by Sandra Byrd
Praise for
Let Them Eat Cake
“Let Them Eat Cake is a delicious read! Byrd brings a fresh, insightful approach to women’s fiction as she stretches out a welcoming hand to twenty-something readers. Bon appetit!”
—Robin Jones Gunn, bestselling author of Sisterchicks Say Ooh La La! and The Christy Miller Series
“If a good book were as loaded with calories as a French pastry, this one would have added pounds to my hips. Let Them Eat Cake—a sweet, satisfying story of searching for one’s place in life and inviting God along on the journey.”
—Tamara Leigh, author of Perfecting Kate
“As a twenty-something myself, I felt as if Lexi and I were old friends. Sandra Byrd had me laughing and crying all the way through the book. I can’t wait for the next one.”
—Shannon Kubiak Primicerio, author of The Divine Dance and coauthor of Life. Now.
“Not shying away from tough issues, Sandra Byrd’s vivid characters draw readers in and encourage them to follow their dreams.”
—Natasha Neuroth, Internet product editor, Christianbook.com
“An engaging tale with as many layers as a croissant…and shaped just as lovingly.”
—Siri L. Mitchell, author of Kissing Adrien
“Not every novel fills me up and leaves me hungering for more, but Let Them Eat Cake does. Sandra Byrd has created a witty heroine whose search for significance and desire to follow the Lord equals her charming bonhomie. You won’t regret settling down with a plate of French pastries and this delectable adventure!”
—Angela Hunt, author of The Elevator
“Sandra Byrd has a crafted a delicious gem for the twenty-something crowd — and their mothers! Seattle’s artsy downtown adds flair to the story’s overall appeal, as do the gotta-try-’em recipes. Delightful.”
—Susan Meissner, author of A Seahorse in the Thames
“This is a story with delicious prose, a smattering of French and a grow-as-you-go faith. J’adore Let Them Eat Cake. Merci, Sandra!”
—Leslie Gould, award-winning author of Beyond the Blue and Scrap Everything
“Let Them Eat Cake is a culinary delight. Sandra Byrd creates a lovely atmosphere in this delightful read with a wonderful surprise ending.”
—Rachel Hauck, author of Diva NashVegas
In Memory of Jane Orcutt
A bientôt!
To eat an egg, you must break the shell.
French proverb
Chaque personne sait où sa chaussure pince.
Each woman knows where her shoe pinches.
Catbert avoided catching my eye—never a good sign. He prowled the aisles all day but didn’t stop to say hello or ask about my plans for the weekend.
My cubicle had recently been expanded by three inches to accommodate my new cellmate, Celine, who silently typed nonstop. The woman was a machine. I tried not to compare the stack of nutrition labels she had robotically processed since eight that morning with my own paltry offering.
I pulled up another document and studied it. Hmm, I wonder why they used an emulsifier in this recipe? I closed my eyes and thought about it. And was this soft wheat?
I heard a cough behind me and quickly opened my eyes. “Should I help you?” Celine asked in French, eyeing the stack I still had to translate.
Oh…ah…non, merci,” I answered. “I was thinking about the flour.”
“Bon,” she said. She had a smile like sour milk. I’d asked her to lunch when she first joined us. She’d informed me that she didn’t take lunches, and would I please stop burning lavender candles at the desk. Les allergies.
I glanced at the clock. It was nearly five. In order to get my quota done today, I’d have to stay at least another hour. Again.
Celine tidied up her station, turned off her Moroccan music, and bid me a stiff good night. Everyone else began to pour from the room like mice from a hole. I typed faster.
I felt, more than saw, him standing behind me.
“Miss Stuart?” Catbert said.
I turned around and looked up. “Yes?”
“Can you come with me?” He nodded toward his glassed-in office overlooking the cubicles.
“Should I finish these labels first?” I asked, cotton-mouthed.
He shook his head. “That won’t be necessary.”
Uh-oh.
I followed him into his office, and we sat across the table from each other.
“Your French is really very good,” he said. “You simply don’t translate enough documents in a day to make it worth your time…or ours.”
“I’m just so fascinated by the business,” I said quickly. “I enjoy seeing what’s going into each product.” He nodded curtly. “But you are not here to evaluate contents, Miss Stuart. You are here to translate.”
“I see,” I said, feeling desperate and hating myself for begging for a job that I loathed. “I can certainly work more quickly.”
He shook his head. “That’s what the thirty-day trial period was for. I wish you the best.” He handed me my final paycheck and a cardboard box for the few items I had at my cubicle. “I’m sorry.”
I nodded and took the paycheck and the box, not trusting myself to speak for fear of releasing the tears. What was I going to do?
I packed up my half-burned lavender candles, got into my car, and drove slowly in order to collect myself before pulling up in front of my parents’ West Seattle house. I’d moved back in a little over a month ago to find a job and save some money for a rental deposit on my own place.
I left my box of cubicle gear in the trunk, stashed like a dead body. I pasted on a smile and walked into the house. My mother was just hanging up the phone and looked exultant.
“Guess what?” she said.
“What?”
“All the permits are in place, and we’re ready to go.”
“How long until your new place is ready to move into?” I asked, trying to dredge up enthusiasm from somewhere deep within.
“Six months,” Mom answered. “No longer.” She glanced at me out of the corner of her eye.
I’d lived for twenty-four years in a family rife with unspoken conversations and unstated expectations. I knew what she meant.
“Get a life, Alexandra Stuart. You have until July.” I went into “my” room—recently the storage room, before that Nate’s room—and closed the door behind me. Dad had stacked my mail, forwarded from my old apartment, on the dresser. I shuffled through the magazine subscription advertisements and a manipulative plea for alumni donations from the college I’d attended just an hour and a half to the north in Bellingham.
No wedding invitations so far this week. God is good. I opened the last envelope.
Not again. I’d been overspending on clothes for a job I hated. Had Dad guessed what this was when he’d stacked the mail?
I sat on the bed, lifted the box that held my vase, and rested it on my lap. With the money from my last paycheck I had bought this tiny Chihuly bud vase from a friend who was moving to Spain. I’d always wanted a Chihuly piece, and it was a bargain. If I’d known it was going to be my second-to-final paycheck, of course, I’d have applied it to the final five car payments on my coughing VW.
I set the vase, still carefully swaddled, on the shelf in the corner of the closet. Chihuly would debut in my real apartment. Or maybe in my room at the downtown YWCA shelter.
I walked into the hall, shut the bedroom door behind me, and went into the kitchen. My mom stood in front of the stove, wide-checkered apron hugging her postmenopausal curves.
“What time will they be here?” I lifted the lid on the homemade spaghetti sauce my Italian family calls “red gravy.” A thick tomato steam, flecked with dried summer twins, basil and rosemary, rose i
nto the air. Mom chopped fresh mozzarella and dressed it with balsamic vinegar. I could taste the tang on my lips even now.
“About seven. You can use my curling iron if yours isn’t unpacked yet.” Subtle, Mom.
They say trouble always visits in threes. My hypochondriac lawyer brother, his très successful lawyer fiancée, Leah—who graduated from high school a year after I did—and my outspoken Nonna were coming to dinner. At least Nonna posed no problem to the job conversation.
No, absolutely not true. Nonna was always stirring up trouble.
“Can I help with anything? Make some shortbread for dessert?” I asked. “I perfected a new recipe with vanilla beans before Christmas—the cookies I gave away in tins. Everyone said they were great.”
“No thanks, honey. I have it all under control,” Mom said. “What’s a mother for except to cook for her family?”
“All right. I’m going to run to the mall for a minute,” I said.
Mom nodded absently, tasting the sauce.
When I’d escaped to my car, I sat for a moment and sighed before turning over the motor. I loved my mother, of course, but I missed living on my own.
I headed toward the discount Supermall. My cell phone rang, and the caller ID flashed the name of my best friend, Tanya.
“What are you doing?” she asked.
“Going to the mall.”
“What’s in your wallet?”
I dug it out at a red light. “One hundred and fifty-six dollars, a Tully’s Coffee card, and a creased photo of Greg with a nose ring penciled in.” Greg and I broke up almost a year ago. Everyone said I should be over it.
“No way.” Tanya laughed. “Don’t spend too much.”
“I’m not going to buy a lot,” I said, wincing at how pathetic I sounded. “I just need time to think. And I can use the clothes for job hunting.”
“Job hunting? You have a job.”
“Uh-oh, light’s green. I’ll call you later. Bye!” I hung up. I parked in front of the Rack. Even if I couldn’t afford Nordstrom, I could afford their remainders discounted at Nordstrom Rack. I tried on a pair of slim black pants that hid the extra pound or two hitchhiking on my hips, and some black pumps with a skinny-yet-sturdy heel. I headed to the register, and the clerk took out a marker. “Wait,” I said.
The shoes hung in midair. The ten people in line behind me let out a collective, irritated sigh and shifted their feet.
“Yes?”
“Do you have to write that number on the bottom of the shoes?”
“Yes. It’s loss control. Company policy.”
“Can you make it small?” I asked. The clerk wrinkled her nose but wrote it small. Okay. As long as my feet stayed flat on the floor, no one would know my shoes were discount. I paid, left, and drove home.
Now that the retail therapy was over, I felt sad again and blinked back tears. But I managed to put on a happy face and get out of the car, wondering what I’d say at dinner if they brought up my job. I couldn’t let on.
Nate, Leah, and Nonna arrived precisely at seven. At the store I’d felt so chic in black pants and a white shirt, but now I felt like a hostess at Bakers Square. Even though I was unhappy living with my parents, it still felt good to be back home and near my crazy friends and family again.
“How are you?” Leah said, hugging me. I hugged her back, warmly. It wasn’t her fault that she was pretty and successful, or that she had graduated a year behind me and was already clerking at a law firm in town, or that, to top it off, she was a Pied Piper to children and small pets everywhere.
“Really good to see you, Leah,” I said, meaning it. Hey, if I never found another job, maybe I could nanny their kids!
“Hey, sis,” Nate ruffled my hair, the same rich dark brown as his. But I scored the blue eyes and dimples, for which I offer a hearty thanks to all recessive genes everywhere.
Nate and Leah kicked off their shoes, and Nonna slipped off her loafers after brushing a feathery kiss on my cheek. As soon as everyone had gone into the dining room, I turned Leah’s shoes over, hoping to see a scribbled number on their soles. Nothing. Just soft leather. Real leather.
I am so pathetic.
I followed them into the dining room, where we all sat in the same seats we had used our whole lives, with Leah as an addition, of course.
“So.” Nate looked at me, twirling ribbons of linguine around his fork. “How’s the new job?”
Everyone looked at me, smiling. There had been vast relief when I’d finally scored a job. I knew there’d be major disappointment when they found out I’d lost this one. I’m all about postponing pain.
“The company is interesting,” I said evenly. “They translate nutrition labels from English into French so they can be used in Canada too. It’s a Canadian requirement that all labels are published in both languages.”
Nate grinned and ate another bite. Leah, more sensitive to the vibes, looked up in alarm. She knew I’d neatly dodged the question. Catbert-like, I avoided eye contact.
“I guess studying Madeline and Tintin was a great career decision after all, eh?” Nate forked another mouthful of linguine, and Leah elbowed him slightly. I couldn’t decide whether to be glad that someone finally disciplined my older brother or jealous of his and Leah’s intimacy. They were getting married in June.
“I studied French culture,” I said, “and literature. Contrary to popular opinion, the literature goes way beyond the Madeline books.”
“They sure never read up on how to fight a war,” Dad snickered. “They haven’t won anything since Napoleon.” Nonna gave him a hard look.
“Excuse me,” he said, pushing his chair back. “I’d better refill the water pitchers for Margaret.” Dad always called my mother Margaret, even though everyone else called her Peggy.
“Would you like to have lunch this week?” Leah asked me. “I only get forty-five minutes, but we can go somewhere close or eat in the atrium of my office complex.”
“Thanks,” I said. “I’d really like that. What day works best for you?”
She thought for a minute. “Wednesday? Do you have enough time to get away for lunch?”
“I have a lot of time at lunch,” I said. More than you know. “I’ll bring something good for both of us.”
“You sure?” she asked. “I invited you, after all.”
“I’m sure,” I said firmly, not wanting to be the designated charity case.
I hoped I could buy something both classy and cheap. I didn’t want to show up with homemade sandwiches like Red Riding Hood and her picnic basket.
After dinner we talked for a while, mostly about Nate and Leah’s wedding.
“You’ll help me shop for dresses, won’t you?” Leah asked.
I nodded. “Of course! It’ll be fun. I’m glad to be back in town for that reason, if nothing else. I’d like to give you a shower, too, if no one has spoken up for it.”
“I’d love that,” she said.
“I have three possibilities to escort me to the wedding,” Nonna chimed in. “One has a walker, so dancing might be tough. I may have to choose between the other two.”
“Maybe you can give one to Lexi,” Nate teased.
I threw a balled-up napkin at him. “How do you know I don’t have a date for your wedding?”
He raised his eyebrows, but Mom walked in with a tray of cookies right then, which thankfully stopped the conversation.
“Do you?” Nonna whispered.
I shook my head and winked. “But I will. Promise.”
“That’s my girl.”
After coffee, Nate got ready to drive Leah and Nonna home.
I gave Nonna a peck on the cheek. Her skin was soft and floury with face powder, like freshly kneaded dough.
“Bonsoir,” Nonna said, kissing me back. She was the only one who tried to speak French with me.
“Bonne nuit,” I answered.
As soon as they left, I called Tanya. “Come over,” I said. “I need some get-a-life support.”
/>
She laughed. “I’ll be there in a few minutes.”
I hung up the phone and began to unpack a few books. I opened a bookstore bag and took out the three I’d bought earlier that week. When I was a freshman, I’d decided to buy books at the local bookstore, save the receipt, read them, and return them for credit. I did it twice before I’d realized it wasn’t right.
Things were so tight now. Was it really that bad? I looked at the books on the bed, unwilling to return any of them.
I shredded the receipt and sprinkled the confetti into my garbage can, then started hanging up my new clothes.
A knock sounded on my bedroom door, accompanied by a soft “Hey.”
“Help!” I called from inside the closet. “I’ve been swallowed by a shrine to Nate’s childhood!” When I’d moved out, my mom had changed my smaller room into her sewing and craft room. When I moved back in, only Nate’s old room was available.
Tanya came in and helped me lug Nate’s old dartboard out of the closet.
“I barely have enough room for my stuff,” I said. “I’ll put it in the garage. Or he can take it to his apartment with the rest of his stuff.”
“He might want to wait until he and Leah have their own place,” Tanya said.
“Yeah, or she may want me to deep-six it.” I grinned. “How’d it go tonight?” she asked.
“Dinner was a little rough.” I sighed and plopped down on the bed.
“Nate and Leah doing well?”
“Yeah. It’s not their fault they’re both great. It’s just that I seem so…so…unproductive next to them.”
“You’re not unproductive.” Tanya sat on my floor. She nodded at the open box of books. “Want me to hand these books to you while you put them on the shelf? We can talk while you do. You’ll feel better when they’re up. It’ll feel like your own space.”
I frowned. “I don’t want it to be my space at all. That’s why I hadn’t unpacked yet. And anyway, it can’t be my space for long. In six months, my parents are moving to a fifty-five-and-older community nearly two hours away.”