The Ultimate Pi Day Party
Page 1
The Ultimate Pi Day Party
Baldwin Village, Book 1
Jackie Lau
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, companies, or persons, living or dead, is coincidental.
Copyright © 2019 Jackie Lau. All Rights Reserved.
First edition: March 2019
ISBN: 978-1-7753047-5-3
Editor: Latoya C. Smith, LCS Literary Services
Cover Design: Flirtation Designs
Cover photograph: Shutterstock
Table of Contents
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Meet Josh Yu...
Chapter 1 | Josh
Chapter 2 | Sarah
Chapter 3 | Josh
Chapter 4 | Sarah
Chapter 5 | Sarah
Chapter 6 | Josh
Chapter 7 | Sarah
Chapter 8 | Josh
Chapter 9 | Sarah
Chapter 10 | Josh
Chapter 11 | Josh
Chapter 12 | Sarah
Chapter 13 | Josh
Chapter 14 | Sarah
Chapter 15 | Josh
Chapter 16 | Sarah
Chapter 17 | Josh
Chapter 18 | Sarah
Chapter 19 | Josh
Chapter 20 | Sarah
Chapter 21 | Josh
Chapter 22 | Sarah
Chapter 23 | Josh
Chapter 24 | Sarah
Chapter 25 | Josh
Chapter 26 | Sarah
Epilogue | Josh
Thank You!
Acknowledgements
About the Author
Also by Jackie Lau
For Dad
Meet Josh Yu...
If there’s one thing that might get my dad, a retired math teacher, to visit Toronto and have a real conversation with me for the first time in seventeen years, it’s a big nerdy Pi Day party. And hopefully this party—and seeing the tech company I built from nothing—will finally be enough to impress him and make him forgive me for everything I did when I was a teenager.
But it’s got to be a really great party.
That’s where Sarah Winters comes in. She owns Happy As Pie, a sweet and savory pie shop, and wants to get into catering. She makes an amazing lamb-rosemary pie, cherry pie, lemon-lime tart...you get the idea. She’ll provide the food and help me plan the party, nothing more. No matter how much time we spend together, I’m not going to fall in love with her.
At least, that’s what I tell myself...
Chapter 1
Josh
“Will you marry me?”
Amrita is down on one knee in front of me, holding a ring box and a single rose. She’s wearing a spiffy black suit with a white shirt and red bow tie.
“My first proposal.” I lean back against my desk. “I don’t know what to say.”
“Say you’ll marry me. Or are you going to make me beg?”
“Hmm. I kind of want to see you beg.”
She smacks my leg. “Come on.”
“Yes, I’ll marry you.”
She stands up and gives me a quick hug before stepping back. “Now tell me what you think. The suit, the rose—is it okay?”
There’s a touch of uncertainty in her voice, which isn’t like Amrita. My best friend usually exudes confidence.
“It’s more than okay,” I say. “Except your bow tie’s a little crooked.” I move to straighten it, but she slaps my hand away.
“It’s supposed to be crooked. It’s jaunty.”
“Right. A jaunty bow tie.”
“You’re making fun of me.”
“I’m not. It’s nice.” I gesture at her suit. “I can’t believe you’re getting engaged.”
“She still has to say yes.”
“Holly will say yes. You know that.”
Amrita grins at me.
Two years ago, I never would have imagined her standing in my office with a rose and a ring, preparing to propose to someone. If I’d mentioned the idea to her, she would have wrinkled her nose and laughed in my face. But she’s been with Holly for a while now, and here we are.
Her phone rings.
“Just a sec, this won’t be long,” she says, then answers the call and begins speaking rapidly in Punjabi. I take a seat behind my desk and wait for her to finish.
I’ve known Amrita since university, and we started Hazelnut Tech together several years ago. I’m the CEO, and she’s the CTO. We have an office just east of Yonge Street in downtown Toronto, as well as offices in Montreal and Vancouver.
Amrita ends the call. “My mom wanted to know whether I’d proposed yet.”
My eyes widen. “I can’t believe you told her you were going to propose.”
“I can’t believe it, either. It just slipped out when I saw her last weekend.” Once upon a time, Amrita’s parents were not supportive of the fact that she likes women, but they’ve come around. “She also says that she’s found a nice woman for you, Josh.”
I cough. “What?”
“You heard me. My mother wants to set you up with someone.”
“I hope you said no.”
She shrugs.
“Amrita!”
“Okay, fine. I said no, but the thought of her bringing this woman to the office? It was tempting.”
I glare at her. “You wouldn’t dare.”
“Maybe I would, but tonight is not the night for me to think about your poor excuse for a love life.” She tugs the lapels of her suit jacket, then uses her phone as a mirror to fix her short hair.
I ignore her comment about my love life. I don’t have one...because I don’t want one. Besides, I’m too busy with work for a relationship. I do, however, have a sex life, although I’ve had a bit of a dry spell lately.
I push that thought aside. “February thirteenth is an odd day to propose.”
“Exactly! That’s the point. It’ll be a surprise. Valentine’s Day is too obvious, but the day before Valentine’s? She won’t be expecting it.”
“Right.”
“Come on, Josh. Sound happy for me.”
“I am happy. I just...” I don’t know. I’ve been in a bit of a funk lately, and it’s Valentine’s Day tomorrow, and I’ve had to see red roses and hearts everywhere.
“It’s okay,” she says. “I’ll see you on Friday?”
“Friday?” It’s only Wednesday. “Why not tomorrow?”
She gives me a look. “I told you about my plan to take Valentine’s Day off, remember? Unless Holly says no, and then—”
“She’ll say yes, don’t worry. And you look good. Really, you do.”
Amrita gives me a smile, then leaves my office.
I walk to the window and look out at the street below. It’s snowing today. Not much, but even a little snow can mess up traffic. There’s a bunch of honking, and some idiot is driving too quickly down the crowded, snowy streets.
I head back to my desk. Time to answer some emails, but my head isn’t in the game.
Instead, I pick up the picture of my family that’s gathering dust on the shelf beside my desk. Dad, Mom, me, and my sisters, Nancy and Wendy, at Nancy’s wedding several years ago. Dad isn’t smiling. He rarely smiles in photos, especially not when he’s forced to stand beside his only son. Amrita’s office is decorated with pictures of Holly, but me, on the other hand...I only have this one dusty photo of my family.
I turn it over and sigh.
* * *
When I leave the office, it’s dark. I don’t feel like heading home and cooking, so I wander north from Hazelnut Tech, planning to grab somethin
g to eat before I get on the subway.
I pass Chinese restaurants, ramen restaurants, a falafel place. A British pub next to an Indian restaurant, which is next to a Korean barbecue restaurant.
Nothing appeals, however.
I consider going to a Hong Kong-style café I like, but I’m not in the mood.
I’m not in the mood for anything.
Why do I feel like this? Am I annoyed that my best friend is getting engaged? It’s not like I’m jealous—I don’t want what she has for myself. But I also don’t think she’s making a mistake. She and Holly will be very happy together.
I find myself in Baldwin Village, a small section of Baldwin Street east of Chinatown where the houses have been converted to businesses. Mostly restaurants, many with patios out front, gathering snow in the dead of February. Pupusa Hut, Paulie’s Laksa, Hogtown Poke, Elk Bistro...
And then I see a place that makes me smile.
Happy As Pie.
The name of the shop sounds vaguely familiar, though I can’t place it.
But pie sounds like the perfect dinner. A slice of lemon meringue, a slice of apple pie, and a cup of coffee—that should hit the spot.
I step inside, glad to be out of the bitter cold, and peruse the offerings. I’d expected it to just serve sweet pies, but there are savory ones, too. It appears I’ll be able to have a proper meal after all, rather than just a big dessert.
There are four meat pies: tourtière, braised lamb and rosemary, beef and mushroom, and chicken and leek. No one’s behind the counter, though, and I’m the only customer.
“Hello?” I call. There’s a door—presumably to the kitchen—that’s open just a crack.
It opens further, and a white woman with a big smile and light brown hair steps out. She’s about my age, and she’s wearing an apron over her nicely-shaped—
Never mind. I’m here for pie, not to ogle some woman’s figure.
“What can I get you?” she asks. She has a lovely voice. Soft, but not too quiet, and musical, somehow.
“I’ll have a beef and mushroom pie,” I say.
“Sure thing.”
“And a coffee.”
“Alright.”
“A slice of pear ginger crumble pie.”
“Yep.”
“And a butter tart. All for here.”
She raises her eyebrows. “Will that be everything? Are you sure you don’t also want a slice of cherry pie and a slice of chocolate tart?”
I smile, enjoying her teasing. “No, that’s all.”
I pay for the large meal, and she says she’ll bring it over to me. I go to sit by the window and watch the snow fall on the empty patio.
My phone buzzes. It’s Amrita.
She said yes!
Congrats, I reply, then set my phone aside.
The woman sets a warm beef and mushroom pie in front of me, followed by a second plate with my desserts.
“Enjoy,” she says.
“I’m sure I will, thank you.” And then it comes to me. I remember where I’ve heard of this pie shop. “Last month, the premier got hit in the face with a pie at Queen’s Park.”
She sighs. “Yes, that was one of our pies.”
“A cherry pie, if I remember correctly?”
“No, it was a special order for a banana cream pie with lots of whipped cream.”
“Much less colorful.”
That gets a smile out of her, and her smile is a thing of beauty.
“I had no idea what they were going to use it for,” she says. “If it wasn’t going to be eaten, why didn’t they just buy a pie from the grocery store and add whipped topping from a can?”
I chuckle. “You tired of hearing about it?”
“I always hoped that when we got some press, it would be for how great the pies taste, not for how they look when smashed on a politician’s face.”
“Yeah, I can imagine.”
“Though his political rivals did place an order for six banana cream pies, extra whipped cream, so it’s not like I didn’t get any business out of it. I shouldn’t complain.”
“I’m sure you’ll get the business you want soon enough.”
“Thank you.”
She smiles at me before walking away, and I try the pie. The beef and mushroom is delicious. The crust is flaky, and the filling is rich and steaming. Perfect for a chilly winter’s day.
I have stuff to do. A proposal for an app for a food delivery service to review. Too many emails in my inbox. But instead I just sit here, enjoying my pie.
I sip my coffee, then move on to dessert, starting with the butter tart. It’s a high-quality butter tart, and I consider myself a connoisseur. Although I feel disloyal to even think it, it’s better—just a teeny-tiny bit better—than my mother’s butter tarts.
My mother worked as a cook at a Chinese-Canadian buffet in Ottawa. She was responsible for the so-called Canadian food, which included roast beef and mashed potatoes. She also made apple pie and butter tarts, a Canadian specialty with filling that’s a bit like pecan pie without the pecans. Butter, syrup, sugar, and egg, if I remember correctly. She taught me to make them when I was ten.
I think that’s why I was tempted by the pie shop: it reminds me of those last happy days with my parents, before my mom got sick. Before I went on my rebellious teenage streak, culminating with the unfortunate incident that caused my father to quit talking to me.
My mom is better now, and my parents are both retired, but my dad still hasn’t forgiven me, and he refuses to come to Toronto for a visit.
Yet despite the fact that he’s essentially forgotten I exist, I think of him every day. I can’t help but hope that one day, I will be enough for him. My mother and I get along okay, but my dad is a different matter.
I put down the butter tart and pick up a forkful of the pear ginger crumble pie. Oh my God, it’s exquisite. It’s quite gingery—I love ginger—and the crumble topping is perfect.
Seriously, this might be the best thing I’ve ever eaten in my life.
“Did you make this?” I ask the woman in the apron, gesturing at the pear pie.
“No, but they’re all my recipes. Except for the famous banana cream pie. That one’s my mom’s.”
Suddenly, I imagine my own mother meeting this woman, swapping pie recipes with her.
What the fuck is wrong with me?
I don’t want the kind of relationship with a woman that would involve her meeting my mother. And I don’t know this woman. I don’t even know her name.
It must be because of Amrita and Holly’s engagement. That has to be why I’m having these weird thoughts.
I savor the rest of my pie. I wish there were more, but I’ve already eaten a lot tonight, and I should probably restrain myself from getting another piece.
I take my dishes up to the counter, and I’m about to head out when the woman says, “You have something on your lip.” She points to the left corner of her lip. “Butter tart filling.”
I swipe at the left corner of my mouth. I don’t feel anything.
“No, I mean, your right side. Which is on my left.” She picks up a napkin. “May I?”
I nod, and she wipes off the offending crumb. I feel the warmth of her fingers, just for a moment, and then it’s gone.
But for the rest of the evening, I keep touching the corner of my mouth, remembering the feel of her fingers on my skin.
That night, I dream I’m wearing a suit and a crooked—a jaunty—red bow tie like Amrita, and I’m down on one knee, holding open a ring box.
I’m proposing to a large pear ginger crumble pie.
I have no idea what the hell that’s supposed to mean.
Chapter 2
Sarah
I don’t usually get into work at five thirty in the morning, but today is a special day.
It’s Valentine’s Day.
Not that I have any romantic plans. I haven’t been on a date in ages.
But Valentine’s Day means that there are several sp
ecial orders at Happy As Pie, my sweet and savory pie shop in Baldwin Village.
Pie isn’t the sort of food that comes to mind when you think of Valentine’s Day. However, I have twelve special orders for today. It’s nowhere near as much as Thanksgiving weekend, but it’s extra business all the same. I’m glad that some people are a little more creative than simply purchasing a box of chocolates.
Even if I have no man waiting for me when I finally get off work in...fourteen hours or so, today is a good day. Sure, it’s early, but I’ve got a cup of coffee and I’m all alone in the kitchen.
I turn on the music and pull out the pumpkin purée, eggs, and cream. First order of business: four pumpkin pies.
Yes, I have multiple orders of pumpkin pie for Valentine’s Day. Some people really love their pumpkin pie, and they don’t like having to wait until Thanksgiving for it. I sell pumpkin pie in my shop all year round, on Tuesdays, Fridays, and Sundays.
One of these lucky pumpkin pies is even going to witness a proposal. In fact, the man who placed the order wanted me to bake an engagement ring into the pie, but I refused. First of all, I don’t want the responsibility of keeping track of a diamond ring, and second of all, I have some unfortunate memories of inedible objects that were baked into desserts.
You see, money cakes were a tradition in my family. For every birthday, my grandmother would bake coins in the cake, and it was always very exciting.
Unfortunately, I swallowed a dime on my eighth birthday, and I totally freaked out. My mom assured me that it would likely pass out the other end, no need to worry, but for two days, I was convinced I would die, no matter how much she reassured me.
Swallowing a dime is one thing, but what if someone swallowed a ten-thousand-dollar engagement ring?
I shudder to think of it.
Nope, no inedible objects are being baked into any of my pies. That’s one of my rules.
Anyway, for Valentine’s Day orders I’m also making two chocolate tarts, one spiced apple pie, one key lime pie, two lemon meringue pies, and one pear ginger crumble pie. And fifteen butter tarts, for the man who’s proposing using butter tarts because they’re his girlfriend’s favorite.
All this talk of love and engagements makes me think of what I do not have, and I feel a strange ball of tension in my stomach.