Read Starting From Scratch Online
Authors: Georgia Beers
Tags: #Fiction, #Lesbian, #Romance, #Erotica
more nerve-wracking, was the fact that I wanted to be
attractive to them. Just as I would pass judgment on their
looks, so would they do the same thing to me.
I hated to even think about it.
It was a cool Sunday afternoon and Steve and I were
enjoying a quiet day at home…my favorite kind. We’d
gone for a long walk in the morning, and Steve was now
crashed out on the couch in the living room.
I closed the laptop and stared out the window at a sky
the color of dull metal, wondering when it would rain.
Such weather seemed to cry out for warm chocolate
chip cookies, so I began pulling out the ingredients for
them. I’d only gotten as far as creaming the butter and
sugar together when a knock on the sliding glass door
scared the bejesus out of both me and Steve, who leapt off
the couch as if he’d been ejected from it and started
barking his head off.
ere, with his nose pressed against the glass, probably
hoping to be able to see inside, stood Max.
“Damn,” I muttered. So much for my relaxing Sunday
at home. Alone. Cruel as it sounded, I briefly entertained
the thought of ignoring him. But when Steve jumped at
the door and Max’s face lit up, I had no choice. I had to let
him in.
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“What are you doing outside?” I asked him as he
entered and immediately dropped to his knees to cuddle
Steve. “It’s going to pour.”
“Cece brought me home and she was being loud, so I
left.”
My eyebrows met above my nose as I tried to process.
“Cece?”
“My mom,” he said with a slight hint of annoyance
that said I should have known that.
“Oh.” She was being loud? at didn’t sound good.
“Was she fighting with your other mom?”
He shrugged and kept his eyes on Steve. “ey always
fight.”
“What were they fighting about?” I cringed, the
realization that I was totally going to hell for siphoning
information from him about his moms’ dysfunctional
relationship tapping me squarely on the shoulder.
He didn’t look at me when he spoke and kept his eyes
and hands on Steve. “Mom said Cece was early. She asked
her if it would kill her to spend more time with me.” en
he shrugged again, such a kid thing to do. “Whatever.”
Even at thirty-four years old, the childhood pain of
not being worth the time of your parents could sneak up
on me and whack me over the head like a board and I
suddenly felt great sympathy for this little boy who, just
moments ago, I was wishing would disappear. I was
ambushed by the unexpected need to make him feel better.
“Hey,” I said, making my voice sound sort of
conspiratorial. “Guess what I was just doing.”
He blinked those deep dark eyes at me, so much like
his mother’s. “What?”
“Making chocolate chip cookies.”
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His eyebrows made a show of trying to climb up into
his hairline and his big eyes grew even wider. “You were?”
“Yep. Want to help?”
“Can I?”
“Absolutely.”
Sharing my kitchen and my baking duties with
anybody but Grandma was not something I was good at
and letting Max help was an exercise in self-control. It
took all the energy I had to let him do stuff himself, like
measuring and stirring, because my instinct was to take
over and do it right. I bit my lip whenever he spilled
something and made myself look away while he cracked
eggs. I guess the fact that I was well aware of my control
freakishness was a good thing, but by the time we had the
batter ready to go, I had a splitting headache from
clenching my jaw.
Instead of occupying his usual space in the living room
while I cooked, Steve stayed in the kitchen with us—and
by “us” I mean Max—the whole time we were working. I
shot him a betrayed glare every now and then, but he
pretended not to notice.
By the time we got the first batch of cookies into the
oven, half an hour had gone by. Upon shutting the oven
door, Max and I high-fived and I tried not to look as
relieved as I felt.
“Nice work, Mr. Assistant Chef,” I said to him.
His little giggle was so cute, I couldn’t help but giggle
a little myself and ruffle the top of his brown head. He
dropped to his knees in front of the oven and watched the
cookies bake through the window. When the timer dinged
nine minutes later, he was still there.
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As I backed him up and put an oven mitt on my hand,
there came a banging on the front door. Apparently, I
didn’t move quickly enough getting the cookies out of the
oven because there was more banging before I was in any
shape to answer.
“All right, all right,” I muttered as I nudged a barking
Steve out of my way with my foot.
e knocker was a harried-looking Elena Walker, hair
disheveled, eyes darting. Before either of us could speak,
her gaze landed on Max and she flew at him, falling to her
knees and crushing him in a bear hug.
“ere you are,” she said, a frantic note of desperation
in her voice.
It was only then that I realized we probably should
have let her know where her son was. I winced as the guilt
seeped in. How stupid could I be?
“I’m so sorry,” was all I could get out before she started
jabbering to Max, as anxious mothers are wont to do.
“You
cannot
just leave the house without telling me,”
she said to him, gripping his shoulders tightly. I got the
impression she wanted to shake him, but was holding
herself back with great effort. “I was worried. I didn’t know
where you were. I called you from the backyard. I checked
the playground. I knocked on doors.
I didn’t know where
you were.
” She seemed to run out of steam then, and simply
pulled him into another hug.
“You were busy with Cece,” Max said, his words
muffled by his mother’s shoulder. “I didn’t want to bother
you.”
“You are
never
a bother.” Elena was almost
frighteningly firm when she said it, shoving him back to
arm’s length so she could look him in the eye. “Never. Do
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you understand me? You’re my son and I love you and you
are
never, ever
a bother to me. Okay?”
Her voice cracked and I had the sudden fear she was
going to burst into tears right there in my foyer. Feeling
intrusive, I looked around for an escape, but found none, so
I stood there like an idiot.
“What’s on your face?” she asked him once she pulled
herself together, and swiped a finger across his cheek as she
stood.
“We made cookies.” His giant grin was contagious and
I couldn’t help but catch it.
Elena turned her gaze my way and I could tell she was
annoyed with me, as she should have been. It also felt a
little like maybe she didn’t
want
to be, so I decided it was a
good time to re-launch my apology.
“I’m so sorry, Elena,” I said as I moved into the
kitchen. “I assumed you knew where he was and I didn’t
ask him and I should have. It won’t happen again.” I hoped
my accompanying grimace was pathetic enough because
having her flash fire at me from those espresso-colored
eyes was too much for me to bear for very long.
How I managed not to jump when she reached
toward my face, I’ll never know. She ran a fingertip along
my chin and held it up, showing me the flour I was
apparently wearing. “It got you, too,” she said, her voice
colored with amusement as she rubbed her finger and
thumb together.
I swallowed hard and tried to fight the sudden surge
of nearly overwhelming arousal she’d just caused by
holding up a chocolate-chippy confection. “at’s because
we made cookies,” I offered and tried to mirror Max’s grin.
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She pursed her lovely lips and cocked an eyebrow at
me, very clearly telling me that she was still irritated, but
my silly facial expressions were making her rethink things.
Or maybe she just liked chocolate chip cookies.
Regardless, she took it from my hand and when she bit
into it, I felt forgiven.
“Oh, still warm,” she said, nearly moaning. I had to
look away.
“Coach King just took ’em out of the oven, Mom,”
Max informed her, in case burning the roof of her mouth
wasn’t enough of a clue.
“And you helped?” She swiped again at the splotch of
flour on his cheek. Like me, she must have concluded it
was just too damn cute to wipe off.
“He was a huge help,” I told her as I spatula’d an entire
tray of cookies onto a plate. “I hardly did a thing.”
Max beamed at the praise. “I was sistant chef.”
“Wow,” said his mother, looking impressed. “You got a
title and everything?”
“Yup.”
“Hey, we don’t mess around here,” I said. “You do the
work, you get a title.”
Elena seemed to have let go of her initial anger and
panic and was now smiling softly at her son. A good time
to offer refreshments, I decided.
“Can I get you something? Coffee? Tea? A big glass of
milk?”
e small crinkles at the corners of her eyes deepened.
“at’s very sweet of you, but I’ll have to take a rain
check.” To Max, she said, “We have to go to dinner and
Nana and Papa’s.”
“Oh!” Max exclaimed. “I forgot.”
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“No kidding.”
I quickly put some plastic wrap over the plate of
cookies. “Here you go, Mr. Assistant Chef. You get to share
in the fruits of our labor.”
“ere’s no fruit in them,” he said with slight
confusion.
“Figure of speech. Here, take these home and make
sure you share.”
“anks, Coach.”
“ank
you
for your help.” At the door, I reached out
and touched Elena’s elbow, said her name, which felt as
smooth as cream on my tongue. “I really am sorry.”
“It’s okay.” e size of her smile and that usual twinkle
in her eyes told me she was over it. “I didn’t mean to come
across as a madwoman. I had some residual junk carrying
over from earlier and I should probably apologize to you.”
Deciding not to ask her to elaborate, I simply shook
my head, telling her that it wasn’t necessary, that we were
good, and held the door for them.
“Bye, Steve!” Max waved as he ran down the sidewalk
toward his own home. Steve looked too much like he
wanted to follow, so I held his collar.
I wanted to stand there and watch Elena walk all the
way home in the low-slung jeans that were evidently made
just for her, but I decided that might seem a bit lecherous
and forced myself to shut the door.
I did watch her from the peephole for a couple extra
seconds, though.
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CHAPTER TWELVE
We were slowly phasing Maddie in and phasing me
out as coach of the tee-ball team and it seemed to be
working well. She’d been sitting in on practices, which I
continued to run since her mobility was still limited, but
she’d begun taking the lead since our last game and I was
perfectly okay with that.
She was somehow able to see that coaching was not
something I wanted to do on a regular basis. I even
managed not to say “I told you so.” But we agreed that I’d
stay on even after she was able to hobble around without
crutches. Hell, there were only six games all together
anyway. I figured I could tough it out.
Plus, letting Maddie take the lead left me more time
to hover around the bench and happily notice that Elena
had made it into the bleachers. I suspected that she often
had to work Saturday mornings, since her branch office
was open from nine until noon, but she must have shifted
some things because she sat high up in the stands (or
high-ish given there were only five rows), clapping and
cheering for her son. And looking devastatingly beautiful
while doing it.
June was turning out to be an incredibly pleasant
month and that morning was sunny and warm. Elena had
traded her worn and sexy jeans for a pair of worn and sexy
Georgia Beers
khaki shorts and I felt warm and mushy inside just
glancing at her knees.
God, what the hell was wrong with me? I’d never felt
such a visceral reaction to any other woman before in my
life.
I ripped my eyes from her legs and lifted them up to
her face, only to have my heart start jackhammering inside
my chest at the realization that she was looking right at
me. en she winked and my insides turned to goo.
I’d had no idea I was so easy.
It was embarrassing, really.
At Max’s turn at bat, the difference between what I
usually saw and what I saw now that Elena was there to
watch him was shocking. He picked up the bat and turned
to the bleachers. Elena smiled and waved at him, all her
focus centered on him, and his face lit up like the