Read Starting From Scratch Online
Authors: Georgia Beers
Tags: #Fiction, #Lesbian, #Romance, #Erotica
“Hey, what’s going on?”
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Max looked up and grinned at me, and I got such an
unexpected glimpse of his mother in his face, it was as if
she had poked me in the ribs. “We’re just sitting here,” he
said matter-of-factly.
“Well, you know, I was thinking…” I tapped my
forefinger against my lips as though contemplating
something very important. “It feels like a day that needs
chocolate cupcakes. Don’t you think so?”
His eyebrows raised and he nodded, his head bobbing
rapidly enough to flop his bangs into his eyes.
“I could use a little help from an assistant chef,” I
added, suddenly feeling like I wanted nothing more than
to spend some time with him and wondering what the hell
was wrong with me. “You up for it?”
“Okay,” he said, scrambling to his feet, his excitement
obvious. I helped him over the fence and we headed inside,
Steve following right behind Max, tail wagging and eyes
bright.
“First, we need to call your mom and let her know
you’re here. We don’t want to get in trouble like we did last
time, do we?”
“No way.”
“Okay.” I picked up the handset and asked if he knew
his number. Surprisingly, he did. I helped him dial and
then let him have the phone.
“Mommy? Hi. I’m at Coach King’s house. We’re
gonna make cupcakes! Chocolate ones!” He paused. “I’m
not. No, I promise I’m not.”
“Not what?” I whispered to him.
“Making a noose of myself,” he whispered back.
I could hear Elena’s voice in the handset saying,
“Nuisance.
Nuisance
of yourself.”
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“Tell her if she comes over in an hour, she can have a
warm cupcake and a glass of milk.” I winked at him and he
repeated my words.
When he was finished, I pulled one of my kitchen
chairs over to the counter for Max to stand on. Folding
down the top of my extra apron a couple times, I tied it
around him, explaining, “If you’re going to be my assistant
chef, you’ve got to look the part.” e pride on his face told
me he liked that idea.
I got ingredients out, batching them on the counter.
His eyes scanned them.
“Where’s the box?” he asked.
“What box?”
“e box the cupcake stuff comes in.”
After a second or two of brow furrowing, I realized he
meant the box of cake mix. “Oh, no, little man. We make
this from scratch.”
“What’s that?”
“Well, I don’t exactly know why it’s called ‘from
scratch,’ but it means we use all our own ingredients and
we don’t use a boxed mix. A boxed mix is really just a lot of
this stuff here,” I waved a hand over my ingredients, “put
together ahead to save you time. But my grandma always
told me that scratch is better. A box is faster, but scratch
tastes better.”
I don’t know that he understood my explanation, but
he gave a curt nod and looked ready to begin.
I set the chocolate and butter to melting in a double
boiler on the stove and then helped Max crack eggs and
measure sugar into the mixing bowl. I even managed not
to cringe when he stuck his thumbs through the shell and
got egg whites all over the counter.
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“What’s your mom up to today?” I asked him, trying
to be nonchalant in my questioning as we watched the
KitchenAid go to town.
“Cece’s over. ey’re fighting.” His eyes never left the
bowl.
“ey fight a lot?”
He shrugged.
“What were they fighting about?”
He shrugged again.
“Max?” I squatted a little bit so I was level with him.
“Hey. Look at me.” He did, reluctantly. “You know Mom
and Cece love you very much, don’t you?”
is time it was just a half-shrug. “I guess.”
“No,” I said firmly, hating the uncertainty in his eyes.
“No, there’s no guessing. ey
do
love you. You’re the most
important thing in the world to them.”
“ey yell a lot,” he said softly.
“At you?”
“No, at each other.”
I blew out a frustrated breath for him. I hated the idea
of Cindy yelling at Elena. Did she yell back? She didn’t
seem like a woman who raised her voice often, but I knew
it was not uncommon to partner with somebody who
could bring that out of you. And was it even possible to
explain something like this to a six-year-old? Max may
have seemed wise beyond his years at times, but he was still
a little boy, and there were things about his moms that he
just didn’t need to know.
“You know, Max, sometimes grown-ups don’t even
know they’re yelling. Sometimes, after we’ve been together
for a while, we get so used to yelling that we just do it all
the time. And it doesn’t necessarily mean we’re mad at you
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or each other or anybody else. We’re just loud because we
think that’s the only way the other person will hear us. We
have to learn how to be a little calmer, a little quieter, that
sometimes people listen better when you don’t shout at
them.”
He seemed to absorb this, roll it around in his little
head. “Maybe I should tell ’em next time. Tell ’em not to
yell so much.”
“Maybe you should.” I put my arm around his
shoulders and gave him a little squeeze. Part of me felt bad
for him, having to deal with his moms. Another part
wondered what it would be like to have your parents
around, even if all they did was argue all the time.
We left that topic and focused on the cupcakes. Max
was adorably precise in his measuring of flour and cocoa
powder, taking an exorbitant amount of time to get them
just right in the measuring cups, an almost equal amount
ending up on the counter, on the chair, on the floor. My
own patience with him surprised me; I somehow managed
to keep my hands to myself and let him do the work. I also
somehow enjoyed it. We finally got all the ingredients
mixed together and then slowly added the melted
chocolate.
“We don’t want to stir this in, we need to fold it,” I
told him.
He looked puzzled. “Fold it?”
“When you stir something fast, what actually happens
is that you’re taking all the air out of the batter. at’s what
makes it smooth and dense. When you fold something,
you’re keeping the air in, which makes the batter fluffy and
light. We don’t want this batter to be smooth and dense or
it won’t bake right. We want it to be fluffy and light. So
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folding is really a fancy way of saying stirring really slowly
and really carefully, from the bottom and over the top, like
this.” Damn if the kid wasn’t hanging on my every word. I
showed him how to fold and then let him do the rest. His
concentration was so deep, I wondered if his face might
turn red from the intensity. It took an effort on my part,
but I forced myself not to chuckle at his determination.
He did a great job, I had to admit.
His next task was putting paper liners in the muffin
tin and then I poured the batter and into the oven it all
went.
“Now for the best part,” I said and handed him a clean
wooden spoon. “My grandma always said that my payment
for being the assistant chef was that I got to lick the bowl.”
Max’s eyes lit up so brightly, I was surprised there
wasn’t light pouring out his ears. “I
like
your grandma.”
at earned him a ruffle of the hair, then I set him up
at the table with the spoon, the bowl (in which I’d left a bit
of extra batter to make it worth his while), and a smile. I
used heavy cream and chocolate chips to make the frosting
while he licked happily, chocolate outlining his mouth as if
he were a clown who’d used brown makeup for his smile
instead of red.
ere’s nothing quite like the smell of warm chocolate
and it only took about fifteen minutes for my kitchen to
emanate the scent. Max was savoring every last drop of the
batter, taking his time to make it last. When the knock on
the door came, he hadn’t budged from the table.
“Hi, there,” Elena said with a smile. She wore black
workout pants that reached just below her knees, a
turquoise tank top, which gave me a mouthwatering view
of her shoulders, and white Nikes with ankle socks. She
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was beautiful and I tried not to look at her chest, tried to
forget that I’d had my hand in her bra the night before,
tried to ignore how warm and perfect her flesh had felt
cradled in my palm.
She squatted down to give Steve a scratch, then
turned into the kitchen where her son was doing his best
to cover himself in cake batter. She burst into laughter.
“We made cupcakes,” he said proudly.
“Yeah? Did you get any batter in the cupcake pan or
just all over your face?”
“Mom,” he said, drawing the word out, its tone saying
she was embarrassing him, and went back to the bowl.
I peered in. “Huh. at might be able to go right back
into the cupboard. I might not even have to wash it.”
Max giggled adorably and Elena took his hand to help
him off the chair. “Come here, you. You’re a mess. Let’s
wash your face and hands before you get chocolate all over
Coach King’s house.”
I watched as Elena wet a paper towel and cleaned her
son. I picked things up and moved them to the sink, trying
hard not to inhale deeply whenever Elena’s scent hit my
nostrils. How could one woman smell so divine all the
time?
Max took up residence at his usual spot: in front of
the oven door, watching the cupcakes bake. Steve sat down
next to him and they looked like a Norman Rockwell
painting. I shook my head with a grin and turned to find
Elena watching me.
“ree more minutes,” I said, hoping my sudden
nervousness didn’t show in my voice, “and you can have a
cupcake and some milk. If you’ve been a good girl.” I
winked.
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“I’m really sorry about last night,” she said, her voice
barely audible. I got the clue that she didn’t want to talk
about it in front of Max (who was carrying on a
conversation with Steve), and I felt a little hamstrung, not
sure what was okay to say and what wasn’t. I gave her an
unconcerned grimace-shrug-dismissive wave combination,
the universal sign for “it was no big deal.”
I must not have been all that convincing to Elena,
because she jumped in with, “We can talk about it later, if
you want to, but I just wanted to say I’m sorry.”
e timer saved me from having to come up with any
kind of reply. I liked having something to do that kept me
from squirming under Elena’s gaze. In a couple minutes, I
had all three of us set up at the kitchen table with
deliciously warm cupcakes on plates, dripping melted
frosting, and glasses of milk all around.
It was very domestic and I was shocked to realize how
comfortable I was with the arrangement.
“Okay, buddy, time to go. Let’s let Coach King have
the rest of her Sunday in peace.”
“Oh, wait,” I said. Quickly, I slapped some frosting on
six of the cupcakes and put them in a square Tupperware
container that was deep enough to allow me to snap on the
lid without smashing the contents. I handed the container
to Max. “Remember? Assistant chefs share in the fruits of
our labor.”
“Did your grandma say that, too?” he asked, his face
serious.
“She did.” I walked them to the door. “See you later.”
“See ya, Coach,” Max said over his shoulder as he ran
ahead down the sidewalk.
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“Bye, Avery. See you soon.” Elena’s voice was low,
almost intimate as she tossed me a little wave. “Max, you
wait for me, please,” she said, raising her voice to Stern
Mom level.
“Bye,” I said, and watched them go, trying to
understand the swirling emotions in my head, while at the
same time, trying to ignore them.
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CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
“I still can’t believe you didn’t tell me about her, that
I’m just now hearing about all of this.” Maddie could pout
with the best of them and she seriously worked it that
Friday night at dinner.
“All of what?” I’d talked quite a bit about Elena once
Maddie prodded me. At the same time, I tried to downplay
how taken I was with her but apparently, I hadn’t done a
very good job.
“You
like
this girl. It’s obvious. Why didn’t you tell me
sooner? I don’t understand, Avery.” She pouted some more.
“My feelings are hurt.”
J.T. was in the kitchen doing the dishes. She could
hear the conversation just fine and hadn’t leapt to my
defense, so I could only assume she was miffed at me, too.
I sighed, knowing she’d get it out of me sooner or
later. “I was mad at you, Maddie. Did you forget that part?
You crossed a line with me and I was angry with you.”