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Sweeter Than Tea

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by Deborah Grace Staley




  When it comes to family,

  love, tradition and pride are a powerful brew...

  “In the South you grow up steeped in tradition. It’s not that you find the South particularly quaint or interesting. You simply have no choice. By the time Miss Eulayla Overstreet, or her equivalent, places the metronome-from-hell on the family piano, you know four very important things that will shape your life. You know who your people are, where the home place is, and that you will never, ever like the piano.

  “You also know precisely how much sugar to put in a gallon of tea.

  “True sweet tea is a sublime syrupy DNA test for family identity. You either belong to the syrup subset of Southerners or you belong to the carpetbaggers who moved down from up North. Sweet is sweet, and you can’t cheat. No hostess of any stature would be caught dead sweetening her iced tea at the table.

  “More than once I’ve asked myself how a modest beverage gained so much power. The simple answer is that sweet tea is the dividing line between us and them.”

  —from Sweet Tea and Jesus Shoes (Debra Dixon)

  “The trouble with growing up rooted deep in a family, tucked safely in a pretty valley south of the Mason-Dixon, is how your future lies in front of you like a clean sheet just off the line. Ask me. You’ll take it for granted.

  “All my life, I knew when the first crocus would come up by the back step of Mama and Daddy’s house. I knew when the first hay would come in from the field, when the scent of a wood burning fire would curl out of the chimney, and when the sunflowers would stand taller than a man. And I knew that on the first fall weekend I’d clean out Mama’s perennial beds so they could bloom again the following spring. There’s something about that kind of security that will make you believe you have all the time in the world.”

  —from Sweeter Than Tea (Kimberly Brock)

  The Sweet Tea Story Collections

  Sweet Tea and Jesus Shoes

  More Sweet Tea

  On Grandma’s Porch

  and now . . .

  Sweeter Than Tea

  “The Sweet Tea books clearly define what it means to be Southern with a Southern family.”

  —Newnan Times Herald, Newnan, Georgia

  “If you don’t recognize a family member or can’t recall a story that could be a twin to one in here, you’re a Yankee. That mystical union of Southern pride, sensibilities, and practical faith traipse in all their glory through these stories.”

  —VABooks! Center for the Book

  “[Sweet Tea and Jesus Shoes] is rich in storytelling and makes me long for those Southern days as a child listening to the stories of the past.”

  —Barbara Dooley, author, radio talk show host, and wife of University of Georgia Athletic Director, Vince Dooley.

  “Miss Julia would feel right at home on the front porches and in the living rooms and kitchens where these delightful stories originated.”

  —Ann B. Ross, author of Miss Julia Speaks Her Mind.

  “Storytelling is back with all its Southern habits and charms, thanks to six women who are making it easier to get it in print. The stories are so good you’ll be hungry for more.”

  —Liz Carpenter, acclaimed author and former press secretary for Lady Bird Johnson.

  “A brilliant compilation of Southern women’s stories in the tradition of Anne Rivers Siddons.”

  —Harriet Klausner, Midwest Book Review.

  “Sweet Tea and Jesus Shoes is a feast for any reader.”

  —Lisa Knighton, editor, Georgia Women Speak

  Sweeter Than Tea

  by

  Deborah Grace Staley

  Valerie Keiser Norris

  Susan Sipal

  Misty Barrere

  Kimberly Brock

  Jane Forest

  Willis Baker

  Clara Wimberly

  Kathleen Watson

  Tom Honea

  Martina Boone

  Deedra Climer

  Darcy Crowder

  BelleBooks, Inc.

  Copyright

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are either the products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons (living or dead), events or locations is entirely coincidental.

  BelleBooks

  PO BOX 300921

  Memphis, TN 38130

  Ebook ISBN: 978-1-61194-149-4

  Print ISBN: 978-1-61194-135-7

  Copyright © 2012 by BelleBooks, Inc.

  Sweet Tea (excerpt) copyright © 2000 by Debra Dixon

  Made With Love, copyright © 2012 by Deborah Grace Staley

  All Foam, No Beer, copyright © 2012 by Valerie Anne Norris

  Running Raw, copyright © 2012 by Susan Sipal

  The Agreement, copyright © 2012 by Misty Barrere

  Never Promised You A Rose Garden, copyright © 2012 by Kimberly D. Brock

  Bedeviled Eggs, copyright © 2012 by Jane A. Jacobson

  Not Through My Window, copyright © 2012 by Willis E. Baker, Jr.

  Circle of Life, copyright © 2012 by Clara Wimberly

  Lessons on a Paper Nakin, copyright © 2012 by Kathleen Hodges

  A Pig Roasting, copyright © 2012 by Thomas E. Honea

  Bringing Lula Home, copyright © 2012 by Martina A. Boone

  Lavender in Blue, copyright © 2012 by Deedra C. Bass

  Chasing Sunset, copyright © 2012 by Darcy Crowder

  Printed and bound in the United States of America.

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the publisher, except by a reviewer, who may quote brief passages in a review.

  Visit our websites – BelleBooks.com and BellBridgeBooks.com.

  10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

  Cover design: Debra Dixon

  Interior design: Hank Smith

  Cover art © Christine Griffin

  :Etst:01:

  We Dedicate These Stories To...

  To all those, past and present, who have served in our nation’s military so we can enjoy our freedoms, and particularly the men in my family: James R. Jones, Sr. and James R. Jones, Jr.—WWII, Joe K. Jones, J. Edward Jones, and J. Eugene Jones—Korea. My father, Sherman L. Grace, Korea. My fathers-in-law, Fred E. Staley, Sr. and William P. Davenport—Navy. And my nephew, Christopher C. Staley, currently serving, U.S. Air Force. A heartfelt thanks and much love to my boys, Fred and Ethan, who have given me a family and home. Because I feel safe and secure in your love, I can do what I do. And for my niece, Hannah, who allowed me to borrow her name.

  —Deborah Grace Staley

  To my mother, Suzann, who loved for her grandmother, Stella, to read her tea leaves.

  —Misty Barrere

  For Sylvia. A life-time’s worth. And as always, to John, Brenna, Wil and Brittani—I love you.

  —Darcy Crowder

  To Mama, whose glorious gardens are only overshadowed by the abundant love she’s nurtured in so many lives, and to Daddy, whose mountains of roses may one day lift us all up to heaven.

  —Kimberly Brock

  To my Family—my husband Wayne; to Wayne Jr. and Tina, Lindsey, Lucus and Lily: to Mark and Jenny, Hannah and Meadow; to Suzanne and Doug, Emory and Ethan. You are my everything. I love you all very much.

  —Clara Wimberly

  To my mom, Mickey, who was born in Mobile, Alabama and has remained a southern belle all
her life. Mom taught me to love reading—she took me to my first library and found me a story about Siamese cats. I haven’t stopped reading since.

  —Jane Forest

  To my grandmother, Myrtis McDaniel Honea . . . Who taught me to clean my tools before I put them away. Who told me, “A ten cent tree in a ten dollar hole is better than a ten dollar tree in a ten cent hole.” . . . And, who always had tea cakes on the table when any grandchild came to her house late on a summer afternoon.

  —Tom Honea

  To my mom, and all the wonderful moms in my life: Mindy, Dee, Nita, Holly, Janet, Gina, Tracey, Deonne and Hazel.

  —Kathleen Watson

  To the members of the Greenville East Chapter of the South Carolina Writers Workshop, for all their help and encouragement.

  —Valerie Keiser Norris

  To Karen Hall—a real-life, modern-day Minoan snake goddess, whose home is a sanctuary for all living things, whether beast, fowl, or child.

  —Susan Sipal

  To my family of true Southerners, through whose lives continues to flow another kind of tea, spiritual, sweetened by such eternal intangibles as love and respect, faith and family.

  —Willis Baker

  In Order Of Appearance

  Deborah Grace Staley—Made With Love

  Valerie Keiser Norris—All Foam, No Beer

  Susan Sipal—Running Raw

  Misty Barrere—The Agreement

  Kimberly Brock—Never Promised You A Rose Garden

  Jane Forest—Bedeviled Eggs

  Willis Baker—Not Through My Window

  Clara Wimberly—Circle Of Life

  Kathleen Watson—Lessons on a Paper Napkin

  Tom Honea—A Pig Roasting

  Martina Boone—Bringing Lula Home

  Deedra Climer—Lavender In Blue

  Darcy Crowder—Chasing Sunset

  Made with Love

  Deborah Grace Staley

  The kitchen was the heart of Hannah Goode’s home. It was a big, loud, messy place filled with heavenly aromas and great conversation. Momma firmly believed idle hands were the devil’s workplace. If that was the case, the cure was to keep everyone busy cooking. Yep, the yard had more weeds than grass, and inside, dust could be found accumulating on furniture and in corners, but the kitchen was well stocked and well appointed.

  In the kitchen, each family member had a job. Momma did entrees, Daddy desserts, Lara made side dishes, and Hannah was in charge of breads and sweet tea. Not that Helen Goode didn’t mix it up on occasion. Momma was known to change everyone’s jobs without notice, just so each person learned how to make everything. But Hannah loved the breads, and, of course, sweet tea was a southern staple.

  It’s not so surprising that Hannah grew up wanting to be a baker. When the time came, she applied to the finest schools. She and her parents had spread the acceptance letters for culinary schools across the scarred kitchen table and talked about which she should choose. Momma had cried, and Daddy had looked proud. Hannah squeezed Momma’s hand and said, “It’s okay. I’ll be home on holidays, and it’s only a two-year program.”

  Momma took Hannah’s hand in both hers while she and daddy shared a look.

  “What is it?” Hannah asked, not sure she wanted the answer.

  Daddy laid his big, warm hand on top of hers and Momma’s. “The doc says I need surgery, but I don’t want you to worry—”

  “Surgery!” she said in unison with her sister.

  “Now it’s nothing to worry about. I’ll just go in, have it done and be good as new before you know it. Now, which of these schools is good enough to deserve my little girl?” He’d wrapped his arms around her shoulders. “I’m so proud of you.”

  She chose a school, and then Daddy had had surgery and begun chemotherapy. The prognosis was good. Hannah left for school that fall. When she’d come home for Thanksgiving, her daddy had been so weak, so feeble. She didn’t know which broke her heart, that or him asking for help with the pumpkin pies. He sat on a stool and supervised, but as always, Hannah cherished time in the kitchen with her family.

  Christmas that year, the Goodes had baked more than ever before because everyone had wanted to spend every second together doing what they loved. There were decorated cutout cookies, cakes, pies and dessert bars. They’d covered everything that had gotten in their path with chocolate. They even made rum soaked fruitcake—Gran’s recipe.

  It had been Daddy’s idea to ship most of it to the soldiers overseas and away from home at Christmas. The rum cake stayed. It had to come with the warning, “Do not operate heavy machinery after consuming.”

  Hannah laughed, remembering. She could just imagine soldiers driving tanks around the Middle East tipsy on rum cake.

  It was that Christmas Hannah had first gotten the idea to sell their baked goods. Momma and Daddy wouldn’t say, but with Daddy unable to work, things were tough financially. Christmas Day, she’d stayed up all night making cupcakes. The next week, she had taken them to every restaurant and corner store she’d come across. When she’d returned home, she had orders from three restaurants and two delis.

  Hannah didn’t go back to school. Daddy hadn’t been happy about it, but she was determined to spend her days baking with him. Momma had helped with deliveries while Daddy had rested.

  Business was good. Great, in fact. The orders had soon outgrown their kitchen’s capabilities. They needed more ovens, commercial mixers and storage. Hannah found cheap equipment online from closing businesses and took out a one-year lease on a shop front with good foot traffic downtown. For the first month, Hannah had just filled commercial orders. Toward the end of the month, Daddy had felt so much better that he’d come in and helped them. Lara had done what she could after school, but none of them had wanted to take her away from sports or her schoolwork.

  Things went so well that the family found themselves with spare time in the afternoons. That’s when they put some tables and a coffee bar in the front of the store. They began opening midday to sell cupcakes. By then, most of the baking was done, and Momma was making deliveries. The first week, they’d sold out by three. As word spread, they sold out sooner.

  “Hannah, honey,” Daddy said, “I think you’re going to have to hire some help.”

  “I don’t know, Daddy. I want to keep it a family business.”

  “Then talk to your cousins. Your Aunt Christy said the girls have been looking for a job, but haven’t had any luck.”

  “Can they bake?”

  Daddy laughed. “We’ll do the baking. Let them take orders and wait on customers.”

  She hired Ginger and Gracie, who, thankfully, started right away. Hannah was so busy she was dead on her aching feet most afternoons. The shipping company had just picked up treat boxes going to the soldiers overseas. Sending them had become something like a tithe for the Goode Family Bakery. God had blessed the business so much, they all wanted to do something to help others. Supporting the troops was another way to honor Daddy, who had spent the years before he married Momma in the Army serving in Desert Storm.

  The years passed almost without Hannah noticing.

  Daddy got a clean bill of health and had been in remission since. Thank God. Lara went off to college, and Hannah had bought a loft downtown to be close to the business. Hannah liked being able to walk everywhere she went. With Maryville, Tennessee being a small town, it was pretty quiet, so the routine was a bit monotonous. She’d like to say she was too busy to get lonely, but if she was being honest, sometimes she wondered what might have been if she’d stayed in cooking school. Would she have moved to a big city and become a chef? Would she have met someone? Had a family of her own by now?

  Hannah shook her head. Thinking about what might have been served no good purpose. She had no regrets. She loved her work and spending time with
her family. It was afternoons—the time when all the busyness of baking had passed and she had time to think—when her mind wandered. Or more to the point, her mind wandered when she should have been trying to make sense of the jumble of paperwork cluttering her desk and clogging her inbox.

  Hannah grabbed a cup of coffee and a cupcake and sat at a corner table with her laptop and overflowing inbox. Instead of sorting through it all, she wound up doing some mindless Internet surfing. The bell on the front door signaled the arrival of a customer. She didn’t even look up, just tapped away on the mouse pad and sipped her coffee while deleting junk emails.

  “Welcome to Goode’s,” Gracie said. “What can I get you?”

  “A double-chocolate buttercream cupcake and a bottle of water, please.”

  She looked up to check out the owner of the rumbling, deep voice and found a man wearing fatigues with an American flag and several bars on the sleeve that indicated his rank. The insignia indicated he was Air Force. He was average height, but nothing else about him was average. Like most soldiers, he was in great shape and powerfully built. Tanned, clean-shaven, close cut dark hair. She propped her chin on her hand and irrationally wondered what color his eyes were.

  “For here or to go?” Gracie asked.

  The man inhaled deeply. “The smell is so amazing, I think I’ll sit awhile and enjoy.”

  Gracie smiled. “Have a seat, and I’ll bring it right out to you.”

  “How much do I owe you?”

  “It’s on the house. Memorial Day is this weekend, and cupcakes are free to members of the military.”

  He nodded, twisting his cap in his hands. “Thank you.” He reached into his pocket and dropped a few bills in the tip jar, then sat at a table not far from Hannah. He caught her eye and smiled a greeting. Hannah smiled as well, then looked back at her computer screen, but soon, she was sneaking another peek at him. He had a compelling face that kept her looking past what should have been polite glances. There was something about his eyes, which were the color of rich, velvety chocolate. He couldn’t be much older than her, but his dark eyes held a sadness that said he’d seen more than a man so young should.

 

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