by Violet Duke
âAh, yes. Jason the spanakopita god. Nickâs learning from the best. I never thought Iâd come to love spinach butâ¦mmm.â
âI know. And Jacques has the bakery in the morning.â
âThat manâs talent amazes me. And his accent makes me giddy, although not nearly as giddy as those incredible fig cookies he makes. You know, he told me he puts a teaspoon ofââ
âGretchen! Stay with me here. And you have to work at Chocolate Heaven every afternoon, right?â
âThatâs true.â
âSo the general plan should work. I scheduled myself to do the opening shift and the next one. Rob has to do a midday shift and also close the shop.â
âSo, see, you can avoid him.â
Elizabeth sighed. âMaybe, but the problem is that twenty-four hours are nowhere near enough time for everything I have to do. Whether I open or close, Iâve got a ton of writing left to finish for this cookbook. My deadlineâs August first. And some recipes need to be rewritten. Camden has to fly out here to shoot the pictures. I want to make sure my best friendsââ she squeezed Gretchenâs arm, âget their creations highlighted in the book in a way that makes senseâ¦â
âJust stop worrying. Nick and Jacques will be there tomorrow morning, too. Between the four of us, weâll put the Hot Italian in his place and figure out a way to get you some quality writing time. Okay, um, Lizzy?â her blond friend said with a saucy grin.
âOh, donât you start.â She gave Gretchen a light smack. But she felt better already. Thank God for true friends. Especially friends who could make such wicked things with chocolate.
She grabbed one last truffle then closed the box.
*
TEN A.M. Tutti-Frutti time. And they were all assembled at the ice cream parlor. Except for Rob.
âI canât wait to meet the infamous Roberto Gabinarri. The guy was amazing on the football field,â Nick declared, fingering his black sideburns and looking especially Greek this morning.
Elizabeth marveled at the twenty-two-year-oldâs classic features. Turn him into marble and prop him up by the Parthenon. No one would suspect he didnât belong there.
âHe was a legend you know,â Nick said in Part Two of his Roberto Dissertation. âI read about his senior season in the Wilmington Bay High School record books. Do you know he averaged fourteen points per game as a quarterback and that during game three of the regional playoffs he scored a record thirty-two points? And isnât it just amazing when you thinkââ
âFor a gay guy, isnât it just amazing how into sports he is?â Jacques interrupted in a loud whisper to Elizabeth and Gretchen. âGood thing he can at least make a mean baklava or all would be lost.â
Nick shot him a pitying look. âDonât go all stereotypical on me, man. The body is a temple.â He punched Jacquesâs small paunch. âAnd from what Iâve heard about Rob, heâs got a body on him that makes everyone drool.â
âIs that true, Elizabeth?â Gretchen asked her, one eyebrow cocked.
âI regret to inform you all that, yes, heâs the epitome of âhot.â I refuse to be witness to any drooling, however.â
âI wonât drool,â Jacques promised.
âI make no such vows,â Nick said, hip-hopping around the tiles. âSo, I hope Iâm on lots of shifts with him.â He checked his watch. âDamn. Ten after ten. When will he get here?â
âLook, I donât know,â Elizabeth said, the nervousness rising like soda fizz inside her. âThe only thing Iâm certain of is that I will never get done with my draft of Perfect Pastries, Pralines and Parfaits if I have to spend an entire five hours per day in this shop. Aside from not getting the features and recipes finished, Iâll probably gain back all the weight I lost eight years ago. Some of usââ she tossed Nick her most evil look, âare not natural athletes. Three half-hour sessions of X-treme Abs and Thighs is all I can handle each week. No way am I doing more just because I canât resist ice cream and éclairs.â
âItâs all right, chéri,â Jacques said, patting her arm. âWe all know how youâre trying to help us by featuring our specialties in your cookbook. Weâre here to help you, too.â
Gretchen and Nick both nodded, and Elizabeth felt the familiar tightness in her throat, but this time it was because of the affection she felt radiating from her friends. They choked her up and left her buoyant. They made her feel as though she could handle this enormous responsibility. And she wouldnât freeze the next time she had to talk to Rob. No! Sheâd be cool, like ice cream, and smooth andâ
âHi, everyone,â Rob said, surprising them by entering through the backroom door. âSorry Iâm late, but I picked up bagels and coffee for all of us.â He deposited his goody bags on one of the tables and managed to elicit Oohs and Aahs from her cadre of helpers. The traitors.
Her friends introduced themselves to Rob and then quickly turned their attention to the treats. As they spread strawberry cream cheese on their cinnamon-raisin bagels and doctored their coffees to their liking, she watched Rob watching them, and she realized she hadnât heard the backdoor bang before he entered. Had he just gotten here? Or had he been here already, lying in wait, listening to them? Had he overheard their discussion of his âhotâ body?
The possibility of this made her blush, and she suddenly wished she hadnât given him his own set of keys to the shop yesterday in her panic. Then he wouldnât have been able to sneak up on them today.
âGood morning, Elizabeth,â he said, speaking her name with noticeable deliberateness. âAnd how are you doing on this bright Friday?â
âF-F-Fââ Oh, hell! âF-Fine.â She gestured an âAnd you?â with her nearest hand.
âLong night, last night, to tell you the truth,â he said. âKind of stressful, actually. I locked up the shop about a half hour after you left. Spent some time with my family. Dinner. Discussions. More discussionsâ¦â
She couldnât help but notice the way he eyed her every move while he spoke. Goodness, what was he looking for? Did he think she had any connection to his family? She barely knew them.
âWhat did you do last night?â he said.
âI-Iââ She made a scribbling motion in the air but Nick took this opportunity to jump right into their conversation. Bless him.
âOh, man, sheâs an awesome writer. Sheâs only twenty-seven and sheâs co-written a couple of books and gotten a three-book contract for her own dessert cookbook series.â Nick turned to her. âI know your deadlineâs during the summer, but whenâs the publication date for book one? Thanksgiving?â
For a reason she wasnât able to analyze, her voice unfroze. âNo, just before Christmas. The s-second book is supposed to be released b-by Thanksgiving next year.â
âThatâs right,â Nick said. âAnd the third one around Halloween of the year after.â
âAnd the first one is going to be fantastique,â Jacques added, âbecause my éclairs will grace the cover of the pastries section.â
âHis are long,â Nick said appreciatively.
And Gretchen laughed, which made Elizabeth laugh, which made Rob look at them all like they were more than a little psycho.
âSo, we should get organized here,â Gretchen said. âElizabeth needs to get a lot of work done, and all of us have other part-time jobs to return to. Whoâs got the opening shift today?â
Rob pulled out the schedule Elizabeth had scrawled on the notebook paper yesterday. âLooks like Elizabeth and Gretchen are on the docket for round one. Butââ He waved the page in the air before dropping it and letting it float to the tabletop.
> âBut what?â Jacques asked.
âBut it seems to be in all of your best interests to have Elizabeth concentrate her time on finishing this cookbook. Isnât that right?â Rob said, scanning their faces as he spoke.
âOh, absolutely,â Gretchen agreed heartily.
âYou bet, man,â Nick said.
Jacques squinted at Rob. âBut of course. This is why weâre here. This is what friends are for.â
Rob gulped down some coffee and turned his gaze fully on Elizabeth. âAnd your having to work these extra shifts is dramatically cutting in to your writing time, right?â
âR-R-Right, butââ she began.
âWell, how about I take over your shifts,â Rob said. âI could handle them, too, ifâ¦â
âOh, no. Thatâs not fair to you. I-Iâm willing to workââ
âLet the man speak, Elizabeth,â Nick said. âMy baklava is being featured on page sixty-five. Iâm protective of this book.â
She glanced at Gretchen, who winked unhelpfully.
They all turned their eyes to Rob, but Elizabeth sensed his offer of help wasnât quite as altruistic as it seemed.
âHereâs the thing,â he said. âI can see youâre signed up for the first two shifts today, Elizabeth, first with Gretchen from ten to twelve-thirty, and then with Jacques, twelve-thirty to three. If I take over both of those, would you be able to help me for just two and a half hours tonight instead?â
âS-Sure. You mean do the closing shift for you, from eight to ten-thirty?â This she could handle. It would be like her schedule before Uncle Siegfried left, with only half the time away from her computer screen. And Rob would, obviously, be somewhere else. Nighttime party plans, no doubt.
âNot exactly,â Rob said. âI can still do the mid-afternoon and late-evening shifts you assigned me as well. What I need from you is the time between five-thirty and eight. I need you to come to dinner with me.â He paused. âAt my motherâs house.â
CHAPTER THREE
âW-WHAT?â
Rob took in LizzyâsânoâElizabethâs stunned expression, but if a little trickery was required to get Mama off his case, he wasnât too proud to stoop to it. Last night had been an evening of enjoyment right up there with a toasty visit to Hades. He had no intention of repeating it. Ever.
âThat seems like a more than fair trade,â the young guy Nick said to her.
The Frenchman nodded his approval.
Only the blonde looked dubious.
As for Elizabeth, she opened her mouth several times but not a single word emerged after that first âWhat?â This surprised him. Here was, after all, the woman who apparently could talk up a firestorm without stuttering when among her friendsâ¦
He grimaced. So she thought he had a hot body, huh? Wasnât that always the case with the Wilmington Bay crowd? Rob the Hunk. Rob the High-School Football Star. Rob the Popular Guy. Just about anything but Rob the Intelligent. Hell, heâd even settle for Rob the Occasionally Bright. But it was always about his body and his face, never about his mind.
Which hurt sometimes. Especially when he was trying to talk to a woman as smart as Elizabeth Daniels.
âSo, what do you say?â he asked her. âDo we have a deal?â
âI-Iââ
âOf course you do,â Nick said for her. âWhy donât you leave right now, Elizabeth, and get back to typing?â
The blonde started to speak, but Elizabeth stopped her. The ladies did some eye-contact thing and Gretchen said, âElizabeth?â
Elizabeth said, âB-B-Bye, e-everyone.â She waved and headed for the door. Always one for abrupt departures.
âPick you up here at five-thirty sharp,â he called after her. She shot him a worried parting glance, but she nodded.
âL-Later,â she said, but he wasnât sure if she was talking to him or addressing Team Tutti-Frutti.
The moment she was out the door, Gretchen started whispering to Jacques rapidly and, it seemed, in code because he couldnât figure out from their words why Gretchen was acting so panicky. He mightâve gone ahead and asked her if their first customer of the day hadnât shown up.
âRoberto Gabinarri? Is that really you?â his motherâs favorite hairstylist said. âJust look at how youâve grown up. Such a fine young man.â She sparkled at him and, yes, actually pinched his cheek.
He heard Nick stifle a laugh before the Frenchman said to him, âCâmon, Nick. Itâs Gretchen and Robâs shift now. You promised to help me with the Grand Marnier tortes.â
âOkay,â he said to Jacques. âNeed to be at Jasonâs Joint in two hours, though.â Then, to Rob, âSee you later, man. Iâve got some football questions for you this afternoon.â
âAll right,â he said, turning his attention back to Mamaâs hairstylist and to Gretchen, who lobbed an ice cream scoop at him, and none too gently either.
*
ELIZABETH STARED AT her iMacâs blue screen, heaved in gulps of air (in an unsuccessful attempt to prevent hyperventilation) and mentally retraced the past half hour for evidence of personal psychosis. Dinner with his family? Good heavens, how could she have let that happen?
Her cell phone rang. Gretchen.
âOh, God, Elizabeth! Iâm so sorry I couldnât stop it. Iâm going to wring Nickâs neck later. Thereâs no way you have to go through with this. Weâll think of something to get you out ofââ
âWhere are you?â Elizabeth asked her. âI thought you were working this shift?â
âI am,â her friend said. âI told the Hot Calzone that I needed a bathroom break. Look,â she said, lowering her voice, âI can see why you get tongue-tied around him. Heâs pin-up-boy gorgeous.â
Elizabeth groaned. âHeâs a scheming deviant.â
âThat, too,â Gretchen said.
âAnd he wants somethingâsomething more than a live body to take along to dinner at his motherâs houseâb-but I donât know what it is yet.â
âWeâll find out.â She paused. âElizabeth, I know this all has you rattled, but thereâs no reason we canât come up with some excuse for you to skip tonight. People get sudden cases of the measles or rheumatic fever or Asiatic flu orâ¦or elephantiasis without warning, all the time probably.â
âElephantiasis?â
âOr something,â Gretchen insisted. âMy point is, you can come down with a contagious disease almost immediately. I can ring up my brother and ask him to give me a list of really vile-sounding symptoms. In fact, heâs on call at St. Andrewâs right now and Iâll bet he knowsââ
Elizabeth sighed. âThanks, Gretchen, but you know I canât.â
âWhy not? Rob tricked you. Thatâsâ¦thatâs entrapment. And, anyway, Nick was the one who said yes for you. You didnât say anything. You never actually agreed.â
âQuite true, literally, but my silence was my agreement. And I nodded. And I left. Not staying to work my shift confirmed my acceptance of the terms of his deal, however bizarre. So, even if this means long years of psychotherapy are in my future, I do have to go tonight. But just tonight.â Unlessâ¦did Rob mean for this to last longer than one night? The very thought made her shudder.
âBut Elizââ
âLook, you know I need the writing time, Gretchen. For all of our sakes.â
âDamn. Thatâs the real reason you did this, isnât it? You agreed for us. Thatâs why you didnât say anything to him.â
âI didnât say anything to him because my throat closes up like the space inside a cream-filled donut whene
ver Iâm around him. And I need the cookbook to succeed as much or more than you or Jacques or Nick do,â she said, which was the truth. âIâll be all right for an evening,â she added, which was a monstrous lie.
There was a long pause. âThanks, Elizabeth.â
âYouâre welcome. Now, I have to get back to work, and so do you.â For good measure, Elizabeth made a few clicking noises on her computer keyboard.
âOkay, but one more thingââ
âYeah?â
âIf he tries any fresh moves on you, just tell me,â Gretchen said. âIâll have him bound and gagged so fast he wonât know what hit him.â
Elizabeth laughed and hung up. How could she tell Gretchen that doing this very thing to Rob had been the cornerstone of many of her high school fantasies? Rob bound. Rob gagged. Rob all hers.
She rested her head on her arms, thought about the terror-inducing event that stretched out before her tonight and began hyperventilating in earnest again.
*
FIVE-THIRTY WASNâT The Witching Hour in anybodyâs book, but Elizabeth decided it ought to be renamed.
She dressed carefully and conservatively in a pale pink shirt and dress slacks, adding a light summer sweater to camouflage the inevitable sweat ringsâfrom nervousness not high temperatures. Then she packed herself and the pastries she was bringing into her Camry, drove over to Tutti-Frutti with all of forty seconds to spare and eased her way out of the car.
âPerfect timing,â Rob said, emerging from the sweets shop before she had a chance to change her mind and speed away. âIâm parked across the street.â
âH-How did the shifts g-g-go?â
He took her elbow and led her toward his sporty red car. Her pulse shot up to well over a hundred, and it surely had nothing to do with taking her first ride in a Porsche.
âAwesome,â he said. âPeople were real friendly and had lots of questions about our uncles. They wanted to know where in Europe they were headed, what kinds of sites theyâd planned to see, and I told them Iâd have to ask you because youâre the keeper of all those details.â He grinned at her, opened the passengerâs door and continued his monologue. âOh, yeah. And the florist was back for a repeat of yesterdayâs double scoop. And I had an interesting conversation with your friend Jacques about the making of éclairs. He promised to bring me a sample to taste tomorrow.â