The Second Chance Café (Hope Springs, #1)

 

 

The characters and events portrayed in this book are fictitious. Any similarity to real persons, living or dead, is coincidental and not intended by the author.

Text copyright © 2013 Alison Kent

All rights reserved.

No part of this book may be reproduced, or stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without express written permission of the publisher.

Published by Montlake Romance
P.O. Box 400818
Las Vegas, NV 89140

ISBN-13: 9781611097894
ISBN-10: 1611097894

To Robyn Carr, for
Virgin River
, and to Barbara O’Neal, for
The Lost Recipe for Happiness
. These two books took me back to my roots and the stories I’ve longed to tell. Thank you for making this happen.

CONTENTS
 

CHAPTER ONE

CHAPTER TWO

CHAPTER THREE

Two Owls' Signature Chocolate Brownie

CHAPTER FOUR

CHAPTER FIVE

CHAPTER SIX

CHAPTER SEVEN

CHAPTER EIGHT

CHAPTER NINE

Wake Up and Smell Two Owls' Chocolate Brownie

CHAPTER TEN

CHAPTER ELEVEN

CHAPTER TWELVE

CHAPTER THIRTEEN

CHAPTER FOURTEEN

CHAPTER FIFTEEN

CHAPTER SIXTEEN

CHAPTER SEVENTEEN

CHAPTER EIGHTEEN

Two Owls' Number Ten Brownie Special

CHAPTER NINETEEN

CHAPTER TWENTY

CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE

CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO

CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE

CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR

CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE

CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX

Two Owls' Nutty Chocolate Brownie Buddy

CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN

CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT

CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE

Two Owls' Chocolate Brownie on the Brain

CHAPTER THIRTY

CHAPTER THIRTY-ONE

CHAPTER THIRTY-TWO

CHAPTER THIRTY-THREE

CHAPTER THIRTY-FOUR

CHAPTER THIRTY-FIVE

CHAPTER THIRTY-SIX

CHAPTER THIRTY-SEVEN

CHAPTER THIRTY-EIGHT

Two Owls' Brownie Bouquet

CHAPTER THIRTY-NINE

CHAPTER FORTY

CHAPTER FORTY-ONE

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

Sneak Peek:
Beneath the Patchwork Moon

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

CHAPTER ONE
 

I
t was done.

The papers signed. The money transferred. The holding tight to the other shoe a thing of the past.

After weeks of waiting to hear on her offer, Kaylie Flynn was the proud owner of the three-story Victorian nestled on an oak-shaded acre and painted Van Gogh’s
Starry Night
blue.

It was the house where she’d spent the best years of her life. It was the house that had saved her. She wrapped her hand around the keys, the tiny teeth like a smile in her palm, and glanced up at the windows taking her in.

The shutters would be the first thing she replaced. Several slats were broken, some dangling, others gone. They’d once been white, but the paint had since chipped and faded. A soft dove gray would suit much better. Or maybe the pale butter-yellow of Van Gogh’s stars.

“You’ve got the keys, your copies of the pertinent documents, and my number if we’ve missed anything. All the utilities were turned on this morning. You’ll need to transfer them into your name, but you should be set. Can you think of anything else before I go?”

The real estate agent. Carolyn Parker. The other woman had remembered Kaylie from high school, but the memories from Kaylie’s past had yet to be puzzled into place. “Sorry. I was lost picturing new shutters, but yes. I should have everything.”

“Ah, not quite. For new shutters, you need a contractor.”

“Actually, I’m going to need a contractor for a whole lot more than that.”

“Then you’re in luck, because I know just the man. I’m pretty sure I have his card here somewhere,” Carolyn said, her voice lost in the depths of the quilted tote hooked over her shoulder.

Kaylie was used to professional women accessorizing with designer labels. The quilted tote’s paisley and pink elephant print reminded her how far Hope Springs, Texas, was from Austin—a distance that had little to do with miles, but everything to do with Kaylie’s return.

“Here you go,” Carolyn said, coming up with the card. “Anything you need repaired or replaced, Ten’s your man. He’s the best, and runs a crew that knows what they’re doing, even if they’re a bit unconventional.”

Tennessee Keller. Two words and a phone number. The whole of the information imparted by black ink on white stock. She filed away the “unconventional” remark, preferring to make that judgment for herself. “He’s here? In Hope Springs?”

Carolyn nodded, blowing at an unruly brown curl dangling between her eyes. Carolyn, Kaylie had come to notice, was always blowing, pushing, adjusting, as if she was so used to doing the same for her two-year-old twins, she couldn’t stop setting things to right.

“For about seven years, I guess? Eight maybe? He did some work on Wade’s back porch the summer we started dating, so that would’ve been…wow, more like ten.”

Ten years ago, Kaylie had left Hope Springs for Austin, her departure a ship in the night to Tennessee Keller’s arrival. A decade of work in the area should mean he’d have plenty of references. She tucked that thought away, too, sliding the card into the back pocket of her jeans.

“Thanks. I guess that’ll do it, then. At least for now.” She moved her keys from her right hand to her left to shake Carolyn’s. “I really appreciate you going to bat for me with the Colemans.”

“Oh, please. How could they say no? In this economy? And you paying cash? I mean, really, it’s not my business, but cash?”

Kaylie’s financial advisor had been of the same incredulous mind, but Kaylie would not be swayed. Cash meant the house was hers. The lawn, the trees, the memories. The bedroom. The kitchen. Most of all the kitchen.

She slipped her fingertips into the pocket with the card and toyed with the edge. She had big plans for the kitchen. Even better, now she had the funds to see them through. “I know how crazy it sounds, but it was the right thing to do.”

“Well, it’s your money. I guess you’re the one who would know best where to put it. Listen.” Carolyn was speaking into her tote again. “We rarely have any problems with vagrants or break-ins, but the Colemans got so caught up caring for Bob’s parents in Wichita Falls that the place kinda took a backseat. The police have had to run off squatters a time or two.”

She handed over another card from what Kaylie guessed was her collection belonging to local businesses. This one was imprinted with the official seal of the Hope Springs Police Department. “You can always call 911, but this is the direct line to Alva Bean in dispatch. If you need an officer, he’ll have someone here pronto.”

“Great. I really appreciate it.” The card joined the one for the contractor. “Oh, wait. There is something. Would you know what time the newspaper office closes today?”

Carolyn brought up a hand to shield her eyes from the sun as it cut through the limbs of the street-side oaks. “Since it’s Friday, that makes me want to say three. We’ve got a high school girl at the office who takes care of our listings there, so I can’t be sure.”

“Thanks.” Kaylie wanted to put an ad in the next weekly edition, but before she did anything, she needed to get Magoo from her Jeep. “Maybe we can have lunch sometime soon? My treat?”

“Wow. A meal eaten without twenty grubby fingers reaching for everything on my plate? It’s a date.” With a wave, Carolyn turned to go, her sensible flats smacking against the sidewalk as she made her way to her minivan, parallel parked at the curb.

Kaylie waited until the other woman had pulled safely onto Second Street, then headed through the overgrown grass to the driveway on the Chances Avenue side of the lot. “Hey, Goo. Ready to check out the new digs?”

Tongue lolling, the two-year-old shepherd mix placed his paws on the doorframe and boosted himself halfway through the window. Kaylie slapped her hand to her thigh,
and ninety pounds of dog sailed through the air to land at her feet.

She scratched between his ears, then circled the vehicle to grab his water bowl from the passenger floorboard. He trotted beside her to the breezeway connecting the garage to the house. The door there opened into a mudroom that opened into the kitchen she’d dreamed of for ten years. She filled the bowl at the sink, setting it near the back door before allowing herself to take everything in.

She didn’t know where to start. The six-foot island with a stove top, cutting board, and second sink for food prep. The walk-in pantry with shelves deep enough and tall enough to stock with a platoon’s worth of supplies. The linoleum that had suffered skid marks from rubber-soled shoes, and gouges from dropped mixer beaters, and stains from food coloring intended for a red velvet cake.

Kaylie wrapped her arms around her middle and remembered the klutz she’d been at twelve. All those tiny squeeze bottles, the mess on her fingers and the toes of her shoes, the droplets flung like blood from a knife to the floor. She’d ruined a brand-new sponge, wasted half a roll of paper towels, and still not wiped away all traces of the spill. She’d wanted so badly to surprise May Wise, but her foster mother had been less concerned about her birthday—or the shambles of the kitchen—than to hear through a sobbing confession that Kaylie knew about knife wounds.

As much as Kaylie would love to install hardwood or Italian marble, her plans required commercial flooring—durable; slip-, fire-, and stain-resistant; easy to maintain. The menu for her daily ten-to-two lunch would be simple, selfserve,
and self-pay. Salad, bread, entrée, dessert. Payment in cash dropped in a cigar box at the dining-room door.

Kaylie’s specialty was business—and brownies—not reproducing the breads baked in this kitchen the eight years she’d lived here. Or putting together the hearty main dishes she would serve others as May Wise had served those in her care. Making a success of Two Owls Café meant a cook who knew red leaf from romaine, Gouda from feta from
Parmigiano
from Swiss. Egg noodles from rice noodles from semolina spaghetti. Hiring the right woman, or man, was a priority.

She hadn’t come to her plan lightly. Malina’s Diner was the only true restaurant in Hope Springs proper. Max Malina did a booming breakfast business, but closed at ten once the rush was done. He reopened at four for dinner, leaving a six-hour window where anyone wanting a meal had to cook or leave town. The fast-food franchises on the interstate, Kaylie had learned, boomed at lunch like Max’s place did at first light.

Two Owls Café would offer an alternative to soup and sandwiches, burgers and fries. But more than that, it would offer a place for friends to gather, and over a meal discuss crafts and child rearing, music and books and movies, favorite recipes and gardening tips. Kaylie saw her place as an oasis, one with a limited menu, yes, but then this house had always been about nurturing with things other than food.

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