Chapter One from Bake It to the Limit
Rita Knight glared at her twin sister with her usual aggravated expression. āWhy?ā she asked.ā©āBecause,ā Rhonda Knight responded in a humorous tone as she slapped a smiley face sticker onto the side of an old-fashioned cash register that now belonged to the Twin Berry Bakery. āA smiley face a day keeps the doctor away...or doctors, in our case, because we're both forty-four and not spring chickens anymore.ā ā©Rita glanced down at the soft green dress she hoped made her appear distinguished yet youthful. The dress was very lovelyāand costlyāand complimented her flowy strawberry-blond hair, but her sisterās words suddenly made her feel more like a simple green bean stuck in a rusted can. āDon't remind me of our age,ā she begged Rhonda. āYesterday had to be the worst birthday we have ever experienced.āā©Rhonda grinned. āHumor makes life better, sister.ā ā©Rita rolled her eyes. She loved her sister more than life but could never understand why the woman had the heart of a clown. āLogic is strength,ā she fired back, holding firm to her lifelong belief in the value of taking life seriously. Comedy was one of many frivolous distractions to be discarded along with other nonsense that interrupted practical life. ā©āOh, pooh,ā Rhonda replied and motioned her hands around at the lovely bakery that looked like a kitchen straight out of the 1930s. āJust look at our new bakery,ā she said, then added with a happy smile, āThe bank wouldn't have given us the loan if I hadn't made the loan officer laugh at my jokes.ā ā©āIt was my business plan that did the trick. And that dress youāre wearing is a joke,ā Rita complained, cringing at the sight of the bright yellow and pink dress her sister was wearing. āYou look like a deranged pink lemonade.āā©Rhonda threw her hand at Rita. āOh, you wouldn't smile even if you won the lottery.ā ā©Rita rolled her eyes. āWinning the lottery isn't practical. Owning and managing a business that can support daily, monthly, and yearly expenses is practical. Need I remind you we have a mortgage, two car payments, and other financial obligations that need our attention?ā ā©She nervously glanced around the deserted bakery and wondered if going into business with her sister had been practical. The bakery was lovely and the building itself held a certain appeal. The old hardwood floor was very nice and the vintage wood-paneled walls did make a person feel as if they had stepped back in time. The only items that needed to be replaced were a few old, splintery wooden shelves and a cracked glass display case sitting to the side of the front counter. āA little fresh paint...some flowers...but what it needs is a touch of class on the walls. We could update this whole placeāāā©āHold it,ā Rhonda objected, reading her sister like a book, āI know what you're thinking and the answer is no.āā©āNo?ā Rita prepared for an argument. āRhonda, if we're going to be successful, weāāā©āWe're not going to transform this lovely bakery into a cookie-cutter modern art gallery,ā Rhonda told Rita sternly. āIn today's world all you see are lookalikes...everywhere. Towns all look the same, buildings, grocery stores...why, I can't tell one town apart from the next anymore. Chain stores are everywhere...corporate America has ruined the character of our great landāāā©āOh, please don't give me one of your speeches about how corporations are destroying America,ā Rita begged. āI hear enough of your crazy conspiracy theories at home.āā©Rhonda folded her arms and gave Rita one of her I-feel-sorry-for-you looks. āIf you would only open your eyes,ā she said, a desperate note in her voice. āBut...okay, I'll bypass my speech and just say this bakery will take a hard nosedive if we transform it into a flashy modern dump just like all the others that pollute the American landscape. We need originality. We need to reach back into time and bring the good old days back alive. We need to give this bakery a heart.āā©Rita hated to agree with her sister on any topic, but the vintage appeal of the building was undeniable, and she had to admit that making the bakery into a modern lookalike wasn't very practical. āRhonda, the loan officer approved our business loan because our credit was stable and because we're both retired cops with savings and small pensions to fall back on. But if this bakery fails, we're both going to be dipping into our personal savings to pay back the business loan...for a long time. Now, with that said, I don't want to argue. I simply want to agree that making this bakery a success will become our primaryāand onlyāgoal. However, I do agree that a vintage design would beā¦helpful to our goal of owning a successful business.āā©āYou bet,ā Rhonda said, tapping the smiley face sticker on the side of the old cash register and beaming with excitement. āI knew this would work out when we left Atlanta. Moving to this lovely small town up here in North Georgia was the best idea we ever had, not to mention buying ourselves a lovely two-story cabin on a piece of land with a river running through it. Oh, this life is the fulfillment of my dream.āā©āI thought your dream was to live in Los Angeles and become a star?ā Rita asked, teasing her sister. ā©āOh, well...you know...being a cop got in the way,ā Rhonda blushed. ā©Rita rolled her eyes. āSure it did,ā she told Rhonda. āMy, how time flies. Doesnāt it seem like just yesterday we went through the police academy after we left the Navy? So let's see, if we enlisted in the Navy right when we turned eighteen, completed our contract, and then we went to the academy one year later, that would make itāāā©āTwenty years ago,ā Rhonda sighed. āTwenty long years ago.ā ā©Rita saw joy leave her sister's face. āOh, I'm sorry, Rhonda. I was only trying to tease you.āā©āI know,ā Rhonda sighed again. āIt's just that...well, itās not the silly dream of being a movie star I think about. I think about love and making a family. Iām still not married, and neither are you, Rita. And being single at forty-four is no laughing matter. I can laugh at almost anything...except being unmarried.ā Rhonda reached into a green purse sitting on the front counter and pulled out a half-eaten bran muffin wrapped in a soft pink handkerchief. āSee this?āā©āYour breakfast?āā©āMy predictable, lousy breakfast,ā Rhonda pointed out. āI bypass the junk food, walk five miles a day, take my daily vitamins, sleep eight hours a night...everything Iāve been doing since high school because deep down, I believe someday I'll find Mr. Right and actually get married.ā Rhonda looked down at the bran muffin, made a sour face, and tossed it down onto the counter. āItās stupid. I donāt know why I bother.āā©Rita studied her sisterās upset face. āI know you're upset,ā she said in a loving voice, stepping away from business for a minute and becoming a caring sister again, ābut until love peeks its beautiful eyes around the corner, I'm afraid we have no other choice but to keep living our lives and doing what makes us happy. And doesnāt this bakery make us happy?āā©Rhonda looked away from Rita and tossed her eyes at the glass front. āYes, I suppose youāre right.ā Fall leaves were dancing in the crisp, early morning autumn air, gently caressing the small town of Clovedale Falls. The sight of the autumn leaves created a cozy, warm feeling in her heart that slowly pushed away the sadness trying to destroy the peaceful morning. āMaybe I'll find a husband at the Pumpkin Festival?ā she said hopefully. ā©Rita sighed. Being a twin sister meant she felt every single ounce of pain Rhonda feltāand more, even though she would never admit the truth of this. Rita understood Rhondaās painful longing to fall in love, get married, and start a family. She too longed to wake up to a husband and share a cup of coffee with him and raise babies and spend rainy nights playing board games with children. But there was no way to hurry fate along. āThe Pumpkin Festival starts in a few daysā, she said lovingly.ā©āA few days,ā Rhonda replied, and quickly forced a smile back to her face. There was no sense in letting a foolish heart ruin a beautiful day. āYou know, Rita,ā she said, āwe bought a beautiful cabin together. And now we're opening our own bakery. And youāre right. So what if Mr. Right hasn't come along yet? When he does...if he does...great. Until then, well, life goes on and so do we. Now,ā she grabbed her bran muffin and tossed it into a wooden trash can under the front counter, ālet's focus on the here and now.āā©Rita felt a calm smile spread across her face. Her sister was a fighter and never let life push her down for too long. That was one character trait about Rhonda that Rita admired more than anything: Rhonda never gave up and always went all twelve rounds even when the fight seemed lost. On the other hand, Rita had a bad tendency to give up the fight when logic screamed in her ears it was futile, instead of letting faith carry her through to the conclusion. ā©āBack to business. I agree that we need not design our bakery in a modern scheme,ā she said. āI believe an old-fashioned design will be fun and profitable.āā©āWhich means we have a whole lot of antique stores to visit,ā Rhonda pointed out excitedly. āClovedale Falls has a few antique stores and I believe I saw a couple in Dove Hills, andāāā©āWait a minute,ā Rita objected, quickly holding up her right hand. āRhonda, we're not rich. We can't spend all our savings in antique stores. We have to be practical.āā©āWe also have to spend money to make money,ā Rhonda pointed out. āAtmosphere is everything, Rita.ā She pointed to the front window. āWe can bake the best muffins and cakes in town, but if we don't set the right atmosphere...splat!ā Rhonda smashed her hands together. āLike a bug hitting a windshield.āā©āI don't thinkāāā©āWe'll get off to a good start, and then...splat!ā Rhonda smashed her hands together again. āLike a bug with no sense buzzing down a night highway.ā ā©Rita stared at her sister. Fear quickly gripped her heart. āRhonda, this is our first time ever owning a business. We spent so many years fighting crime. Relocating to Clovedale Falls...going into business for ourselves...buying the cabin...this is all so very risky and scary. I simply want to make sure we don't fail and by chance, if we do, we have a little money to fall back on. I'm wary about spending more money than we have allocated for our start-up funds.āā©Rhonda understood Rita's worry. Deep down, she was scared herself. āI promise we'll stick within our budget,ā she told Rita, offering her sister a warm smile. āThis bakery isn't the size of an iceberg. It won't take a lot to make this place look like the 1930s. A few tables, some shelves, and we'll be off and running.ā ā©āOff and running,ā Rita said in a nervous voice. āThat means we must bake...and that's where the true test will come.ā She gazed around the bakery. āThat is, if we even get past the health inspector.āā©Rhonda bit down on her lip. āYeah, the health inspector,ā she agreed and looked at the wooden door leading back into the kitchen. āThe kitchen is a mess, isn't it?āā©āWe need all new appliancesāāā©āWhich is covered by our loan,ā Rhonda pointed out.ā©āI know,ā Rita said in a grateful voice. āI can't imagine what we would have paid out of pocket for the new appliances we need to get the kitchen back in functioning order.ā ā©Rhonda was more worried about the health inspector. She didn't believe the jokes she told the loan officer would go over well with the health inspector, who was a sixty-nine-year-old woman named Mrs. Thorndale. Rumor wasāat least from the loan officerās mouthāMrs. Thorndale was meaner than a threatened rattlesnake and colder than a block of ice dredged up from an underground ice cave. According to the loan officer, Mrs. Thorndale was tougher than a Marine drill sergeant with inspections and searched for any excuse to fail a hopeful business owner. ā©Rhonda tried to banish those thoughts from her mind. āI know we can do it. We have one week before the health inspector is due to arrive. That's plenty of time to get our bakery in tip-top shape. We have money in our loan to cover the new appliances and we have a few extra dollars set aside for buying what we need to transform this front room into something that reminds folks of the old days. As long we keep a positive attitude, I think we'll succeed in all our efforts.āā©āPrayer first,ā Rita pointed out in a serious voice.ā©āYes, prayer,ā Rhonda agreed. She grimaced and tried to turn it into a smile. āWith our bakingāāā©āOur baking skills areāāā©āDecent,ā Rhonda finished for Rita and forced a worried smile to her face. āWe may never bake the best coconut cake in the world, sister, but we don't burn our cookies in the oven. This a small town and folks here are used to granny's cookies. We have a lot of competition to overcome to make a go of it.āā©āYou're not making me feel very confident,ā Rita complained, looking around at the dusty corners of the room behind her.ā©Rhonda winced. āI guess I'm just as nervous as you are,ā she admitted. āI know I haven't been showing it, but I'm...well, I'm nervous, okay? We have invested our lives into this bakery and our new home. If we fail, you and I both know our personal savings wonāt quite cut it. It will be Mom and Dad bailing us out of a deep hole.ā ā©āThen let's not fail,ā Rita begged. ā©āYeah, let's not,ā Rhonda agreed, ābecause I don't want to ask Mom and Dad for help. They were so happy when we retired from the force and moved to Clovedale Fallsāā ā©Rhonda stopped talking when the front door opened and a woman in her mid-sixties strolled inside, looking just as relaxed as a soft autumn breeze. ā©āOh, Iām terribly sorry, we're not open for business yet,ā Rhonda said in a quick voice.ā©Erma Wilson tossed a warm smile at Rhonda and then at Rita. āI know you're not open for business,ā she said in a honeyed voice filled with gentle love that nearly melted Rita and Rhonda to the floor. āI've just come to see my old bakery.āā©āYour bakery?ā Rita asked in pleased surprise as her eyes absorbed the womanās short gray hair and round, rosy face that cried grandmotherly, and now, most important, an excellent baker. ā©The woman smiled at Rita, folded her wrinkled, arthritic hands in front of her soft, rust-colored dress patterned with leaves, and nodded. āMy name is Mrs. Erma Wilson and I owned this bakery for forty years,ā she explained. āFive years ago, after my Ralph went on to Heaven and my hands became too stiff and poorly to bake anymore. I closed up shop and put the building up for sale.ā Erma's sweet smile slowly faded. āI'm afraid the building has sat empty these last five years, collecting dust. And last year, a couple of runts broke in here and made a mess of things. Sheriff Bluestone put them to work mowing a whole lot of the town.āā©Rita and Rhonda looked at each other in surprise and then focused back on Erma. āUh...we are pleased to meet you, Mrs. Wilson. Can I offer you some coffee?ā Rita asked. āWe brought some in a thermos.āā©āOh no,ā Erma replied and brought her smile back like a ray of sunshine. āI just came back to meet the two women who bought my bakery and to thank you. Ralph didn't leave me much to live on, and now with your purchase, I have enough money to rest on. Thanks to youā¦ā Tears began to sting in the elderly womanās eyes. āOh my dears, excuse me,ā she said, and hurried back outside, leaving Rita and Rhonda confused.ā©