When Rebecca emailed me about this promotion, asking if I wouldn't mind blogging about it, I didn't hesistate to say yes. I read Christmas at the Gingerbread Cafe last year, and loved it, and I would urge you to take advantage while it is FREE to download it, and prepare to be hungry while reading!
Christmas at the Gingerbread Café Free eBook!
To celebrate the release of the Gingerbread Café series being published in paperback on Friday the 22nd of October, my publisher, Carina UK have made the first eBook in the series free on all eBook retailers in the UK for a limited time!
Please grab a festive eBook for FREE!
UK http://amzn.to/1FeqENt
Nook http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/christmas-at-the-gingerbread-caf-rebecca-raisin/1117719619?ean=9781472073785
iBooks https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/christmas-at-gingerbread-cafe/id1024605643?mt=11
Kobo http://www.whsmith.co.uk/products/christmas-at-the-gingerbread-caf�-once-in-a-lifetime-the-gingerbread-cafe-book-1-/9781472073785
Sainsbury’s https://www.sainsburysentertainment.co.uk/ebooks/Christmas-at-the-Gingerbread-Caf-Once-in-a-Lifetime-The-Gingerbread-Cafe-Book-1-/Rebecca-Raisin/9781472073785
CHAPTER ONE
Christmas at the Gingerbread Café Free eBook!
To celebrate the release of the Gingerbread Café series being published in paperback on Friday the 22nd of October, my publisher, Carina UK have made the first eBook in the series free on all eBook retailers in the UK for a limited time!
Please grab a festive eBook for FREE!
UK http://amzn.to/1FeqENt
Nook http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/christmas-at-the-gingerbread-caf-rebecca-raisin/1117719619?ean=9781472073785
iBooks https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/christmas-at-gingerbread-cafe/id1024605643?mt=11
Kobo http://www.whsmith.co.uk/products/christmas-at-the-gingerbread-caf�-once-in-a-lifetime-the-gingerbread-cafe-book-1-/9781472073785
Sainsbury’s https://www.sainsburysentertainment.co.uk/ebooks/Christmas-at-the-Gingerbread-Caf-Once-in-a-Lifetime-The-Gingerbread-Cafe-Book-1-/Rebecca-Raisin/9781472073785
CHAPTER ONE
Amazing Grace blares out from the speakers above me,
and I cry, not delicate, pretty tears, but great big heaves that will puff up
my eyes, like a blowfish. That song touches me, always has, always will. With
one hand jammed well and truly up the turkey’s behind I sing those mellifluous
words as if I’m preaching to a choir. Careful, so my tears don’t swamp the damn
bird, I grab another handful of aromatic stuffing. My secret recipe: a mix of
pork sausage, pecans, cranberries and crumbled corn bread. Punchy flavors that will
seep into the flesh and make your heart sing. The song reaches its crescendo,
and my tears turn into a fully-fledged blubber-fest. The doorbell jangles and I
realize I can’t wipe my face with my messy hands. Frantic, I try and compose
myself as best I can.
“Jesus Mother
o’ Mary, ain’t no customers comin’ in here with this kinda carry-on! It’s been
two years since that damn fool left you. When you gonna move on, my sweet
cherry blossom?”
CeeCee. My only
employee at the Gingerbread Café, a big, round, southern black woman, who tells
it like it is. Older than me by a couple of decades, more like a second mother
than anything. Bless her heart.
“Oh, yeah?” I
retort. “How are you expecting me to move on? I still love the man.”
“He ain’t no
man. A man wouldn’t never cheat on his wife. He’s a boy, playing at being a
man.”
“You’re right
there.” Still, it’s been two lonely years, and I ache for him. There’s no
accounting for what the heart feels. I’m heading towards the pointy end of my
twenties. By now, I should be raising babies like all the other girls in town,
not baking gingerbread families in lieu of the real thing.
I’m distracted
from my heartbreak by CeeCee cackling like a witch. She puts her hands on her
hips, which are hidden by the dense parka she wears, and doubles over. While
she’s hooting and hollering, I stare, unsure of what’s so damn amusing. “Are
you finished?” I ask, arching my eyebrows.
This starts her
off again, and she’s leg slapping, cawing, the whole shebang.
“It’s just…”
She looks at me, and wipes her weeping eyes. “You look a sight. Your hand
shoved so far up the rear of that turkey, like you looking for the meaning of
life, your boohooing, this sad old music. Golly.”
“This is your
music, CeeCee. Your gospel CD.”
She colors. “I
knew that. It’s truly beautiful, beautiful, it is.”
“Thought you
might say that.” I grin back. CeeCee’s church is the most important thing in
her life, aside from her family, and me.
“Where we up
to?” she says, taking off her parka, which is dusted white from snow. Carefully,
she shakes the flakes into the sink before hanging her jacket on the coat rack
by the fire.
“I’m stuffing
these birds, and hoping to God someone’s going to buy them. Where’s the rush?
Two and a bit weeks before Christmas we’re usually run off our feet.”
CeeCee wraps an
apron around her plump frame. “It’ll happen, Lil. Maybe everyone’s just
starting a little later this year, is all.” She shrugs, and goes to the sink to
wash her hands.
“I don’t
remember it ever being this quiet. No catering booked at all over the holidays,
aside from the few Christmas parties we’ve already done. Don’t you think that’s
strange?”
“So, we push
the café more, maybe write up the chalkboard with the fact you’re selling
turkeys already stuffed.” This provokes another gale of laughter.
“This is going
to be you in a minute—” I indicate to the bird “—so I don’t see what’s so darn
amusing.”
“Give me that
bowl, then.”
We put the
stuffing mix between us and hum along to Christmas music while we work. We
decorated the café almost a month ago now. Winter has set in. The grey skies
are a backdrop for our flashing Christmas lights that adorn the windows.
Outside, snow drifts down coating the window panes and it’s so cozy I want to
snuggle by the fire and watch the world go by. Glimmering red and green baubles
hang from the ceiling, and spin like disco balls each time a customer blows in.
A real tree holds up the corner; the smell from the needles, earth and pine,
seeps out beneath the shiny decorations.
In pride of
place, sitting squarely in the bay window, is our gingerbread house. It’s four
feet high, with red and white candy-cane pillars holding up the thatched roof.
There’s a wide chimney, decorated with green and red jelly beans, ready for
Santa to climb down. And the white chocolate front door has a wreath made from
spun sugar. In the garden, marshmallow snowmen gaze cheerfully out from under
their hats. If you look inside the star-shaped window, you can see a
gingerbread family sitting beside a Christmas tree. The local children come in
droves to ogle it, and CeeCee is always quick to invite them in for a cup of
cocoa, out of the cold.
I opened up the
Gingerbread Café a few years back, but the town of Ashford is only a blip on
the map of Connecticut, so I run a catering business to make ends meet. We
cater for any party, large or small, and open the café during the week to sell
freshly made cakes, pies, and whatever CeeCee’s got a hankering for. But we
specialize in anything ginger. Gingerbread men, cookies, beverages, you name
it, we’ve made it. You can’t get any more comforting than a concoction of
golden syrup, butter, and ginger baking in the oven in the shape of little
bobble-headed people. The smell alone will transport you back to childhood.
CeeCee’s the
best pie maker I’ve ever known. They sell out as quickly as we can make them.
But pies alone won’t keep me afloat.
“So, you hear
anything about that fine-looking thing, from over the road?” CeeCee asks.
“What fine
thing?”
She rolls her
eyes dramatically. “Damon, his name is. The one opening up the new shop,
remember? You know who I mean. We went over there to peek just the other day.”
“I haven’t
heard boo about him. And who cares, anyhow?”
“You sure as
hell wouldn’t be bent over dead poultry, leaking from those big blue eyes of
yours, if he was snuggled in your bed at night.”
I gasp and
pretend to be outraged. “CeeCee! Maybe you could keep him warm—you ever think
of that?”
“Oh, my. If I
was your age, I’d be over there lickety-split. But I ain’t and he might be just
the distraction you need.”
“Pfft. The only
distraction I need is for that cash register to start opening and closing on
account of it filling with cold hard cash.”
“You could fix
up those blond curls of yours, maybe paint your nails. You ain’t got time to
dilly-dally. Once the girls in town catch on, he’s gonna be snapped right up,”
says CeeCee, clicking her fingers.
“They can have
him. I still love Joel.”
CeeCee shakes
her head and mumbles to herself. “That’s about the dumbest thing I ever heard.
You know he’s moved on.”
I certainly do.
There’s no one in this small town of ours that doesn’t know. He sure as hell
made a mockery of me. Childhood sweethearts, until twenty-three months, four
days and, oh, five hours ago. He’s made a mistake, and he’ll come back, I just
know it. Money’s what caused it, or lack thereof. He’s gone, hightailed it out
of town with some redheaded bimbo originally from Kentucky. She’s got more
money than Donald Trump, and that’s why if you ask me. We lost our house after
his car yard went belly up, and I nearly lost my business.
“Lookie here,”
CeeCee says. “I think we’re about to get our first customer.”
The doorbell
jangles, and in comes Walt, who sells furniture across the way.
“Morning,
ladies.” He takes off his almost-threadbare earmuff hat. I’ve never seen Walt
without the damn thing, but he won’t hear a word about it. It’s his lucky hat,
he says. Folks round here have all sorts of quirks like that.
“Hey, Walt,” I
say. “Sure is snowing out there.”
“That it is.
Mulled-wine weather if you ask me.”
CeeCee washes
her hands, and dries them on her apron. “We don’t have none of that, but I can
fix you a steaming mug of gingerbread coffee, Walt. Surely will warm those
hands o’ yours. How’d you like that?”
“Sounds mighty
nice,” he says, edging closer to the fire. The logs crackle and spit, casting
an orange glow over Walt’s ruddy face.
Or a paperback version here
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