Toxic Toffee
Also by Amanda Flower
Assaulted Caramel
Lethal Licorice
Premeditated Peppermint
TOXIC TOFFEE
Amanda Flower
KENSINGTON BOOKS
KENSINGTON PUBLISHING CORP.
www.kensingtonbooks.com
All copyrighted material within is Attributor Protected.
Table of Contents
Also by
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Acknowledgments
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Chapter 40
Epilogue
Charlotte’s Toffee Pieces
Teaser chapter
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
KENSINGTON BOOKS are published by
Kensington Publishing Corp.
119 West 40th Street
New York, NY 10018
Copyright © 2019 by Amanda Flower
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any means without the prior written consent of the Publisher, excepting brief quotes used in reviews.
To the extent that the image or images on the cover of this book depict a person or persons, such person or persons are merely models, and are not intended to portray any character or characters featured in the book.
If you purchased this book without a cover you should be aware that this book is stolen property. It was reported as “unsold and destroyed” to the Publisher and neither the Author nor the Publisher has received any payment for this “stripped book.”
Kensington and the K logo Reg. U.S. Pat. & TM Off.
ISBN: 978-1-4967-2202-7
ISBN-13: 978-1-4967-2205-8 (eBook)
ISBN-10: 1-4967-2205-1 (eBook)
My Dear Readers
Acknowledgments
Thank you to all the readers who have fallen in love with the Amish Candy Shop mystery series. I love hearing from you about how much you enjoy it. Without you, I wouldn’t be where I am today.
Thanks to my amazing publisher, Kensington, which has been so supportive of this series and me. Special thanks to my editor, Alicia Condon, and everyone on the incredible marketing team.
Thank you as always to my super agent, Nicole Resciniti, who always knows what our next move should be. You are a dream maker, Nic!
A special thank you to Gwen Mayer, who is an expert on rabbit care and lent me the name Puff from one of her prized bunnies. Thank you.
Always thanks to my friends David and Mariellyn for their support, and to Delia for testing recipes with me. Love to my family, Andy, Nicole, Isabella, and Andrew, for their constant support.
Finally, thanks to my Father in Heaven for letting me tell so many stories.
Chapter 1
Charlotte Weaver stood in the middle of Times Square with her mouth hanging open and the ties of her black bonnet flapping on the hot air pushing its way through the subway grate, as the trains rumbled below.
“Charlotte!” I took hold of her arm. “Close your mouth. Your Amish is showing.”
She snapped her mouth shut.
The truth was Charlotte’s Amish had been “showing” the entire time that we had been in NYC. In Holmes County, Ohio, no one would blink an eye at the pretty redheaded girl in the plain dress, sensible black tennis shoes, and black bonnet, but in New York, she stuck out like a gorilla on the subway. We had been in the city for the last six weeks shooting six episodes for my candy maker television show, Bailey’s Amish Sweets, to appear on Gourmet Television in the summer season.
Charlotte was in Manhattan as my kitchen assistant and would also appear on the show giving it that extra “Amish oomph,” as producer Linc Baggins liked to say. Yes, “Baggins” like the Hobbit. It was best not to mention that when he was around since his resemblance to the hairy-footed character was uncanny.
Typically, an Amish person would never appear on television. It was against the rules they lived by, but Charlotte was able to appear on the show with me because as of yet she hadn’t been baptized in the Amish church and could do more English things while on her rumspringa. Her church elders were not thrilled with the idea of her being on TV, but until she was officially baptized, there wasn’t much they could do about it. I didn’t want Charlotte to get in trouble with her church, but I’d invited her along anyway. Her heart was so set on going with me to New York that I couldn’t bring myself to disappoint her.
“I—I’ve never seen anything like this!” Charlotte said in awe.
I glanced around and tried to take everything in through Charlotte’s eyes. Thousands of people of every race, ethnicity, and language milled around; the bright lights and signs glittered on the towering buildings; the smell of bodies, hot dogs, car exhaust, and street vendor flowers mingled together. It was sensory overload for anyone, and for a girl who had lived most of her life in a very conservative Amish community, it must have been like the dark side of the moon.
I wrapped my arms around her shoulders. “Since you’ve been working so hard on the show, and since we haven’t been able to get out much with the shooting schedule, I’m glad that we had time for me to show you some of the city.”
“Is all the city this loud and bright and . . . ?” She trailed off, searching for the right word.
“Maybe not this loud and bright,” I said with a smile. “We are in the thick of it now, but every city has life to it. That’s not any different from Holmes County.”
She looked at me with wonder in her large blue eyes. “How can you say that? This place is nothing like back home.”
“Holmes County has as much life and color as New York does; it’s just shown in a different way.”
My best friend Cass Calbera ran up the sidewalk, maneuvering expertly through the crowd like someone who had lived in New York her entire life, which she had. “There you are! I’ve been circling the square for the last ten minutes looking for you two.” She glanced at Charlotte. “I thought it would be easy, considering, but I got fooled by a nun in full habit walking down the street. I swore it was Charlotte.”
I rolled my eyes. “Charlotte doesn’t look like a Catholic nun.”
“From the back she might. Anyway, why weren’t you answering your phone? I tried to call too!”
I pulled my phone out of my pocket; I had put it on silent during our last shooting session and forgotten to turn the sound back on. Whoops.
“Seriously, Bailey, you’ve lived in Amish Country too long. I think being away from electronics has addled your brain. You don’t know how to behave in normal society.”
“What is normal society?” I asked.
She shook her finger at me and, as she did, her purple bangs fell into her eyes. “Don’t you go and get philosophical on me, King!”<
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Before I could say anything, she retorted, “Now, Jean Pierre sent a car. I left it just up the street. It was the only place the driver could find to park. We have to go. No one keeps Jean Pierre waiting if they know what’s good for them.”
That much was true.
The ride through the city to JP Chocolates was slow, but by the looks of it, Charlotte didn’t mind a bit. She had her nose pressed up against the tinted glass, taking everything in. I could just imagine the stories she would tell my grandmother and Emily Keim, our other shop assistant, when we got back to Swissmen Sweets.
When we finally walked through the front door of JP Chocolates, a wave of nostalgia hit me. This was where I had spent six years of my life working eighty to one hundred hours a week. Unlike Swissmen Sweets, my grandmother’s Amish candy shop back in Ohio, with its hardwood floors and pine shelving, JP Chocolates was striking white and sleekly accented with chrome. It would have even been considered sterile or plain if it had not been for the chocolate itself. Elaborate chocolate creations sat under glass encasements. There was a replica of the Statue of Liberty that I had carved in white chocolate in one of the glass cases.
With Easter just a week away, JP Chocolates was dripping with Easter bunnies in every size and flavor of chocolate. I even saw Easter rabbits made from molded peanut butter, marshmallow, and red licorice
“I wish I could have spent more time with you in the last week, but you know what a nuthouse this place is around any holiday,” Cass said as she walked through the showroom to the back of the shop where the chocolate happened. Cass was the head chocolatier at JP Chocolates, and it was obvious that she was the woman in charge as the apprentice chocolatiers backed away from her and avoided eye contact when she passed by. Cass didn’t seem to notice the power she had over them.
I most certainly did. Before Cass got the position as head chocolatier at JP Chocolates, I had been next in line to receive the promotion as Jean Pierre’s long-time protégée, but then my grandfather died, and I found myself giving up the position to live with my grandmother in Holmes County, Ohio, helping with the candy shop that had been in our family for generations. I left thinking that I would never return to the city for more than a short visit, but then Linc offered me my own show on his network. I hadn’t thought much would come of it, but to my surprise, the network loved the screen test that we shot in Harvest, and the next thing I knew I was in NYC shooting my own candy-making show. Somehow fate had decreed that I would have the best of both worlds: Holmes County and New York, the two places on earth that had captured my heart. I called it fate, but my Amish grandmother called it providence.
“Ma chérie!” Jean Pierre floated into the giant kitchen. “You have come back to me. Please say that you plan to stay!” Jean Pierre Ruge was a tall, thin, silver-haired man with a Parisian nose who carried himself as erect as a dancer. He moved his arms in such a way that it seemed he might have been just that once upon a time.
I gave Jean Pierre a hug and he smelled of chocolate, which wasn’t all that surprising considering what he did for a living. The only thing was that he wasn’t supposed to be doing it for a living any longer. Months ago, he had retired from the business and Cass took over. From what Cass said he was there every day giving her advice. Cass said that she didn’t mind it. As aggravating as Jean Pierre could be, you couldn’t help but love his flamboyant personality.
“You know I can’t stay, Jean Pierre. Charlotte and I leave tomorrow morning. We just dropped by to say our good-byes.”
He clicked his tongue in disgust. “Oh, dear me, how are you getting home?”
“We have a flight going out of Newark.”
“A commercial flight?” He shuddered. “You should take my plane. No protégée of mine should ever fly commercial.”
I chuckled. “I appreciate the offer, Jean Pierre, but the network paid for the flight and Charlotte and I will be more than comfortable.”
He sniffed. “What kind of television network would fly their star commercial? It is a disgrace!”
“Not to worry, Jean Pierre,” Cass chimed in. “Hot Cop is picking them up from the airport.”
I rolled my eyes. “Hot Cop” was the name Cass called my sheriff deputy boyfriend, Aiden Brody, back in Ohio. Her description was accurate on all counts, but it was also embarrassing. As of yet, Aiden hadn’t heard the nickname, and I would do everything in my power to keep it that way.
Jean Pierre set a long finger against his cheek. “I do not know of this Hot Cop. How do I not know about Hot Cop?”
Cass patted his arm. “I gave him the once-over and Bailey has my support on this one. We both know what a bulldog I can be.”
Jean Pierre sniffed. “This is very true. You make a judgment on a person’s character and stick with it. I like decisiveness. This is a good skill to have in chocolate and in life. In chocolate, there are no second chances.”
“In life there might be,” I mused.
Jean Pierre smiled. “Perhaps. That is my wish for you, ma chérie.” He clapped his hands. “Now if you want to help us weave some more chocolate Easter baskets, we won’t turn you away.”
I grinned. Making chocolate Easter baskets and weaving with chocolate was one of my favorite jobs at JP Chocolates. I planned to teach my grandmother the fine art when I got home. “I thought you would never ask!”
I was just settling in to weave chocolate when my cell phone rang. I had turned it back on after Cass’s reprimand. I removed my gloves and pulled the phone from my pocket. When I checked the screen, I saw the name “Margot Rawlings” there. Margot was the village of Harvest instigator. Whatever she had to say to me, chances were high I wouldn’t like it. Against my better judgment, I answered the call.
Without so much as a hello, she said, “I need to talk to you about a rabbit.”
And a dark cloud of foreboding fell over me.
Chapter 2
Charlotte squeezed my hand when our flight descended for landing early the next day in the tiny Akron-Canton Airport. As the plane’s tires bounced on the tarmac, I gave a huge sigh of relief. It was good to be home. The thought surprised me. When I had traveled to Ohio the previous summer, I would never have considered the state, let alone rural Amish country, as home, but that was how I felt now. The little village of Harvest, Ohio, felt more like home to me than New York ever had in all the time I had lived there.
We deplaned without incident and without causing a scene. The people of Ohio were used to seeing the Amish, and they didn’t so much as blink an eye at Charlotte when she strolled through the airport in her plain dress and bonnet, rolling her little red suitcase behind her.
Sheriff Deputy Aiden Brody stood just on the other side of security in his Holmes County Sheriff’s Department uniform. His blond hair was tousled as if he had just removed his hat, and his dark brown eyes scrutinized everyone who walked by him. Years of being a police officer had taught Aiden to always be on the lookout for trouble.
His face lit up and the adorable dimple in his right cheek appeared as Charlotte and I came into his line of sight. Charlotte waved at him with a big smile on her face, but I was much more reserved. I adjusted my carry-on bag on my shoulder and took a deep breath. It truly was good to be home.
Aiden gave me a smile that I knew was meant for me alone, and my stomach did a little flip. We had spoken on the phone every night while I was away, but it was so good to see him in the flesh. I didn’t dare run up to him and give him a hug. That would have to wait. Public displays of affection embarrassed the Amish, and I had already put Charlotte through enough by taking her with me to New York. The poor girl could only take so much Englishness.
Aiden seemed to sense this, and he simply said, “It’s good to have you home.” His voice was deep and fuller of emotion than I had ever heard it.
“It’s good to be home.” I smiled back, feeling a little choked up myself.
He grabbed the handle of Charlotte’s suitcase and took my bag from my arm. “Let’s go
pick up your luggage.”
The drive back to Holmes County was made lively by Charlotte’s Amish view of life in New York. “Do you know that you can buy hot dogs on the street there?” she asked Aiden. “Not for a festival either! Any day of the week. I ate so many hot dogs.”
Aiden chuckled and looked at me in the rearview mirror. “I’d say that was a great takeaway from life in the city: hot dogs on every corner.”
Charlotte frowned. “Not every corner, but a lot of them.”
Aiden smiled. Growing up in Holmes County he was used to the Amish literalness. The plain people say what they mean and mean what they say. “Many corners then?” he asked.
“‘Many corners’ works,” she said in all seriousness.
“The New York City tourist board would be pleased,” I agreed. “I got a call from Margot just before we left the city. Something to do with rabbits.”
“Oh.” Aiden glanced at me from the corner of his eye. “I hoped to get you to Swissmen Sweets before that came up.”
“That sounds ominous.”
“It’s Margot we’re talking about here.” He paused. “I think it would be better for you to see it before I try to explain. It’s a little hard to describe.”
“That doesn’t sound terrifying or anything.”
Aiden laughed. “You know Margot. Bigger is better. More, more, more. She wants Harvest on the tourist map and will do anything to get it there.”
“Anything?” I raised my eyebrows.
He looked at me in the mirror again. “Just about anything, yes.”
Main Street in our little village of Harvest, Ohio, was buzzing when Aiden turned his departmental SUV onto it. Buggies and cars were parked along the street and a whole cluster of people stood in front of the white gazebo in the middle of the square. Aiden illegally double-parked his car so that we could get out and see what all the commotion was about. Since Aiden was a police officer, I didn’t think he was worried about getting a ticket for the parking violation.