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Authors: Susan Bishop Crispell

The Secret Ingredient of Wishes (16 page)

BOOK: The Secret Ingredient of Wishes
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Rachel shielded her eyes from the sun with her hand. Their heads bobbed up and down, side to side as they ate. “They're not allowed to use their hands?” she asked.

Catch fanned herself with a piece of cardboard she ripped from one of the pie boxes. “It's not called the Ultimate Pie Face-Off for nothing.”

They watched, the clock counting silently down as the crowd began chanting names and encouragement. She and Catch joined in, urging Ashe on. She yelled louder when Everley squeezed in beside her and started screaming Jamie's name. Rachel's cheeks hurt from smiling.

With ten seconds left, the noise from the crowd ratcheted up a few more decibels, as if the added volume could give the contestants a final burst of speed.

With five seconds left, the words melded into an unintelligible rhythm that pulsed urgent and hot through the air.

With three seconds left, Ashe pushed back from the table, grinning as purple sauce dripped off his chin.

With one second left, Rachel had the overwhelming urge to kiss him.

*   *   *

She hadn't been able to shake the feeling twenty minutes later and was thankful Ashe was too busy waiting on the final scores and getting cleaned up to come find her. She couldn't pinpoint when the attraction had taken hold. Until a few days before he'd just been a good-looking, charming guy she flirted with, knowing it probably wouldn't go anywhere. But then Catch had made her wish. Now she couldn't stop herself from wondering what it would be like to kiss him.

She told herself it wasn't real. The universe wouldn't let her be the person who would make Ashe happy. Not after everything she'd done.

“Stupid, stupid, stupid
,
” she repeated under her breath, willing herself to just forget about Ashe and how she felt when she looked at him. But her feelings for him had already started to take root, and it had nothing to do with a wish. She couldn't help but think what he felt for her was real too.

She focused on helping Catch dish out slice after slice to the line of customers that snaked around the park. There was no end in sight and that was fine with her. If she was dealing with people and pie, she wasn't thinking about Ashe.

*   *   *

It took more than two hours for the line to dwindle down enough that Rachel could see a definite end. Every time she thought they were about to run out of pie, Catch dragged another box from the trailer.

“No wonder you've looked so run-down lately. Do you ever sleep?” she asked.

“I look just fine, Miss I-Got-All-Dolled-Up-and-Now-Everyone-Else-Looks-Like-Crap,” Catch snapped.

“I didn't mean—”

“I know what you meant. Old ladies just don't like to hear that they're getting old.” She lowered herself into a canvas chair and propped her feet on an overturned bucket. “We're winding down, so I'm gonna head home soon. You should go find some people your own age. Get some use out of that dress.”

She thought of Ashe, then of how exhausted Catch looked. How she'd found Catch asleep in the kitchen more than once, cheeks hollowed out and her skin so pale she looked half-dead. She hoped it was just normal signs of aging like Catch said. The alternative wasn't something she even wanted to consider. “I don't mind sticking around here for a little longer.”

Catch backhanded her on the thigh. “Don't make me tell you twice.”

Rachel rubbed a hand over her stinging skin. She slipped on her shoes and left before Catch could smack her again.

The band had changed several times during the afternoon from bluegrass to country and back again. The barbecue tents transitioned from food to beer. The people, however, were still everywhere. She maneuvered around them, slipping through small pockets of space between groups.

“Oh, Rachel,” Lola called out in a singsong voice. She darted around the person she'd been talking with and latched on to Rachel's arm, pulling her to a stop. “Do you have a minute?”

Rachel freed her arm with a sharp tug. “I was just on my way to—”

“I'm sure no one'll mind if you're a teensy bit late. This'll just take a minute.”

Rachel contemplated walking away, but she knew Lola would follow her until she'd said her piece. Staring at Lola, she waited.

“As crazy as it might seem, you and I have something in common.”

“A strong dislike for each other?” Rachel said.

“No, we both have things we don't want everybody and their mother to know. I'd like to think we could help each other out. I know who you are. And that some people might say you're bat-shit crazy.” Lola scanned the crowd, then continued in a voice so low Rachel had to strain to hear, “I know about the hospital. All those years of therapy must have been hard.” Lola looked at Rachel the way a mother might look at a disappointed child, knowing full well they weren't going to get what they wanted.

Rachel took a step back, her mind racing for some explanation for how Lola could know about what she'd been through. She wanted to lie, to say Lola was wrong, but she could only manage a stunned, “How?”

“I probably wouldn't have made the connection, but I was thinking about the things from my past I wish I could change and had this flash of a memory about my sister. She was in that hospital too. I went with my parents to visit her once, when they thought she might've been getting better and wanted to bring her home. But Mary Beth didn't want to leave, and they wouldn't let me go back.”

Mary Beth
. Rachel's heart pounded so hard she wondered how Lola didn't hear it over the music from the band and the babble of voices roaring around them.

She should have been able to see it, though, the resemblance. Lola was more done up, but underneath the makeup and better-than-everyone attitude, the similarities were there. The deep brown eyes flecked with gold and heart-shaped faces offset with auburn hair.

Rachel assumed their smiles would be the same if Lola ever smiled and meant it.

“I know you know her. Mary Beth Beaumont?”

“I don't think so,” Rachel said. If she could just make Lola believe her, this could all blow over without anyone else getting pulled into it. “I think you've got me mixed up with someone else.” She took one step before Lola's clawlike fingers gripped her arm again.

Lola's smile was sharp when she held Rachel in place. “Now, you and I both know that you know her. Before she shut me out, she told me about you. How you wished away her nightmares and y'all became BFFs. I'd just hate for the whole town to know what you can do, because it might complicate the nice, quiet life you're trying to build here. But if you make a wish to get Ashe to forgive me, I'll make sure to keep that to myself.”

Rachel let Lola continue to hold her in place, let Lola think she was considering the blackmail though there was no way she could give Lola what she wanted. Wishing for Ashe to be happy was one thing, but doing what Lola was asking? That wouldn't be fair. She had to find a way to make this all go away. Quickly.

“Just so we're clear, you expect me to make him forget you cheated on him, that you threw away your marriage like it meant nothing? And in return you won't tell anyone that you think I'm some fairy godmother who goes around granting wishes?”

“I made a mistake. I love him, Rachel. And I just want him to remember that.” Lola loosened her grip as her expression deflated.

Rachel jerked away from her. She rubbed at the band of red circling her wrist. “Well, despite what you think, I can't help you.”
I won't. He doesn't deserve that.

“We'll see about that,” Lola said in her best Southern-belle tone. Her smooth smile slid back into place, covering all traces of her angry desperation.

A hand grazed Rachel's back, fingers skimming across the bare skin above her dress, making her jump.

“Everything okay?” Ashe asked.

Lola laughed. “We're just talking. Nothing to worry about.”

“Rachel?”

“It's nothing,” she said. Though it was anything but. Lola could ruin the life she was starting to build in Nowhere. Even if no one believed Lola about Rachel's wish ability, they would ask about her brother, her mom. And she didn't want to lie to anyone. Especially not Catch or Ashe. She forced a smile at Everley and Jamie as they approached, grateful for the distraction. “Hey, what are y'all up to?”

Everley tucked her arm through Lola's and held a plate of deep-fried something into the middle of their little circle. “I figured pie was out of the question after the contest, so I got enough fried Oreos and Reese's for all of us, though I don't know which is which. I expect each of you to eat one. And then we're all going to go find a place to watch the fireworks. Together. And we're all going to get along for the rest of the night, no ifs, ands, or buts about it.”

“I'm not sure deep-fried sweets have enough magic to make that come true,” Lola said to Everley, her voice as sweet as the treats on the tray. She flicked her gaze to Rachel, annoyance sparking in her eyes. “This town is full of mysteries. Secret-keeping pies and now mood-altering candy? Next thing you know, we'll find out that someone here can make our deepest wishes come true.”

“Funny,” Everley said. “Now eat. All of you.”

Grinning, Jamie grabbed two off the plate and popped one in his mouth whole. Ashe followed suit but handed his second one to Rachel. His fingers brushed against hers with just enough pressure for her to know he'd done it on purpose. When she smiled, it was only partly to convince him she was okay.

“You're staying for fireworks, right?” he asked her.

“Yeah, sounds fun,” she said.

Lola pulled away from Everley and gave Ashe a tight-lipped smile. “I understand you wanting to get back at me, Ashe. But at least have enough self-respect not to embarrass yourself in front of all of us.”

“Lola!” Everley said. “Happy chocolates, remember?” She shoved the last piece of dessert into Lola's hand.

“I can't stand here pretending to be happy when my husband's clearly not in his right mind. She's done something to him—wished for God knows what—so that he can't see how manipulative she is.”

Everley leaned into her friend and whispered, “You know you sound a little crazy, right?”

Rachel's fingers dug into the fried dough encasing the peanut butter cup she had yet to eat. Melted chocolate and peanut butter oozed out of a rip in the side and dribbled down her fingers. Everley offered her a napkin and an apologetic smile.
Just ignore her,
the smile said. But Lola's words roared in Rachel's ears.

“Stop it, Lola,” Ashe said.

“She's not who you think she is. If you knew the truth, you wouldn't be defending her.” Lola pointed at him, bits of greasy dough flaking off the fried candy as she jabbed at the air with it. Her red-painted lips pressed together, as if for just a second she considered keeping what she knew about Rachel to herself. “Just ask her about the wishes. See what she says.”

“Maybe we should get her out of the heat,” Jamie said to Everley, with a concerned look at Lola.

As Everley reached for her, Lola twisted away so she faced Ashe. “This has nothing to do with the heat and everything to do with Rachel ruining lives one wish at a time.”

“You want to talk about wishes? All right, fine.” Ashe shook off Jamie's restraining hand and scowled at him. Jamie held up his palms in resignation, muttering, “It was worth a shot” to Everley, who frowned at everyone. Ashe continued, ignoring the interruption. “I wish you would just eat that damn Oreo so it would shut you up for a change.”

Rachel stiffened, her free hand curling into a fist in the soft fabric of her dress. She stepped back as if she could run away from the wish, but Ashe's warm hand pressed between her shoulder blades stopped her. Holding her breath, she scanned the air for a slip of paper. The rest of the festival continued on around them, music pumping from the speakers and people dancing and laughing and drinking despite the hot waves of tension emanating from their small group.

A few seconds later, a flash of white appeared over Jamie's shoulder. She looked away from its lazy spiral, silently repeating,
Ignore it. Don't prove her right
. Ashe tapped his fingers on her back, drawing her attention from the wish.

“I think we're gonna go. Jamie, Ev, we'll catch up with y'all later,” he said and pulled away from Rachel long enough to give them both one-armed hugs. “You ready, Rachel?”

“Yep,” she said, already turning to leave. She couldn't get away from this wish quickly enough.

Then Everley pulled her back and into a full hug, putting Lola—and the wish that had caught in her hair—right at Rachel's eye level over Everley's shoulder. She squeezed her eyes shut, but the words had already registered.

She tried to think of something else—anything else—but her brain refused to comply. As if some small part of her thought Lola deserved whatever happened after threatening her and spilling her secrets.

Lola bit the Oreo in half and held up the remaining portion as proof that she had done what Ashe wanted. “Happy?” she asked him.

“Not yet,” Ashe said. He grabbed Rachel's hand to get her moving.

Watching Lola, she wondered how Mary Beth, one of the most selfless people she knew, could be related to someone so spiteful.

Lola ate the rest of the Oreo in one bite. She stopped mid-chew, her eyes darting from Ashe to Rachel. A strangled sound—something between a cough and a cry of pain—escaped the small part in her lips. Black crumbs rained down to stick on the flawless skin above the neckline of her dress.

“Lola?” Rachel asked, realizing the effect of the wish could cause serious harm. She reached out, her hand grazing Lola's forearm, but Lola jerked away from her.

Everley patted Lola's back a couple of times. “You're not supposed to inhale it, hon.”

BOOK: The Secret Ingredient of Wishes
4.93Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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