Read Confectionately Yours #2: Taking the Cake! Online
Authors: Lisa Papademetriou
I
hear Marco whisper my name as I walk out of Mr. Carter’s classroom, but I don’t turn around. I walk quickly down the hall, eyes on the floor. I can feel him hurrying after me. I don’t want to hear his apologies. I don’t want to hear his excuses. I just want to get away.
I turn the corner quickly and run right into Devon. “Hayley!” he says, flashing his brilliant smile.
“Oh, hi.”
“You okay?”
He cares
. The fact that Devon’s eyebrows are scrunching at me in worry makes me feel dizzy. I’m aware that Marco is hovering behind me. Waiting to talk to me, most likely. But I don’t really want to talk to him right now. “I’m … fine. I’m great, in fact.” I try to shake off my gloom and return Devon’s glowing smile.
His momentary concern for me passes. “Hey — guess what? I ditched the accent, like you told me to. And Ms. Lang said she liked it better.” He grabs my hand and kisses it. “I owe you my thanks, milady,” he adds in a goofy English accent.
“Oh, you’re welcome.” I guess Marco has finally taken the hint, or else he’s just bored by my conversation with Devon, because he gives up and moves on. My head swims with relief. “Hey — I, uh, I came up with a fund-raiser idea. How about cake pops? I could do a couple of different flavors —”
“What’s a cake pop?”
“Cake on a stick, basically. Like a lollipop. You dip them in frosting —”
“Cake on a stick? I love it!”
“Well, I didn’t invent them….” I blush, feeling like an idiot.
“You’re a genius for even thinking of them for the fund-raiser.”
“Well, actually, Kyle thought of them.”
Okay, lips: Stop moving. Silence!
“Okay, Hayley.” Devon’s blue eyes sparkle. “You’re not a genius. And this idea is just okay. Remind me never to give you a compliment.”
I laugh. “I guess I’m not very good at taking them.”
Devon’s hand reaches toward my face, and I suck in my breath. I feel his fingertips linger in my hair for a moment. My heart slows down. Time freezes.
Devon pulls his fingers away and holds them in front of my face. “You had a piece of fluff in your hair,” he says. Then he tosses it away. I watch as the small blue pill from my sweater floats toward the floor.
I feel as if I’m made of wax, like I’m shifting and melting.
Devon smiles a slow, soft smile. “Pretty sweater, by the way,” he says. “If you can take the compliment.”
“I can take it,” I whisper, but he has already stepped past me, continuing on to class.
A
AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE
EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE!
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Coconut-Macaroon Cake Balls
(makes approximately 80–90 cake balls)
Pop them on a stick or just pop them in your mouth! Cake balls are the perfect bite-sized treat!
INGREDIENTS:
1 cup coconut milk
1 teaspoon coconut extract
1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
3/4 cup granulated sugar
1/3 cup canola oil
1-1/4 cups all-purpose flour
1 teaspoon baking powder
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 cup unsweetened shredded coconut flakes, plus more to sprinkle on top
1–2 12-ounce bags semisweet or white-chocolate chips (optional)
Plastic fork or unwanted metal fork (optional)
Toothpicks or lollipop sticks (optional)
INSTRUCTIONS:
White-Chocolate Frosting
INGREDIENTS:
6 ounces white-chocolate chips
1/2 cup margarine
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
2 cups confectioners’ sugar
INSTRUCTIONS:
I
’m dipping a cake pop in white-chocolate frosting when I hear the bell jingle over the door. This cake-pop thing is harder than it looks. The real trick is getting the frosting to go on evenly. If you can do that, then you’re golden. All you have to do is dip the pop into sprinkles or mini-chips, or whatever, and they look great.
But my frosting keeps glopping. Yes, that is the technical term.
I let out a low growl and toss the cake pop into the trash. This is the fifth one I’ve ruined.
I’m minding the café by myself. Unless you count Rupert and Chloe, who are also here. Rupert is playing the piano, and Chloe is sketching at a table nearby. We have the place to ourselves. Well, we did … up until one minute ago.
“Ahem,” a voice says behind me. “Uh — anyone home?”
I turn to see Kyle standing at the counter, smiling. “Hey, Kyle,” I say. “It’s Hayley.”
“I figured. I just wasn’t sure you were open — it seemed like you were busy.” Kyle is legally blind, but he can still make out shadows and shapes.
“I’m here — struggling with frosting.”
“Better than struggling with hungry sharks.”
“Or rabid monkeys.”
“There! Now you have a whole new outlook.” He grins, and a lock of curly blond hair falls into his gray eyes.
I wipe my frosting-covered hands on my apron. “Can I get you something?”
“What do you have in the cupcake department?”
“I’ve got caramel with white-chocolate frosting, banana with chocolate frosting, salty chocolate with chocolate frosting, and lemon with lemon frosting.” I make a mental note that we’ve run out of the pumpkin spice with maple frosting.
Time to bake more
, I think.
“I’ll take banana with chocolate,” he says. I reach for a square of wax paper and pull out one of the cupcakes. Just as I’m placing it on the plate, Kyle says, “This is the kind you gave Ben, right?”
His voice is so casual that for a moment, I think I’ve misheard him. “What?”
“Didn’t you make one of these for Ben Habib? He told me about it.” Kyle hands me a five-dollar bill, like we’re just making normal café conversation. Rupert’s fingers dance over the keys, and I feel my heart flutter in time to the quick notes of the piano.
I stand there a moment, considering what to say. It probably took Ben about three seconds to figure out where the cupcake came from. Of course.
Dur
, I think. I mean, I’m not the only person on earth who knows how to make cupcakes. But how many people at our school would make a banana one topped with chocolate frosting and a teeny-tiny marzipan banana?
“Am I embarrassing you?” Kyle asks.
“No.”
“Because I can’t see your face, so I don’t know.”
“I’m not embarrassed — it’s just … Yeah, I made the cupcake. But not in that way! It was from … someone else.”
“Oh.”
“But now Ben thinks it’s from me?”
“Well, kind of.”
Rupert stops playing suddenly, and the room is quiet.
“Would you tell him that it isn’t?”
“Sure.”
“Because I don’t want him to get the wrong idea.”
Why am I going on and on about this?
Kyle smiles. “No problem, Hayley.”
For a moment, I wonder why we’re still standing there. Then I look down at the five-dollar bill in my hand and remember that I need to make change. “I’ll be right back,” I say, and head over to the register.
Once I hand Kyle his change, he takes his plate and walks over to the piano, which Rupert has just abandoned. Kyle puts down his plate on top of the piano, then feels the outer edges of the keyboard. He places his fingers at the center and begins to play. It’s a piece of music I recognize. Brahms. It’s lovely, and seems perfect with the fading late-afternoon light that is streaming through our front windows.
I look over at the trash, where my lumpy cake pop sits atop a pile of napkins and empty paper cups. My frustration has faded away, and I feel ready to try again. Besides, Kyle is right — struggling with frosting is a lot better than struggling with hungry sharks — or other things.
I guess I just needed some perspective.
I’m glad Kyle came in
, I realize. And I’m glad I got to clear up that Ben thing. I
didn’t want Kyle to think I really was behind all of the insane romantic behavior. I mean, I didn’t want
Ben
to think that.
It doesn’t really matter what Kyle thinks.
Right?
Gingered Pumpkin Cupcakes
(makes approximately 12 cupcakes)
This is the perfect blend of spice and sweet. Finally, something I can really be thankful for.
INGREDIENTS:
1 cup canned pumpkin
1/4 cup milk
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 cup brown sugar
1/3 cup canola oil
1-1/4 cups all-purpose flour
1/2 teaspoon baking powder
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
2 teaspoons ground ginger
1/4 teaspoon salt
1/3 cup diced candied ginger, plus more to sprinkle on top (optional)
INSTRUCTIONS:
Ginger Cream-Cheese Frosting
INGREDIENTS:
1/3 cup cream cheese, softened to room temperature
1/2 cup margarine or butter, softened to room temperature
2-1/2 cups confectioners’ sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
2 teaspoons ground ginger
INSTRUCTIONS: