Summer Secrets at the Apple Blossom Deli. Portia MacIntosh. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Portia MacIntosh
Издательство: HarperCollins
Серия:
Жанр произведения: Контркультура
Год издания: 0
isbn: 9780008297718
Скачать книгу
was his first day,’ I point out. ‘He also mentioned that none of the other kids would play with him, he said they knew who he was…’

      ‘Ah, yes.’ Mrs Snowball removes her glasses from her nose, allowing them to hang on their chain, around her neck. ‘It would seem that the locals are familiar with your agenda in our town, and no one is happy. Children’s brains are like sponges, if they hear their parents talking about the new family that’s moved in to threaten jobs, well, they’re going to pick up on that.’

      ‘Mrs Snowball, that is not what is going to happen,’ I insist. ‘He said the kids are saying I’m evil. Don’t you think that’s extreme?’

      ‘Simon Dawson’s dad is our local butcher,’ she points out. ‘Ella Carr’s dad is the baker.’

      ‘Whose dad makes the candlesticks?’ I quip. Gosh, I really need to quit cracking these jokes.

      ‘Bart and Bernadette’s parents are responsible for all of our milk, cheese and yogurt.’

      Wow, they sound like cool parents. Not.

      ‘I appreciate what you’re saying, I really do, but I haven’t come here to take over from these people. I run a deli. We don’t sell four pints of milk, we sell speciality products, make sandwiches with them…’

      ‘There’s a lovely old lady called Clara who runs a café – how do you think she’ll feel about you selling sandwiches?’

      The thought of upsetting Clara, after she was so lovely to me, breaks my heart a little.

      ‘We’re living in a tourist town,’ I point out. ‘There’s more than enough room for all of us.’

      ‘Well.’ Mrs Snowball claps her hand as she stands up. ‘I’m just the messenger. And I’ll try and help Frankie to make some friends today.’

      ‘Thank you,’ I reply. ‘And, if you could let him eat his lunch…’

      ‘Is there a bagel in there?’

      No, just a couple of lines of coke and a Stanley knife for playtime.

      ‘No bagel today,’ I reply. ‘Just two slices of bread.’

      ‘Well, OK then. Work today, is it?’ she asks, ushering me towards the door.

      ‘Yes,’ I reply, glancing at my watch. ‘Actually, I’d better get a move on, or I’m going to be late.’

      ‘Oh yes,’ she laughs. ‘Punctuality doesn’t seem to be your strong suit, does it?’

      Nope. Making awkward jokes and killing my child with carbs is my thing.

      I smile and say goodbye, before I’m tempted to play Godzilla with her little village.

      I walk out of the school gates, passing a few mums on my way. I pass a gaggle of four of them, only to feel their eyes burning holes into my back. I turn around and smile, only to see them hurry inside the building. I’m guessing they’ve heard of me.

      Oh, I so hope Frankie makes some friends today. It seems so unfair, that just because of my job, no one is being nice to him.

      Life in Marram Bay is proving to be much harder than I thought it would be. Still, we’re better off here than we were in London. Safer too, given recent events.

      I pull the sleeve of my black jumper dress down over my hand before placing it over my nose. I’ve never been great with strong smells, least of all the smell currently coming from the deli bathroom. Sadly, it’s not a very thick dress – it is still summer after all – so it’s not doing much to disguise the pong.

      ‘It’s the drains,’ Mike insists. ‘Someone flushed the lav today, not knowing about the drain problems we’ve been having.’

      ‘So when is it getting fixed?’ I ask from behind my hand.

      ‘Well, that’s the problem, darling. No one wants to fix it.’

      ‘What do you mean?’ I ask.

      Mike, clearly unfazed by the smell, grabs a doughnut from a box on the side and chomps down on it as we chat.

      Mike, who is in his forties, has got that rough and ready workman look and charm, only made even friendlier by his jolly apples-and-pears accent. His dimpled cheeks give him this cheeky glimmer than makes you instantly warm to him, even when he’s giving you news you don’t want to hear.

      ‘We’re having a bit of bother with local tradesmen,’ he explains. ‘None of them want to help us out.’

      ‘I mean…they know they’ll get paid, right?’

      ‘’Course,’ Mike replies. ‘Even tried offering them extra.’

      ‘So they’re turning work down because they protest the deli?’

      He nods.

      Well, isn’t that just a special kind of stupid? These people are so worried that the deli will harm local businesses, they’re actively turning down business – which is harming local businesses. Talk about a self-fulfilling prophecy.

      ‘The gaffer thought it might help sweeten up the locals, to hire some of them for work, but they ain’t having it,’ Mike says, reaching for a second doughnut. I suppose doing a job like his burns a lot of calories – maybe that’s where I’m going wrong. Still, I’m not about to go and dabble in the drains.

      ‘OK, well, I guess you’ll have to hire the tradesmen you need from outside the town,’ I say plainly.

      ‘Do you think they’ll like that?’ he chuckles.

      ‘Probably not, but we don’t have much choice. Perhaps it will show them that we’re serious about staying here. And at least it will keep work ticking along until I think of a real way to get everyone on board.’

      ‘You’re the boss,’ he says with a cheeky smile. ‘I’ll get on it.’

      Left alone at the counter I glance at the plans laid out in front of me. It really is a shame the locals are set against this place, it is going to be so amazing, and I’m not just saying that because I feel like it’s my baby.

      I can see the doughnuts out of the corner of my eye, but my usual inclination to eat one just isn’t there. It’s this horrible sewage smell, filling the room, that’s proving to be an excellent appetite suppressor. I’m sure we could make a lot of money with it, were this the location of a SkinnyKwick Club meeting, but we’re a deli and we want people to buy food.

      ‘Lily,’ I hear Mike calling as he heads back in. ‘I’m on with a plumber, he says he can do it, but he wants his travel expenses covering. He’s coming pretty far.’

      ‘OK, sure,’ I say reluctantly. Well, it’s not exactly my own money I’m throwing around, is it? My bosses have given me an impossible job to do, and I’m doing the best I can. ‘The sooner he can come, the better.’

      ‘He says he’ll be right over,’ Mike replies.

      ‘Great,’ I reply, semi-sarcastically. Well, it’s not great that we have to fork out for plumbers from afar, but it will be a lot easier to get some work done here once the smell is gone.

      ‘I’m going to go outside and scope out the area,’ I say.

      ‘OK, sure. You get some fresh air,’ Mike laughs. I think he’s onto me, but I can’t think straight around this smell.

      I step out of the main door and onto the paved area out front where I finally take in the view for the first time. We might not be on the seafront, but we’re right at the top of the main street that leads down to it, which means that, for the customers who sit outside the deli to eat their lunch, they’ll be able to see the sea. It’s still quite warm and sunny for early September,