Read Sugar And Spice Online

Authors: Joanne Fluke

Tags: #Mystery, #Romance, #Thriller, #Crime, #Contemporary, #Chick-Lit, #Adult, #Humour

Sugar And Spice (33 page)

BOOK: Sugar And Spice
2.63Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Column A

Column B

(1½ cups of)

(2 cups of)

Graham Cracker Crumbs

Chocolate Chips

Vanilla Wafer Crumbs

Butterscotch Chips

Chocolate Wafer Crumbs

Peanut Butter Chips

Animal Cracker Crumbs

Raisins (regular or golden)

Sugar Cookie Crumbs

M & M’s (without nuts)

Column C

Column D

(2 cups of)

(1 cup of)

Flaked Coconut (5 oz.)

Chopped Walnuts

Rice Krispies

Chopped Pecans

Miniature Marshmallows

Chopped Peanuts

Frosted Cornflakes (crumbled)

Chopped Cashews

Melt the butter and pour it into in a 9-inch by 13-inch cake pan. Tip the pan to coat the bottom.

  1. Evenly sprinkle one from Column A over the melted butter.

  2. Drizzle sweetened condensed milk over the crumbs.

  3. Evenly sprinkle one from Column B on top.

  4. Evenly sprinkle one from Column C on top of that.

  5. Evenly sprinkle something from Column D over the very top.

Press everything down with the palms of your impeccably clean hands. Bake at 350 degrees F. for 30

minutes. Cool thoroughly on a wire rack and cut into brownie-sized bars.

Make sure you cut these before you refrigerate them or they’ll be very difficult to cut.

Hannah’s Note: Kids love to help make these bars when they get to choose the ingredients.

Chapter Nine

The moment that Hannah pulled open the heavy front door of Aames House, she knew that something was wrong. Instead of the childish laughter that had greeted her on every other visit, there was only the sound of quiet voices from the kitchen where Julie and the girls were waiting for her. The group baking yesterday afternoon had been so much fun, the girls had asked if they could do it again today. Of course Hannah had agreed. Tonight was Christmas Eve, and The Cookie Jar was closed. Hannah and Lisa had plenty of time to start the holiday fun by baking Christmas sugar cookies with Julie and the girls.

“What’s the matter?” Lisa asked, as Hannah stopped and listened.

“It’s quiet…too quiet.”

“Like in an old western when the Indians are about to ride up over the top of the hill and attack?”

“Not exactly, but the general concept’s the same. Something’s wrong, and I’ve got the feeling it’s something big. Let’s go find out if I’m right or if I’ve seen too many movies.”

Hannah led the way down the hallway to the kitchen and pushed open the door. Julie was standing at the central workstation with the girls, who were talking quietly among themselves.

“Uh-oh,” Hannah said under her breath as she caught sight of Julie. Even though she’d tried to cover the traces of tears with makeup and there was a brave little smile on her face, Julie’s eyelids were puffy, and Hannah suspected she’d been crying most of the night.

Lisa nudged Hannah and moved closer so she wouldn’t be overheard. “You’re right. It’s something big.

I’ll take over with the cookies and the girls if you want to have coffee with Julie in the dining room and find out what’s wrong.”

“Good idea.” Hannah took a deep breath and waded into deep waters. Julie might resist her probing, but she looked so miserable, they couldn’t just stand by and pretend nothing was wrong.

“Hi, Hannah,” Julie said as Hannah approached her. “The girls are all ready to bake Christmas cookies.”

“And Lisa’s all ready to teach them how to do it. Let’s get a cup of coffee and go into the dining room.”

It was proof of Julie’s misery that she didn’t even voice an objection or say something about how she should help to supervise her students. She just poured coffee for both of them and carried the cups into the adjoining room.

“I guess the makeup didn’t work,” Julie said, setting the cups down on place mats.

“It might fool someone who was visually challenged on a night with no moon.” Hannah opened one of the bakery boxes she’d carried in with her. “We brought along all the leftover cookies for the kids. These are Twin Chocolate Delights. Eat one.”

“Thanks, Hannah, but I’m not really hungry.”

“You don’t have to be hungry. Just eat one. The endorphins in the chocolate will help.”

“Help what?”

“Whatever it is that’s making you cry. You want to feel better, don’t you?”

“Of course I do, but…”

“Then take a bite. It’ll work, I almost guarantee it. Chocolate creates a feeling of well-being, calms frazzled nerves, relieves stress, and puts daily problems into perspective.”

Julie gave a brief little smile, and Hannah was very glad to see it. “You sound like a commercial for a new drug. The only thing you’re missing is the part about the side effects.”

“You may experience a slight weight gain if you overdose,” Hannah said in her best announcer’s voice.

“Ask your local baker if chocolate is right for you.”

This time Julie’s smile was a bit wider. She reached into the box, chose a cookie, and took a bite. “These are good,” she said, after she’d swallowed.

“Of course they are. If I calculated right, they’re over seventy percent good stuff.”

“What’s good stuff?”

“Chocolate, butter, and sugar. But let’s not talk about nutrition.”

“Or the lack of it,” Julie countered, finishing her first cookie and reaching for a second.

“Right.” Hannah was pleased as Julie’s second cookie began to go the way of the first. “Now tell me what’s got you so upset. I’m assuming you had a fight with Matt?”

“Yes.”

“Over what?”

“Over e-mail.”

Hannah thought fast. Asking Julie questions was a little like cracking almonds. If she applied too much pressure, Julie might be crushed by the weight of her problem and start crying again. Still, she had to know the facts. “You mean Matt’s been sending you e-mail?”

“No, he’s been getting e-mail…” Julie stopped to take a deep breath, “…from my fiancé. And I don’t even have a fiancé!”

“Then how did…What…Did he…” Hannah sputtered while she went through the possibilities in her mind.

“Let me get this straight. Matt got an e-mail from a guy who said he was your fiancé, and now he thinks you’re engaged?”

“Exactly. And Matt also thinks I was just amusing myself with him because I was bored and this Dan who claims to be my fiancé is all the way out in Montana.”

“Uh-oh.”

“Uh-oh is right. I tried to tell Matt that it must be a case of mistaken identity, that there must be another Julie Jansen and that I don’t even know a guy named Dan. But he wouldn’t listen.” Julie’s eyes filled with tears.

Hannah thought about that for a moment, and then she stood up. “Okay. I’m going to go talk to Matt.”

“It won’t do any good,” Julie warned.

“Maybe not, but I have to try. You stay here and eat a couple more cookies. I’ll be back just as soon as I can.”

“I really don’t want to talk about it. Not only that, it’s really none of your business.”

“Yes, it is,” Hannah countered. Matt was being rude, but she didn’t take offense. It was clear by his expression that believing Julie was engaged had wounded him deeply. “I talked to Julie and she told me about the man who claims to be her fiancé.”

“The man who is her fiancé.”

“Whatever. Let’s leave that open for now. I’d like to see the e-mail he sent, if you still have it.”

“Why?”

“Because I just can’t believe that Julie would lie to both of us about being engaged. I admit I haven’t seen her since she was in high school, but it seems so out of character for her.”

Matt hesitated, but then he nodded. “Okay. I understand how you feel, Hannah. I was taken in by her too. Come with me. It’s in the room I’m using as an office.”

It was only a few steps to Matt’s office, and Hannah waited while he unlocked the door. Once she was seated on the couch next to the windows, Matt brought her a sheaf of papers. “What’s all this?” she asked.

“The top one’s the e-mail I got from Dan. The others are copies of the messages he sent to Julie. I know it was wrong to do it, but I read them and printed them out.”

“I don’t understand how you got her e-mail.”

“The twins must have known her password or gotten around it somehow. They’re both computer whizzes.”

“You asked the boys to break into Julie’s computer?” Hannah asked, clearly shocked.

“No. The whole thing was accidental. The boys came to me because they heard something buzzing in Julie’s office and the door was locked. It turned out to be an alarm clock, but her computer was on.

While we were there, the computer started acting up and the twins tried to fix it. They got it back online, but then an e-mail message came in and they were afraid that if they didn’t open it and save it, Julie would lose it.”

“I see,” Hannah said, and both meanings of the word applied. While they’d been talking, she’d paged through the messages, and one thing had popped out loud and clear. “So the twins are computer experts?”

“That’s right. They even dabble in programming. Both of their parents are in the technology field.”

“So if anyone could make a computer act up, it would be the twins.”

“True.” Matt’s eyes narrowed slightly. “But they don’t have a key to Julie’s office. How could they get the alarm clock to go off?”

“I’m not sure, but I bet if you check you’ll find out that they went into Julie’s office while she was there.

If one twin did or said something to distract her, it would be easy for the other one to set that alarm clock.”

“You could be right, but how about all these messages from Julie’s fiancé? I’ve got them right here in black and white.”

“Let me read you something,” Hannah said, paging through the stack to find the one she wanted.

“According to the date, this one came in yesterday. I yearn for you more each day and fervently anticipate the instance when we can be united continually. Does that sound like something a guy would write to his fiancée?”

“Not really. I guess I was too upset to notice it before, but the wording’s very awkward.”

“How about this one?” Hannah located a second sheet of paper. “The moments we’re estranged are anguish, but the future will soon arrive. I adore you more with each second that elapses.”

Matt began to frown. “That’s even worse. It reminds me of something, but I can’t quite put my finger on it.”

“It’s writing for Roget,” Hannah told him. “Somebody looked up some perfectly good words in the thesaurus and substituted bigger ones.”

“You’re right! But who’d go to all that trouble for an e-mail?”

Matt and Hannah exchanged glances. And then he answered his own question. “There’s only one person who’d do it. It was a kid who was trying to sound like an adult.”

Hannah headed for the kitchen at a trot. She’d check in with Lisa and the girls, tell Julie what was going on, and then she’d confront the boys. Matt said they were watching television in the lounge and that was a perfect place to elicit a confession from the three pranksters who’d almost been Julie and Matt’s undoing.

A lovely scent wafted down the hallway as Hannah neared the kitchen. The girls were already baking.

She’d mixed up the dough at The Cookie Jar before she’d left last night. Today the only thing to do was roll it out, cut it in Christmas shapes, bake it, and then frost it. From the mouthwatering aroma that hit her nostrils as she pushed the kitchen door open, Hannah could tell that the girls were well on their way to finishing the sugary Christmas treats.

“Will you come look at my cookies, Miss Swensen?” Hope asked, running up to grab Hannah’s hand and pull her to the far end of the workstation. “I’m decorating the bells.”

“And you’re doing a wonderful job, Hope. I especially like that one.” Hannah pointed to a red and green bell with markedly irregular stripes.

“Serena likes that one too. She wants it for her Christmas present.”

To the girls’ delight, Hannah inspected all the cookies and pronounced them good enough to eat. Then Lisa shooed her out of the kitchen and into the dining room to talk to Julie.

“What did Matt say?” Julie sounded calm, but the way her hands twisted in her lap was testament to her anxiety.

“He believes you now.”

“It’s about time! He should have believed me when I first said that…”

“Stop!” Hannah held up her hand and Julie fell silent. “Let’s not compound the problem. Matt didn’t want to believe it, but he was tricked.”

“Who tricked him?”

“We don’t know for sure, but we think it was the boys.”

“But…I thought the boys liked me,” Julie said, looking very confused.

“Oh, they do. And they like Matt too.”

“Then why did they try to break us up?”

“That’s what I’m about to find out. You wait here. Matt’s coming to ask you to forgive him, and I want you to do it. It’s true that he should have trusted you, but everyone makes mistakes.”

Julie thought about that for a minute. “You’re right, Hannah. I just hate to think the boys did this deliberately, though. Maybe they were just playing a prank and it got out of control.”

“Maybe,” Hannah said. Julie was kind, giving the boys the benefit of the doubt, but Hannah didn’t believe it for a second. The boys had planned all this very carefully and she was determined to find out why.

CHRISTMAS SUGAR COOKIES

Do not preheat oven—this dough must chill before baking.

I came up with the cookie recipe and Lisa did the frosting.

1½ cups melted butter (3 sticks, ¾ pound)

2 cups white (granulated) sugar

4 beaten eggs

2 teaspoons baking powder

1½ teaspoons salt

1 teaspoon flavor extract (lemon, almond, vanilla, orange, rum, whatever) 5 cups flour (no need to sift)

Mix the melted butter with the sugar. Let cool. Add the beaten eggs, baking powder, salt, and flavoring.

Add the flour in one-cup increments, stirring after each addition.

Refrigerate dough for at least two hours. Overnight is fine, too.

When you’re ready to bake, preheat the oven to 375 degrees F., rack in the center position.

Divide the dough into four parts for ease in rolling. Roll out the first part of the dough on a floured board. It should be approximately 1/4 inch thick.

BOOK: Sugar And Spice
2.63Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Amongst the Dead by Robert Gott
Chai Tea Sunday by Heather A. Clark
The Color of a Dream by Julianne MacLean
Wild Horses by Kate Pavelle
Buddha Baby by Kim Wong Keltner
Everything Flows by Vasily Grossman
Saved by Kelly Elliott
The Mourning Sexton by Michael Baron
Struts & Frets by Jon Skovron


readsbookonline.com Copyright 2016 - 2024