Chapter 19
L
eilani picked up the filled pastry bag and aimed it at the first row of cupcakes. The stereo was blasting out the theme to
Mission Impossible
. She made a face as the opening riff crescendoed into the staccato beat of the refrain. It was an impossible mission, apparently, because she wasn’t feeling the least bit better knowing she had two hundred cupcakes to fill or pipe frosting onto before opening that day. “No salvation cakes for you.”
So what else was new?
She felt her phone vibrate in her pocket. Only one person would be calling her this early in the morning. She put down the pastry bag, clicked the mute button on the stereo remote, then put the phone on speaker.
“Morning, Charlotte.”
“So?” was all she said. A single word, but loaded with anticipation.
Lani knew exactly what she was referring to. “I told you yesterday, it’s not going to happen. He’s not going to call.”
“Damn him,” Charlotte swore. “I know they got back in the city from the Lancaster taping yesterday. Well, I know Baxter did. Carlo gets back tomorrow. He went to visit his mother first. I thought for certain—”
“You thought. But I knew. We don’t talk, Char. We text. We e-mail. But we never talk. We’re ... pen pals. Friends.”
Charlotte’s response to that was language so blue even Lani was shocked.
“Did you just say—”
“Damn straight I did. It was one thing, when he was on the road, for you two to play at this silly game—”
“It’s not a silly game.”
Okay, so it was definitely a game
, Lani conceded,
but there was nothing silly about it.
It was all her fault. She’d said no communication, but then she’d gone and caved first. She’d made it three whole days. Then she’d texted him. Just to make sure he’d landed in Texas okay. Or that’s what she told herself. And to thank him, for being strong enough for both of them to walk away, end it right, so they could be okay with it. Move on. He’d texted her back that he was fine and that it was good to hear from her.
And that’s how it had started. They’d sent notes, all anecdotal, about what was going on. Never anything personal, never anything emotional. Just ... two people, two friends ... staying in touch. She’d e-mailed him a scanned copy of one of Alva’s more ... incendiary articles, and he’d responded with an attached file of his appearance doing the Top Ten List on Letterman. She’d sent him the front page photo of Laura Jo and Felipe’s engagement announcement. And he’d texted her with photos of some of the strangest regional desserts she’d ever seen ... along with photos of every “Biggest Ball of Yarn” and “Worlds Largest Prairie Dog” type things he’d discovered as he crisscrossed the country in his decked out tour bus.
A friendship. A good one. She was proud of herself for how mature they were being about the whole thing—which is what she said to Charlotte. “We’re being grown-ups about this. Taking the good from what we had here, the part we can keep.”
“Then why is it that two mature grown-ups can’t talk on the phone?”
Lani didn’t answer that, because anything she said was going to be as lame out loud as it sounded in her head. They’d never come out and said phone calls were verboten. They just ... never called.
As long as it was just words on a screen, or photos—not one of which included either of them, except for his Top Ten appearance—she could handle being friends. It beat losing him forever. Thankfully there hadn’t been any tape of show footage sent to her, or she knew she’d have watched it in an ongoing loop. Every day. And night. This way, she could just smile at his texts, feel connected to him, and ... not think about the rest.
“Except you don’t sleep well, you’re not eating right, you don’t seem to be enjoying your life.”
“I do, too, enjoy my life. I love my life. That’s the one thing that hasn’t changed, and thank God for that.”
“In the way you cling to it like a teddy bear for security, yes, you love it. But I don’t know if the love affair is so healthy anymore.”
Lani fell silent, and Charlotte did, too. Finally, Lani gave voice to the thing that had been eating away at her for nine long weeks. “I miss him, Char. I miss him so much I can barely stand it. It’s like I’m not breathing now. Not deeply and fully. It’s like I can only take shallow breaths, so I can hold it all together, and not fall completely apart.” She blew out a shaky breath. “There. I said it.”
“Good. What are you going to do about it?”
Lani didn’t bother pretending she hadn’t been giving it plenty of thought. It was all she thought about. “I-I don’t know. Exactly. I don’t want to give up the shop, but I don’t want to be pen pals with him. I don’t think I can handle it much longer. So, I either have to cut that off ...”
“Or?”
She took a breath, then just blurted it out. “Or ... start the process of closing the shop and moving back to New York. I don’t want to run a place there, but I am thinking maybe of catering. I know that will be a slow start, but I can’t leave here immediately, so I’ll have time to book in advance and hopefully hit the ground running.” She held her breath, waiting for the squeals of happiness and joy that were surely to follow her capitulation. After all, that meant she was also going back to Charlotte.
Instead, her announcement was met with total, deafening silence.
“Did you hear what I said?”
“I did. And you sounded quite miserable about it. Like a woman walking to the gallows.” Her accent was becoming more pronounced as the conversation continued and Lani knew she was far more upset than she was letting on.
And, the bitch of it was ... Charlotte was right. Lani wasn’t remotely enthusiastic about the idea. But it was all she had. “Well, what the hell do you want me to do then?”
“Selfishly, I was hoping to hear those exact words ... but with actual enthusiasm. How can I be happy about saying I told you so if I think you’re miserable?”
Lani smiled at that, even though she was still upset. “Well, you’re right, I’m not super excited about it, but I keep telling myself that being with Baxter will make it all doable. Who knows, I hated being on set, on camera, and he made that fun. Maybe he’ll make me feel enthusiastic about catering. Or being a private chef. I don’t know. I don’t care what I do. Whatever ends up working. As long as we’re together.”
“What about Sugarberry? I don’t mean the shop, I mean—”
“I know what you mean.” Lani sighed and slumped a little against the worktable. “I don’t know, Char. I just know I’m miserable here without him, so I at least want to—need to—try to be away from here with him. I don’t know what else to do.” She jumped when a knock came at the back door. “Oh God, not now.”
“What?” Charlotte asked.
“Knock at the door. This early, it has to be Alva. Since she started doing her column, she got Dwight to give her her own desk at the paper. I think she’s in there before sunrise every day. She even has an old-fashioned newspaper visor, only it’s lavender.”
“Hasn’t she been baking with you a few nights a week, after hours? How does a woman her age operate on no sleep?”
“I don’t know, but if she can find a way to bottle it, she’ll die a very wealthy woman. And I’ll be the first to buy stock. I’ll call you back.” She disconnected and slipped the phone into her pocket.
“It was unlocked. I hope you don’t mind.”
Lani spun around so fast she had to grip the worktable to keep from sliding straight to the floor. “Baxter?”
He smiled, but it didn’t quite reach his eyes. “Who else barges into your kitchen before daybreak? Bad ’abit, I know.”
Her heart was beating so fast, it seemed to interfere with her ability to process what her eyes were seeing. But, even so, she’d heard the slip of the accent. “Is something wrong? Did something happen? Is someone hurt? Are you okay?”
The smile took on a semblance of his trademark grin then. “No, no, luv, no worries on that. We’re all fine. Everyone’s fine.” He fidgeted, shifting his weight. “That’s no’ entirely true. I’m no’ fine. No’ fine atall.”
“Baxter—”
“I know we agreed. No future, no way. And I appreciate, more than you know, your willingness to keep the lines of communication open. That’s been the only thing that’s kept me sane, I think. But it’s—I don’t know if I can—”
“I don’t know if I can, either,” she said, finishing for him. “It’s been my lifeline, too. But I think ... I think it’s strangling my heart, Baxter. I don’t think I can just be friends with you.” Her voice cracked on the last part.
“I know,” he said. “It’s the same for me.”
In that moment, Lani knew what her choice was. She loved Sugarberry, she loved her father, she loved her shop, and all of her customers. But she loved Baxter more. How was it she hadn’t already figured out what, in that moment, seemed so very, very simple?
“Well, I’ve been thinking,” she began, in case he was there to tell her it was over and done and no more texting, no more e-mailing. Though, he could have just stopped writing back. Couldn’t he? She tried to keep her heart from beating straight out of her chest, but she couldn’t keep the tremor from her voice. “In fact, I was just telling Charlotte. I—I’m thinking I want to come back to New York. Cater. Maybe private chef. I don’t know. It will take time to get out from under this, see if I can break my lease, I don’t know. But—”
“You don’t really want to come back, do you?” he asked.
She didn’t think she’d ever heard him sound so dead serious. For once, she couldn’t read his every emotion on his face, either. In fact, he was more or less expressionless at the moment. “What I want ...” She took a breath, and just put it out there. “What I want is you. And you’re in New York. I’ll always love Sugarberry, but my father is here, so I have an excuse to come down and visit, holidays and whatnot.”
“You said you told Charlotte. Have you told him?”
“My father? No, not yet.”
“Good.”
Her heart fell. “Oh.”
Baxter crossed the room, and she would have scrambled away from his touch if she’d anticipated the sudden move. It was hard enough just looking at him while he turned her offer down. Touching him would be nothing short of painful.
“Good, because I’m in a bit of a dilemma, and I was ’opin’ you could help me out.”
“What are you talking about?”
“We finished taping the next season.”
“I know,” she said, confused. “We’ve been texting about it. Nonstop.”
“Right, right. Well, I’ve had an offer come my way, and I’m very excited about it, but it will mean expanding the time between seasons—which we’ve been discussing anyway. We started doing two seasons a year because it was a good way to launch, and build momentum, but the show’s been established pretty well. We’ve discussed making the season longer by a few episodes, and only doing one stretch a year—which will give me time for this other project.”
“Which is?”
“I’ve been asked to do a series of cookbooks. One geared to my viewers, home cooks, with recipes they can try in their own kitchens. And another geared toward teaching home cooks how to be chefs, but in layman’s terms. There’s also talk of doing one based on the road tour stops, but the publisher wants to see how the first two work out.”
“That’s—that’s amazing,” she said, surprised, but thrilled for him. “They’re going to do great. It’s a perfect fit for you.”
“I thought so, too. Thing is ... I need a kitchen.”
“You have several.”
“A private kitchen. One where I can test recipes and work on what I’m going to include in the books, how I’m going to convey them in writing, so anyone can do them. I have six months to get started on them, maybe complete one, before I’ll have to stop and break to tape the next season.”
“Six months,” she repeated, as her heart tripped all over the place. “So ... what are you saying, Baxter?”
He was standing quite close, but he put his hands, those beautiful big warm hands she’d never thought she’d feel again, on her cheeks. “I’m saying I want to use your kitchen. At the cottage, or I could install one upstairs. I don’t care where, but I need space, and peace and quiet, and I need you. By my side.”
“To help with the cookbooks?”
“To help me breathe,” he said. “Lei, I can’t catch my breath anymore. I feel like I’m paddlin’ water and about to drown anyway. I need you in my life. It was bad the first time you left New York, but now ... I can’t breathe.”
“I-I just said the same thing. To Charlotte.”
For the first time, his eyes lit up, and his grin appeared. You’ll let me back into your life!”
“Baxter, you never really left it.”
He scooped her up and spun her around.
“But wait, wait,” she said, laughing, wanting to leap right over the moon with him. “I’m—I don’t understand it all. Are you just going to be here for six months? Because—”
“No. I have six months clear from the studio. Then I’ll have to tape, which will take about three months.”