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Authors: Meg Donohue

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BOOK: How to Eat a Cupcake
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Pride forced me to cross back through the foyer and join the party. Already, the St. Clairs' large, formal living room was alive with rustling silk dresses, clinking crystal glasses of Napa-grown liquid gold, and darting, black-suited waitstaff. Everyone looked perfect: toned and tan and dentally enhanced. Apparently, there was a dentist in Palm Springs offering a special on poolside teeth bleaching and no one had bothered to tell me. I felt a bit like I had wandered into a camp for rich grown-ups and everyone had just transitioned from a mildly robust day of water activities to the mess hall, except instead of canoes there were yachts, and instead of a mess hall there was a chandelier-studded, velvet-draped great room with multimillion-dollar views.

Do any of these people actually eat?
I wondered, lamenting the thought of trays of cupcakes with single bites removed being dumped into trash bags at the end of the night. When I was offered a glass of wine, I gratefully accepted it and made a beeline for one of the three sets of French doors that opened onto an enormous slate patio.

It was among the final days of June, just past the longest day of the year, and remarkably clear and warm for a San Francisco evening. The heat lamps on the patio hadn't even been ignited yet. Again, that view: shimmering bay, bridge the color of red velvet cake, sun just beginning to turn the sky a startling shade of peach above the Presidio's gray-green slope of eucalyptus trees. To the south, the island prison of Alcatraz rose somberly out of the water; I wondered if the sight of it made some white-collar criminal who might be living in Pacific Heights sweat a little as he swilled his five-o'clock martini. Stifling a grin, I leaned over the edge of the railing, drank in the view, and then drank down my wine.

“Annie! It
is
you, isn't it?”

That voice. I spun around. Before me stood Julia St. Clair. Tall and willowy, she had cut her shiny curtain of blond hair so that it fell razor-straight and ended bluntly at her shoulders, making her look sophisticated and vaguely Parisian. Her face, under the stylish hairdo, was as placidly beautiful as ever.

“Julia!” I said, feeling my calves tense. It was something that happened to me when I was anxious, as though my body, of which I only required running when I was late for a bus, nevertheless managed to tap into a biological instinct for flight.
Just being near this woman
, my legs seemed to be warning,
decreases your chance of survival!

Julia hugged me, enveloping me in her rose-petal scent. “You look surprised. My mom didn't tell you I'd be here?”

“No,” I said coolly. “She didn't.”

Julia either didn't notice or chose to ignore my tone. “Funny. Well, I'm living at home now.
For
now, I should clarify.” She smiled, glancing down at the sparkler on her left hand. “I'm engaged. Couldn't bear the thought of planning a California wedding all the way from New York City, so here I am. We're getting married up at the vineyard in the spring.”

Actually, Lolly
had
mentioned that Julia was engaged. Her fiancé's name was Wesley something-or-other, a Silicon Valley whiz kid. What Lolly hadn't mentioned was that Julia was back in San Francisco.
Sneaky lady!
I thought.
Hell, downright Machiavellian
. I had to give credit where credit was due.

“Congratulations,” I said, keeping my voice neutral even as my tongue went dry in my mouth. Seeing Julia brought me back to a time when rumors had buzzed around me as dark and thick as a cloud of flies. “That's great news.”

“I know, thanks. God, Annie, how long has it been? Ten years? Not since, I guess . . .” Julia faltered and I didn't jump in to save her, enjoying the rare crack in her confidence. But then she shook her hair back and plowed forward. “Not since your mother's funeral.”

“That's right.”

We were both silent for a long moment, looking out at the bay.

“I miss her,” Julia said.

I looked over sharply. There was something plaintive in her voice, a quiet desperation I couldn't help feeling was about more than my mother's death. Julia St. Clair had always had the type of serene, classic beauty that practically begged to be studied, and I tried to view my onetime friend through the eyes of a stranger. Her features were understated, less dramatic than her mother's, more pretty than glamorous; she had the look of someone who had never known less than eight hours of sleep per night, who opened her eyes each morning to the smell of lilacs and lattes, who wrapped herself in a cashmere blanket when she flew first class to Rome, which was often. Her nose was patrician, long and thin, but not
too
long or
too
thin, her skin a flawless shade of cream that had never been blemished by a pimple. At twenty-eight, there were no traces of burgeoning laugh lines around her rosy lips or true-blue eyes, but I knew that I myself had made Julia laugh countless times when we were children—a loud, infectious belly laugh that broke her composed face into an unexpectedly cockeyed, cat-got-the-bird grin.

Of course, that was back when I still cared about making Julia happy, before I realized that the person releasing that peal of laughter was a manipulative, lying, cruel young woman who was trying her damnedest to ruin my life.

“Anyway,” Julia said, turning to face me. “It's really good to see you again.” The way Julia said these words—with equal parts earnestness and surprise, as though she could hardly believe them herself—set my teeth on edge. She hesitated, a shadow passing over her face, and seemed on the verge of saying more. But then, just as a heaping tablespoon of curiosity was being mixed into the complicated and fairly toxic concoction of feelings I had for Julia, we were interrupted by the voice of the very man who, once upon a time, had put one of the first nails in the coffin of our friendship.

“Well, look at the two of you!” I heard from behind me. “If someone had told me this shindig was going to be a reunion of the prettiest girls from Devon Prep, I would have gotten here a lot sooner.”

Coming from anyone else, this line would have sounded smarmy. But coming from Jake Logan—Jake Logan of the blue-green eyes, the puckish smile revealing that ever-so-slight gap between his front teeth, and the impossibly adorable dimples—the line produced in me a feeling I could only, and not without embarrassment, describe as puppylike in its unchecked delight. I know, I know: how cliché to fawn over a grown man with dimples. But!
He called me pretty!
I might as well have wagged my tail and rolled over.

How was it that ten years after graduating from high school, I still had a crush on Jake Logan? He'd been one of those kids who'd probably avoided an attention deficit disorder diagnosis by a year or two, always bouncing from one activity to the next, quick-witted and effortlessly talented at ostensibly everything and acutely, though somehow not obnoxiously, aware of his charm. Standing before me now, he didn't seem much changed from his teenage self—perhaps a bit broader through the chest and shoulders, a little more poise in his easy stance, a steadier hold to his gaze. But men nearly always age annoyingly well, don't they?

My stomach did a not-so-little flip. Why the hell had I decided to wear that
stupid
purple tunic? Julia, of course, had on a strapless navy miniskirted dress that might as well have been a field hockey uniform for all of the casual confidence she emitted.
Round two: Julia
, I thought. Jake Logan, after all, was Julia's ex-boyfriend. The whole surreal scenario called desperately for more wine. I grabbed another glass from a passing waiter and was surprised to see Julia do the same. Julia had never been much of a drinker in high school, though of course we were underage at the time. Not that that had ever stopped me.

“I can't believe my mother still has you on her invite list after that de Young Museum gala when you got so drunk you knocked over the champagne fountain!” Julia said to Jake, laughing as she touched his sleeve.

“Please,” Jake stage-whispered. “You're blowing my cover in front of Annie! She hasn't seen me in ages. There's a sliver of hope that she might think I'm all grown up and responsible now.”

“Not a chance, Jake Logan. I've got your number,” I said. I looked down pointedly at his feet. “No one who wears flip-flops with a suit is grown-up and responsible. A peddler of surfboards to i-bankers? Perhaps. Responsible? 'Fraid not.”

Jake laughed. Now I saw that the skin around his blue-green eyes crinkled in a new way. His dimples shone through a light brown scruff he could never have grown in high school. If anything, the changes made him more attractive.

“Touché. Note to self: Lose the suit.” He clinked his wineglass lightly against mine. “So, Ms. Quintana, other than cutting overconfident men down to size, what have you been up to these last ten years?”

Wait.
Was it possible that Jake Logan was actually flirting with me? Before I had a chance to answer him, Julia jumped in.

“Annie's a pastry chef.” She turned to me. “A
fabulous
one. I tried one of your cupcakes already. That lemon one—it's pure summertime. Remember when you were seven and the thing you truly wanted most in the world was a cupcake? You weren't thinking about world peace, or the economy, or, I don't know,
life
. . . you just wanted something delicious and special and homemade. Remember?”

And there goes Julia's third sheet
, I thought as wind swept the patio.

“I'm pretty sure all
I
ever truly wanted was a snake, but maybe that's a boy thing,” Jake said. His amused gaze lingered for a moment on Julia, making me wonder just how many of his old feelings for her remained. Then he looked at me, and for a brief moment I benefited from all the warmth that had built in his eyes as he'd gazed at Julia. “So these cupcakes,” he asked, “are they . . . Ecuadorean?”

I couldn't believe he remembered where my mom was from. When I tried to recall the few interactions I'd had with Jake during high school, what immediately surfaced was the memory of being stung by his look of contempt during my humiliating walk to the principal's office near the end of that devastating final year at Devon Prep. Prior to that, I suppose he had occasionally taken a benign interest in me, but nothing strong enough to risk breaking rank with Devon's dominant crowd. I only made a couple of friends in high school: Jody, the poet who had terrible acne and a tendency to mutter, “This is
definitely
going in my collection” whenever classmates snickered at her dorky, overeager comments; and Penelope, the painfully shy pianist whose face turned a remarkable shade of ground chuck each and every time a teacher called on her. Yup, it was the artsy-fartsy girls and me getting by together as best we could all those years. After the rumors about me started, though, even Jody and Penelope couldn't risk association, and I didn't really blame them. That was the year loneliness gave my sense of humor a run for its money.

“Not exactly,” I told Jake now. “There isn't a long Ecuadorean cupcake tradition for me to draw on. I guess it's in the genes though. My mom was a wonderful baker.”

“So it runs in the family. And now you're a pastry chef.”

“I actually work very hard to eschew labels,” I said. “I am quite literally the most accomplished eschewer of labels you'll ever meet. But if you called me a baker, the pretension police
might
look the other way. I make desserts and breakfast treats for the Valencia Street Bakery in the Mission. It's a hole-in-the-wall. And I walk people's dogs. We must not forget the dogs.”

“Never,” Jake said solemnly.

“You're being too modest,” Julia jumped in. “Those cupcakes . . . really, they're delicious. I'm so impressed.”

I looked at her and allowed a beat of silence to pass before saying, reluctantly, “Thanks.”

I was having trouble knowing what to make of Julia's apparent kindness. If she realized how bizarre it was for three of us to be chatting away like merrily reunited old friends, she certainly wasn't letting on. Did she really not remember what she'd done to me? How she'd turned on me in the years leading up to my mother's death? How her actions had changed the course of my life and caused irreparable damage to my relationship with my mother? What she'd said at the funeral? I shook my head, irritated to find myself rehashing the events of that year after I'd spent so much time working to put it all securely in the past, and excused myself as tactfully as a short woman with two large glasses of wine snaking through her veins was capable of doing. I had nearly reached the living room when I heard Julia's laughter, a loud, flirty, artificial sound that hung in the warm night air. I glanced back. Her hand was touching Jake's arm, their foreheads mere inches apart.
Awfully close for a happily engaged woman
, I thought as I turned and made my way out of that house, determined, yet again, that it would be the last time I allowed myself to be pulled into the duplicitous world of the St. Clair family.

T
he St. Clairs' squat, stucco carriage house sat flush against the city sidewalk at the front of their property and served as the final line of defense between the public and the mansion. A garage and gated porte cochere formed the lower half of the carriage house; the top floor contained the two-bedroom apartment my mother and I had lived in for so many years. Leaving the mansion and its still-crowded party behind me, feeling the courtyard's uneven cobblestones below my feet, and walking up those familiar steps to the carriage house apartment prompted a dizzying wave of déjà vu to wash over me. I found the key in its usual spot underneath a stone duck beside the door and slid it into the lock. Stepping inside, I flipped on the lights and sucked in my breath.

BOOK: How to Eat a Cupcake
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