about what might be. She had a business to run.

The bakery hadn't been her dream when she was a girl, that dream died with Mary Margaret, but this shop was hers and she could feel God's warming smile on her. He had given her this tremendous gift and she wouldn't waste a moment of the opportunity.

With a grunt, she heaved the tray of boxes off of the prep-counter, waddling from the kitchen to the main café, and shoved the loaded carrier onto the shelf.

The snickerdoodle-flavored coffee dripped into the dispenser. She snapped the lid shut and then popped the pump lever so that it would be ready to flow freely when Mrs. Shively came in for her morning fix.

She filled the cubbies for sugar, zero-calorie sweetener, swizzle sticks, and straws with the speed and ease of one who could accomplish the simple task in her sleep. She straightened the handles on the milks and creamers. The symmetry would be lost as soon as Marty McSeverin and his mother arrived for her on-the-way-to-daycare coffee. After experiencing Marty for five minutes every morning, Maggie understood why his mother often stopped for her on-the-way-to-daycare coffee after she dropped him at Tiny-Tots Daycare.

Tables clean. Counters clear. Napkins stocked. Display case set and filled. Coffee brewed. Flip on her tunes, unlock the door, and another day would begin. The flutter of butterfly wings tickled the walls of her stomach. She was ready for another day.
Oh, Lord, Thank You for this life! I wouldn't be living it without You.

She walked behind the counter, opened the small compartment housing the sound system, and contemplated what kind of melodic mood she was in today. Music was her first love. She loved baking and it helped to fill the creative void leaving music had created, but nothing would ever replace the feeling she had when the Holy Spirit flowed through her body in song.

She shuffled through various mixes before landing on an alternative Christian rock set. The music would help to put her focus on God. Maggie wasn't much of an evangelist, but she tried to share her faith in her own subtle way. She slid the compartment door shut, stood, and straightened her chef's coat.

Showtime.

She unlocked the door and flipped the “closed” sign to “open” in one smooth, synchronized motion. And bam! There it was: the twisted tingle in her stomach she always had before she stepped on a stage. Now, it was a constant reminder that every day of her life was a show. Who knew when she was training to dance and to sing for the Great White Way that she would be playing a role for a lifetime rather than a nightly performance? She tugged the small string downward and the Roman shade lifted with a zip to reveal the picture of Main Street, Gibson's Run, Ohio.

She leaned her left shoulder on the glass of the door and scanned the street. Two pick-up trucks were parked north of the town's fountain, both owned by regular customers. Her gaze shifted south, and she caught a glint off of a gold sedan she didn't recognize. Her stomach rolled as her brief conversation with Mr. Hopper replayed in her mind.

His information was limited to Sissy Jenkins's suspicion about an unknown vehicle, and like so many others in town he had ignored the balance of what the resident-expert-on-everyone-else's-business had to share.

Maggie wished she could have, this one time, given Sissy a little of the attention she obviously craved. If he had, Mr. Hopper may have been able to provide Maggie with enough details to erase the wave of worry threatening to drown her. She drew a deep breath through her nose. The air in her lungs was forced out slowly through her lips as she prayed for peace from her worries. Could anyone add a single hour to one's life by worrying?

The reminder from Jesus's own words often brought her comfort. Today was no different. Worry was a waste of energy. At the moment, she had no way of confirming if the unknown gold car was the suspicious sedan Sissy was prattling about to Mr. Hopper. The new car of a town resident was the most logical conclusion; nothing nefarious.

Maggie looked away from the vehicle. When Sissy came in for her post-Jazzercise latte today or tomorrow, she could subtly question the ever-knowing Mrs. Jenkins about her suspicions. Her gaze drifted up the street and settled on the plywood covering the front window of the police station. Or she could ask the chief.

She was on a bit of a teeter-totter with the police chief. Although their relationship seemed to be balancing out, this morning's knife-wielding exhibition probably used up all of her free question tokens. Payment for her curiosity would undoubtedly require answering some of his questions about her life. Best to stick with Sissy.

Sissy's intel would be smattered with more fluff than facts, but any details would help move Maggie closer to the peace she craved. She shoved away from the door. Before she made it behind the counter, the bell announcing a customer chimed, and she turned with a broad smile “Good morning, Mr. Grey. How are you today?”

“Maggie girl, I thought we discussed this? Mr. Grey was my father. Please call me Henry or Hank.” The gentle farmer stood six foot two inches and had the look of a weathered cowboy with salt and pepper hair and a thick mustache covering his top lip. He held his tattered ball cap and the arms of his light-weight flannel shirt were cuffed to the elbows. His worn denim spoke of years, not mere months. There was authenticity in his clothing, the kind that couldn't be purchased from a catalog.

“Well, Hank, what can I get for you this morning?” Maggie moved behind the counter.

“You know Bitsy's in South Carolina, helping Emory, our youngest, settle back into her apartment for her last year of law school. Although I suspect the two are just shopping their way up one end of King Street and down the other. But, she's left me all alone to fend for myself for three days without her cooking. I woke up this morning and decided that I just had to try one of your scones. I love those carrot muffins you make, and your coffee is as good as my wife's, please don't tell her I said so, but for some reason I just got a hankering for one of those scones. Every time I stop in for some coffee or a visit with the guys, those scones scream my name from across the shop, but Bitsy's voice is always louder. Now that Bitsy's in Charleston, I think we might be out of shouting distance, what do you think?” His smile shone through his eyes.

Maggie was definitely not immune to his charm. And since Bitsy dropped by the store a week ago with a list of items Henry was allowed to have and not allowed to have, she was fairly certain she could give into his request without offending anyone and, of course, sticking to the crucial list. Bitsy Grey's naughty list was not a place she wanted to be. “I think we can make that happen. Would you like a to-go cup for some coffee?”

“That would be fine. Thank you.” He took the empty cup and ambled to the rack of coffee selections. “There's such a wide variety.”

Maggie watched him through the glass of the display case as she used large tongs to lift a carrot and ginger whole wheat scone, with extra sugar, from the neat stack, dropping the little treat in a small paper sack. He lifted each of the miniature easels describing the coffee and appeared to be reading them in earnest. He turned. “Where's the regular coffee?”

She couldn't suppress her grin as she folded the top of the bag. “The one Bitsy picks up for you is the first one on the left.”

He moved to the first dispenser and shook his head. “Who knew I was drinking a ‘full-bodied aromatic bean' that has the ‘bold intense flavors synonymous with the beautiful country of origin'?” He pressed the lever on the top of the dispenser and sealed the lid on the cup. He took a generous sip and moseyed back to the counter. “Maggie-girl, this is one mean cup of joe. If I wasn't already head-over-heels for my wife, she might have a little competition on her hands,” he said with a quick nod of his head.

She giggled. “Well, who knew all I needed to get the most handsome man in town's attention was to put a little water and beans together?”

“We're simple folk here. Nothing like those city dwellers.”

“Did you just say ‘city dwellers', Hank?” Sean asked, the jingle of the entry bell echoing behind him.

Maggie's heart shot to her throat at the sight of the chief of police.

A twist of a grin pulled at his lips.

That's promising.

“Well, what would call them?” Henry said. “You arrested enough of them.”

“I would call those guys criminals.” He extended his hand to Henry. “How's it going without Bitsy?”

“It's a struggle.” He turned and winked at Maggie. “But this lovely lady is helping to keep me fed.”

“The lady definitely knows her way around a baking pan. Have you tried her brownies?” Sean's eyes held warmth and welcome, not a question in sight.

Maggie expelled the anxious breath.

“Well, I don't believe I have, son.” He turned back to Maggie. “Will you be making those for Sean and Jane's big brouhaha next week? I guess I could try one there. Bitsy never corrects my eating in public.”

“You're going to the Policemen's Ball, Mr. Grey?”

Other books

Convincing Arthur by Ava March
Broom with a View by Twist, Gayla, Naifeh, Ted
I Love You Again by Kate Sweeney
Until I Saw Your Smile by J.J. Murray
Lawman's Pleasure (sWet) by Karland, Marteeka
Hot Item by Carly Phillips
Singled Out by Virginia Nicholson
My Unfair Lady by Kathryne Kennedy