finished his last cup of coffee, the workday would be over. Harold liked to linger, and for years had ignored the sign indicating that Kimâs closed at precisely three oâclock. âEveryoneâs just glad to see you, thatâs all.â
âYeah, thatâs it,â Rachel told her grandmother. Sheâd been back in Morrisville for two full days now. Once sheâd stormed out of Alessandroâs, sheâd been a woman of action. One day and two phone calls later and sheâd had her place sublet. One more phone call had gotten her car out of its Queens storage lot. A week after tossing cake on her former fiancé, Rachel had been on the road, driving from New York to Indiana with her personal possessions loaded in the trunk.
Unfortunately, she hadnât escaped town quickly enough to avoid a courier-delivered envelope from Anthony and Marco Alessandroâs lawyer. Not only had they docked her final paycheck for the cost of replacing Marcoâs suit, leaving her with a mere six dollars and ten cents, but theyâd also given her thirty days to turn over her recipes or face civil action.
The amount theyâd valued her recipes at had been astronomical. The morning after the cake flinging, Rachel had prayed that Marco would see how stupid and silly they were both being, but apparently, he was determined to punish her.
She no longer had rent expense, but she did have credit card debt. Now she was about to add legal bills to an already stretched budget. She refused to take charity from her mother and grandmotherâit was bad enough she was back in her childhood bedroom, which had pretty much remained unchanged since the day sheâd left for New York City. Her window still faced the Morris house; the only difference was that Colin Morris, her friend since childhood, no longer occupied the room across the way. As youngsters, theyâd used flashlights and Morse codeâget it? Morse/Morris code, theyâd laughâand sent messages to each other until late at night.
For income, Rachel had negotiated eleven dollars an hour to work at Kimâs. Her grandmother had wanted to pay her more, but Rachel knew that any money for a higher salary would come from her grandmotherâs pocket and not the restaurantâs cash register. Kim Palladia lived comfortably, but Rachel didnât want to be in debt to her family. It was time she faced the music.
Starting with heading to the law office of Lancaster and Morris, which had provided legal expertise to the town of Morrisville for over fifty years.
Rachel tugged on her coat. Sheâd walk across Main Street, through the parking lot, and be in the law-office lobby before her bravado deserted her. She dreaded hearing what Bruce Lancaster would have to say. He was one of the sharpest legal minds in the state and a former childhood playmate, but she had to admit she was petrified heâd tell her that Marco had a legitimate claim to her recipes and sheâd have to turn them over.
âIâm leaving,â she called.
Her grandmother waved. âSee you at home tonight,â she said. Sheâd moved in eight years ago, adding another body to the Palladia homestead. The century-old Victorian home, which stood on a half-acre lot, was really too big for just two people. But it had been in Rachelâs fatherâs family for two generations, and Rachelâs mother simply couldnât bear to part with it. Rachel knew that her mother hoped sheâd eventually move home and raise a family in the old place. She hated disappointing her, but figured all those years in New York City were a clue that she didnât want to be a small-town girl.
The blustery March wind whipped down the street, causing the Easter decorations hanging from light poles to sway. Morrisville had signs for every holiday. The current ones displayed a white bunny carrying an egg-filled basket and advertised the annual Knights of Columbus
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