Authors: Ruth Logan Herne
“I'll hold my answer till you get back,” Dylan said, watching her walk away. She seemed out of place, and yet oddly not. As if she was resisting any settling into the little town. It made sense: she had big ambitions written all over her, and Karl's Koffee was only a holiday spot for someone with those kinds of aspirations.
He spied an open backpack on the counter behind the cash register, and got a confirmation to his guess.
Culinary Management
was prerequisite reading for someone itching to get much further than waiting tables in Gordon Falls. Should it surprise him that someone as clever as Miss Kennedy had designs on moving up in the world? Ambition wasn't the root of every evilâhe had to keep reminding himself of that. Not everyone on their way up stepped on anyone to get there. Still, her apparent drive made it easier to ignore her pretty eyes and engaging personalityâonce burned was enough for him.
“Well?”
Karla's voice pulled him from his thoughts. “Well, what?”
“Sweet or salty?”
He'd totally lost track of the question. “Um...both?” It was true, he didn't really have a preference. “Does it work that way, like sweet-and-sour pork?”
“Only sometimes.” She squinted her eyes in thought, her fingertips drumming softly against the counter. “Are you willing to stray from coffee?”
He pulled back. “Like how?”
“Chai tea. A little spicy, but with milk and honey. Very global.”
That was a joke. He plucked at the ripped sweatshirt he was wearing. “Dylan McDonald, international man of mystery?”
Her laugh was engaging, a musical sort of giggle, soft and light. “Yeah, you could say that.”
“No offense, but it sounds like a girlie drink.”
Now it was her turn to balk. “Tea? England's male population and half of the Middle East would take issue with your narrow-minded attitude, bub.” That last word had a decided “I dare you,” flavor to it.
Okay, he could have a little fun with this. “Fine. I am man enough to try chai whatever it is. But I'm not holding out a lot of hope here, and there had better be some serious caffeine in that cup.”
She began working the dials on the espresso machine. “Oh, this'll get your motor humming. Maybe tomorrow I'll find some Japanese matcha. That's got more kick than most espressos.” She leaned in. “And it's green. Kind of like algae.”
“Now you're scaring me.”
A few minutes later, Karla slid a tall mug in front of him. It did smell exotic, but not necessarily in a good way. Dylan was beginning to think this little game wasn't going to end well.
“Go on. Try it.” Her eyes were wide and persuasive.
He took a sizable gulp. Closing his eyes, he took a moment to explore the many different tastes the drink combined. “Wow,” he said after a considerable pause. “That is...really...”
Her eyes popped even wider and she leaned on the counter with both elbows.
“Awful.” He set the cup down on the counter and pushed it back toward her.
“Oh, don't hold back on my account, Captain McDonald, tell me what you really think.”
“I think it tastes like something fish would enjoy, not fishermen. Unless I'm hosting a fishing bridal shower, let's leave this one off the Coffee Catch menu. And the Machu Picchu algae? Let's skip it.”
“Matcha,” she corrected, then added a playful “coward,” as she snatched back the full mug. The sparkle in her eye undercut any force she tried to give the barb.
“Purist,” he corrected right back. “Tea's not my thing, never has been. If it's any consolation, I liked yesterday's contender much better.” Just because her pout was so disarming, he added, “And the captain part. You can keep that.”
“Aye, aye, sir. From now on, all beans, no leaves.”
It took him a second to work out that she meant all coffee and no tea. “Steady as she goes. How about you just give me a regular coffee todayâblack, one sugar. You can surprise me again next Wednesday when I bring in the first customers.”
“One boring regular coffee, coming up. On the house, on account of your recent culinary disappointment.” She pulled one of the stoneware mugs from the shelf behind her, unceremoniously dumped in the sugar and filled it with coffee. With a mile-wide smirk, she scribbled for a second on a meal ticket before placing it facedown beside the mug in front of him and sauntered away to tend to a table.
Smiling, Dylan turned the check to face him. “Kaptain Koffee” was written in an artistic hand, with a little fish-and-bubbles doodle running up the side so that the “$0” was the last of the bubbles.
Karla Kennedy sure knew how to bait a hook.
Chapter Three
“A
nd that's one half-decaf soy with extra cinnamon.” Karla set the final beverage in front of Dylan's six fishermen as they sat at the coffee shop's front table the following Wednesday morning. Dylan had phoned in their orders fifteen minutes ago, and true to her expectations, each man had requested a highly specialized drink.
She was proud of herself; they might not ever have ventured into Karl's on their own, which meant her marketing idea had worked. Even at someplace as nondescript as Karl's, she had a knack for finding customers and giving them what they wanted. The affirmation bloomed a wonderful optimism in her chest. Grandpa always said skills were one thing and anyone could learn them, but the “sense” to run an eating establishment was an inborn gift. Today told her she had that gift.
Karla smiled to herself. The first official Coffee Catch was an odd sight indeed. While Dylan referred to them as fishermen and requested she do the sameâevidently Kaptain Koffee had a knack for customer service even if he did hate marketingâKarla found that a generous term. Calling the collection of well-groomed men in front of her “fishermen” was like calling a guest at a dude ranch a “cowboy.”
These six sure didn't fit any image Karla had of guys who normally cast hooks into water. All in their forties and dressed in upscale sportswear, this crowd looked as if they belonged on yachts at some oceanfront resort. She practically needed a calculator to add up the premium logos, brand names and expensive gadgets these guys touted. If they fished, it sure wasn't to put dinner on the table. Still, she was glad to have them in Karl's. These were exactly the type of customers she wanted to serve when she opened her own place.
A man in a sky-blue polo shirt and preppy plaid shorts arched his eyebrows after taking a sip of his double-shot latte. “Hey, this is good.” Karla chose to ignore the surprise in his expression.
Hey,
she wanted to say,
you have not left the civilized world that far behind
. Which really was a case of the pot calling the kettle blackâshe'd had to drive forty minutes away to get all the supplies she needed to stock a full espresso bar and had been known to gripe about Gordon Falls' “overwhelming quaintness” entirely too often. Hadn't she just referred to her stint in Gordon Falls as “exile” last week?
“I told you I wasn't exaggerating,” Dylan said, coming to her defense. His stained denim shirt looked especially ragged next to his current customers. His eyes were bright, even if his morning stubble gave him the scruffy, unkempt air. He smelled of soap and salt but still a bit of fish, as if he'd tried hard to clean up for his appearance in the shop but hadn't completely succeeded. He tucked his hands in his jeans pockets and glanced around the group. “Not a bad way to end a morning on the river, don't you think?”
“Makes up for the massive one that got away,” Mr. Double Shot said, pushing his expensive sunglasses up on top of his head to give Karla a million-watt smile. Had she seen him on television? One of those trial lawyers with commercials and 1-800 numbers? He had that look of a man in search of his next deal. Dylan said they came from Chicago. Maybe he could be a future customerâlawyers liked power breakfasts, right?
“Now who's exaggerating,” Half Decaf goaded. “I could have fit that fish in my pocket.”
“Mixed luck out on the water?” Karla asked, setting a stack of menus in the center of the table. “Your coffee's part of the catch, but we'll whip up breakfast if you're in the mood for a bit more.” She'd worked for ten minutes to come up with the perfect, nonintrusive way to hint that they might want to consider ordering breakfast.
“You cook as well as you pull a latte?” Double Shot asked, looking doubly charming as he extended a hand. “I'm James Shoemacher.”
“Jim Shoe,” Half Decaf cut in. “Call him Jim Shoe.” He said it again, pronouncing it like “gym shoe” and pointing to his gleaming white leather sneakers just in case she didn't catch the joke. Shoemacher looked weary, as if years of repetition had rendered him immune to the gag.
The same way she'd grown wearily resigned to explaining, “No, that's Karla with a
K
” over and over. She shook Shoemacher's handâone that didn't look like the kind that had done any time with night crawlers and a hookâand felt an unlikely kinship with the man. “Karla Kennedy.” She nodded to the sign in the window. “Karl's my grandfather. And I don't do the cooking, but I can sure vouch for it.”
“Shoemacher Realty. Industrial properties.” Hmm...real estate. How fortunate was that? “And I've been up so long,” he went on, “it feels like I ought to have lunch. Can you do a panini?”
“Sorry, no panini maker here, Mr. Shoemacher. We don't really do a lot of lunch fare.” She almost laughed, picturing what Karl would think of the uppity term for a grilled sandwich. “But I'm sure I can set you up with a grilled cheese.”
She expected him to grimace, but he smiled instead. “Do that,” he replied. “But call me Jim.”
As she pulled out her order pad, Karla decided she might have to eat her words about never making any business contacts in Gordon Falls. “Okay, one grilled cheese for Jim. Any of the rest of you need something more than your coffees?”
Half the group ordered a full breakfast, while three of them made a big show of checking their watches and smartphones, too busy to dally over eggs and toast.
“If you three need to head out, I'll go get your cleaned catches wrapped up and iced for the trip home.” Dylan had told Karla he was adding that extra serviceâand evidently it had been a good idea.
“Dave's will fit in his coffee cup, I bet,” one of them snickered.
“Hey, at least I
caught
something,” Dave replied. “So far all you caught was grief from your wife.” That brought a laugh from the whole group.
“Dylan, we enjoyed our morning,” pronounced Half Decaf, who had introduced himself as an accountant from a big firm Karla only barely recognized. “I'll have my assistant set us up for another later in the season.” He sent a smile Karla's way. “And I'll be sure to leave time for breakfast.”
Dylan shot Karla a grinning thumbs-up as he headed out the door with the exiting half of the group. So far, the first-ever Coffee Catch seemed to be a success.
“Dylan said this was your idea?” Jim asked when Karla brought their food orders to the table. At Grandpa's suggestion, Karla had asked Emily to come in a bit early so that Karla could give the fishermen her nearly undivided attention, only slipping out to make the all-too-occasional coffee drink for another customer. The executives seemed to enjoy the exclusive serviceâwhich had been the point all along.
“Seemed a nicer way to end an early morning than just getting back in the car,” Karla replied. After a second, she quipped, “The espresso machine is too heavy to roll down to the dock.”
“Smart and funny.” Jim nodded to his two companions. “And all the way out here in the middle of nowhere.”
“I'm from Chicago, actually,” Karla explained. “Just finished culinary school. I'm helping my grandfather out while he's laid up from hip surgery.”
“Culinary school. That explains a lot. So, Karla, what do you want to do after you finish helping Grandpa out?”
It seemed like a hundred years since anyone had asked her that question. Everyone in Gordon Falls only inquired how long she planned on stayingânobody seemed to care that she had shelved big plans to do time behind the counter. “I want to open a downtown breakfast eatery. A coffee shop like this, only a bit less...” She didn't know how to finish that sentence without seeming to put down her grandfather's beloved establishment.
“Rustic?” Jim finished for her.
Karla felt her face flush. “Well, yes.” She didn't want to insult Grandpa's place, just wanted to explainâespecially to someone like himâthat her dream had a lot more style and sophistication.
“It's a well-used real-estate term. Useful when explaining grilled cheese to the panini crowd.”
She managed to laugh at that. “I get it.”
“It's a very good grilled cheese,” Jim added. “Takes me back, you know?”
“I'm glad you liked it.” She looked at the other men. “Your breakfasts all okay?”
The other two nodded behind full mouths. “Hmm.”
Jim pulled out his wallet and handed Karla one of those top-level charge cards. “I'll get this, boys.” He also pulled out a business card. “When you get ready to open that place, Karla Kennedy, you give me a call. I'm good at spotting people who will go far in this world.” He pointed at her. “You may just be the best catch of the day.”
Karla slipped the business card in her pocket and smiled. She'd been moaning to God in her prayer journal last night that being cooped up in Gordon Falls was feeling like a colossal detour. This morning, however, felt like God's personalized reminder that she could pursue her dream even while out here. The card in her pocketâand the contact it representedâserved as a deposit on the future she had beyond the counter at Karl's.
The massive tip Shoemacher added to the meager breakfast tab? Well that was very nice, as well.
* * *
“So.” Jesse Sykes, a fellow volunteer fireman at the Gordon Falls Volunteer Fire Department, pulled on a gray T-shirt and shook his still-wet hair as they stood in the locker room later that afternoon. “How was the big rig gig?”
Dylan yawnedâit was tiring to pull a shift as a volunteer firefighter right after a full morning of playing host to a bunch of city visitors. It was 3:00 p.m. and he'd been up for eleven hours already. “Not bad, actually.”
Jesse took one last swipe at his hair before tossing the towel he held into the large canvas laundry bin in the corner. They'd just finished a demonstration at the high school, so it wasn't as if they'd just come in off a fire, but the heavy gear could make a guy sweat in January, much less June. “Today was the day you took them to Karl's afterward, right? How'd that go?”
“It's a nice perkâno pun intended.” Dylan rubbed his own hair dry. “Puts just the right cap on the morning, especially if the fish haven't been biting, which they weren't this morning.” One of the worst parts of the charter fishing business was that the satisfaction of his customers sometimes depended on the participation of Gordon Falls' finned inhabitants. This morning the fish had not been cooperative.
“Came in empty-handed?”
“Not completely, but there's alwaysâ” he made quotation marks with his fingers in the air “âthe big one that got away.” He laughed. “A lot of them got away this morning. Makes it hard to keep the customers happy, you know?”
“I can imagine.” Jesse smirked. “Hey, I think the coffee thing's a pretty clever idea, actually. A way to add to the experience no matter how the fish are bitingâand a bit more sophisticated than coffee in a thermos. Anything you can do to pull in the high-end crowd is always a good thing, right? You've got bills to pay.”
Dylan shut his locker door and spun the lock. “Those boat loans don't care that I've just about run through my savings getting this thing up and running. As for the coffee, the whole thing was Karla Kennedy's idea, actually.”
“Karla? Karl's granddaughter?”
“She's studying restaurant management, or something like that. I'd have never thought of it, being a âcoffee in the thermos' kind of guy.” He smiled ruefully. “Although I did like whatever it was she made me the other day. Had cinnamon in it, and frothy milk. I gave up all that stuff when I stopped working downtown, but now I think maybe I might go back to some of it.”
“So you talked shop with clever little Karla Kennedy.” Jesse hoisted a bag over his shoulder. “There's brains behind those big blue eyes.” He waggled one eyebrow at Dylan. “Reeling in more than the fishermen, are we?”
“She's not my type and I don't think I'm hers.” Dylan leaned against the locker he'd just shut. “Karla's definitely a city girl. I get the feeling she can't get back to Chicago fast enough. You should have seen her charming up my customersâshe definitely prefers a high-end kind of guy.”
Jesse fished a watch out of his pocket and put it on. “You're a high-end kind of guy. You just do it in a down-home kind of way now.”
“You just contradicted yourself, Sykes.” Dylan sat down on the locker-room bench and began tightening the laces on his work boots.
“Not necessarily.” Jesse tapped him on the shoulder. “Hey, wait a minuteâI thought you told me this morning's fishermen were guys in their forties.”
“They were.” Dylan tied off the knot.
“So I highly doubt Karla was fishing for dates from them.”
“I didn't say she was flirting with them.”
“Maybe not with words.” Jesse set his bag back down. “Look at you. You didn't even realize you were jealous.”
“Cut it out, okay?” He was not jealous of the attention Karla had paid those businessmen.
“Likely she was just being nice. You know, making business contacts. You said she wants to open her own place back in Chicago, right?”
“She mentioned it a few dozen times.”
“So she talked to you. A lot. And she made you coffee. And you said she gave you a free lunch the other day. Do the math here, buddy.”
Dylan didn't even bother to reply. He only shot Jesse a glare as he stood up to go.
“Man, we have to get you out more. You're spending way too much time with fish instead of females.”
Maybe I like it that way.
“Ever since you started âring shopping' with Charlotte, you've become impossible, Sykes. Well, more impossible than usual.” Jesse had been the firehouse's most proclaimed bachelor until a pretty, young Chicagoan named Charlotte Taylor had bought a property right out from underneath him. Jesse got himself hired to help Charlotte renovate that cottage, and it was safe to say the relationship had gone far beyond contractor-client since then. “You going to pop the question soon?”