Always the Baker, Finally the Bride: Another Emma Rae Creation / Book 4

Always the Baker, Finally the Bride: Another Emma Rae Creation / Book 4

by Sandra D. Bricker
Always the Baker, Finally the Bride: Another Emma Rae Creation / Book 4

Always the Baker, Finally the Bride: Another Emma Rae Creation / Book 4

by Sandra D. Bricker

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Overview

In Always the Baker, Never the Bride, readers fell in love with Emma Rae and Jackson, and they’ve gotten more acquainted with them in the two books that followed. But now it’s time for the diamond to meet the road as Jackson fields an offer to sell The Tanglewood, a move that will uproot this high-flying family act once and for all. Get reacquainted with all of the lovable and quirky characters from the first three books as your favorite diabetic baker figures out if she'll achieve her greatest goal of all: Will Emma, at last, become FINALLY the Bride?

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781426732270
Publisher: Abingdon Press
Publication date: 03/15/2013
Series: Another Emma Rae Creation Series , #4
Pages: 352
Product dimensions: 5.40(w) x 8.40(h) x 1.00(d)

About the Author

Sandra D. Bricker was an entertainment publicist in Los Angeles for more than 15 years, where she attended school to learn screenwriting and eventually taught the craft for several semesters. She became a best-selling, award-winning author of Live-Out-Loud Fiction for the inspirational market, authored books such as the Jessie Stanton novels, and was best known for her Emma Rae Creation series. Over the years, as an ovarian cancer survivor, she spent time and effort toward raising awareness and funds for research, diagnostics, and a cure. Sandra lived in Toledo, Ohio before her passing in 2016. She is remembered online at SandraDBricker.com.

Read an Excerpt

Always the Baker, FINALLY the Bride


By Sandra D. Bricker

Abingdon Press

Copyright © 2013 Sandra D. Bricker
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-4267-3227-0


CHAPTER 1

Dude. When you said your family had a summer cottage near Savannah, I pictured something kind of different. More galley kitchen and bunk beds than Great Gatsby and mint juleps."

Emma smiled and yanked the camouflage duffle out of the back of Sherilyn's Explorer, heaving it into Fee's arms.

"The Great Gatsby was New York, wasn't it?" Sherilyn asked as she pulled her two floral overnight bags from the back. Leaning on the rear bumper, she wrapped both arms around her large pregnant belly and sighed as she gazed at the house. "It's been such a long time, Em. Are you glad to be back?"

Emma hummed her reply, slinging a burgundy tote over one shoulder and a brown leather bag over the other. She made her way across the sandy driveway and up the white-railed steps to the wraparound porch and pressed her grandmother's birthdate into the security pad. Once the beep of acceptance squawked its approval, Emma pushed open the massive double doors and turned around to grin at Sherilyn.

They sang it together: "Wipe yaw fee-eet."

How many times had they heard those same three words over years of spring and summer holiday visits! They scampered into a quick, animated run-in-place atop the large straw welcome mat while Fee stood behind them, eyeing them curiously over the bridge of square black sunglasses.

Emma dropped her bags at the foot of the staircase and hurried toward the vistas calling to her from fifty yards beyond the wall of windows. She unlatched the French doors at the top, and again at the knobs, and shoved them fully open with dramatic flair, expectant and eager. The salty sea breeze caressed her face just as she'd imagined, and the distant purr of the rolling ocean waves brought the perfect music to accompany the lyric of chattering gulls.

Emma approached the porch railing and leaned against it, mesmerized by the foam-capped dance on the white sand shore. Aunt Sophie had always called it "Atlantic Therapy," a term that had popped immediately to mind when Sherilyn had suggested they go away somewhere relaxing where Emma could pull her thoughts together and make some solid wedding plans after months of avoidance.

Well. Not avoidance, really. More like ... inertia. A numb sort of wedding paralysis that seemed to set in whenever key decisions needed to be made. Like the cake.

She wiggled the fingers of her left hand, allowing sunbeams to bounce off her beautiful engagement ring. She wondered for the hundredth time how Jackson had known that she'd always wanted a princess-cut diamond. She would have been pleased with a little square solitaire, of course, but the frame of smaller round diamonds that surrounded the stone and worked their way down to the platinum band caused the ring to catch that much more light. It was an exquisite ring. Perfect in every way.

"Sher, I never asked you before," she said as Sherilyn stepped up beside her. "Did you tell Jackson I wanted a princess diamond?"

"No, of course not. I was as surprised as you."

"Mm."

"Why?"

"No reason. I've just wondered, and I keep forgetting to ask him how he knew."

"Hey," she said after a moment's thought. "What do you say we unpack? Then we can head into town and get some groceries."

"No need," Emma said, breaking her gaze from the ring and fixing it on the sweeping blue horizon. "I faxed a list to Elmer and Louise. They took care of everything."

"Elmer and Louise!" Sherilyn exclaimed. "They still take care of this place? Are they still alive?"

"Twenty years connected to the Travis clan when they actually had a choice not to be," Emma summarized. "Boggles the mind, doesn't it?"

"Not really," she replied. "I've stayed connected without being required by blood." Emma glanced at Sherilyn, whose turquoise eyes were dancing with amusement as she mindlessly scratched her protruding stomach. "It's not such a bad deal, really."

"What's with this new move of yours?" Emma asked her, nodding at Sherilyn's belly.

"Oh, the scratching?"

"Uh, yeah!"

"I can't help it. My skin itches all the time now."

"You've got, what, a few more weeks? If you're not careful, you'll wear down the skin and the baby can step right out on her own."

"Stop," Sherilyn groaned, smacking Emma's arm playfully. "Wait! You said on HER own. Do you have a feeling? You think it's a girl?"

"If you wanted to know the sex, you should have had them tell you at the doctor's office, Sher."

"We want to be surprised," she sort of whined without conviction.

"You mean Andy wants to be surprised."

Twisting her red hair around one finger, Sherilyn shrugged one shoulder. "Yeah."

"Well, I can tell you this with total conviction. I absolutely know it's either a girl ... Or a boy!"

Sherilyn swatted her arm again, and Emma rubbed her friend's stomach lovingly.

"Em," Fee called from inside. "Hey, Emma!"

Emma and Sherilyn went into the house, both of them looking around. When she spotted Fee standing at the top of the stairs leaning over the banister, Emma laughed.

"Can I have the blue room with the shells on the wall?"

She nodded, and Fee hopped away before she could utter the s in "Yes."

"Cool. This place has a lot of happy-looking rooms. But I think I can live with this one."

"What about you?" Emma asked Sherilyn. "Do you have any preferences?"

"Is the green room still green?"

"It is indeed."

Sherilyn grabbed her bags and waddled up the stairs. "I get the green room across the hall," she called out to Fee as she reached the landing, breathless.

Emma padded across the great room and through the open doors. Leaving her sandals behind on the porch, she rushed down the three wooden stairs and took off at a full run across the sand. She unzipped the heather-gray hoodie, discarded it at the halfway mark, and left her khaki shorts on the sand about three yards from the water's edge. She stopped where the sand darkened from a recent overflow of surf and adjusted the bottom of her red bathing suit. Knee-deep in the icy ocean, she tugged at the suit top before diving in and swimming out against the brisk green-blue current.

Just before surfacing again, she thought she heard her aunt Sophie's melodic laughter.

"Atlantic Therapy, Emma Rae. And the colder the better when you're looking for answers. They're all right out there in the Atlantic Ocean. God's hidden them there for us to find when we really, really need them."


* * *

The elevator door creaked as it shut, and the car groaned slightly before setting out on its shaky ascent to his fourth-floor office. Something about the klunk! before the door opened again waxed familiar. Jackson had heard that noise before.

Emma's sweet face fluttered across his mind. And that pink sweater of his sister's that she'd changed into for their job interview after wiping out in the lobby and smearing fondant all over herself. She'd struck him as cute that day, with a speck of carrot cake still in her hair as they sat down to discuss the impending opening of The Tanglewood; even more so, a bit of a know-it-all when she stood there beside him as trapped passengers called out from the elevator car below a short while afterward.

"I'm assuming this is a hydraulic system, right? ... Well, it probably is. Anyway, I'm thinking it's likely that the rails are just dry. A little oil can take care of that for you. But the door jamming like this is probably your drive belt. The service guy will take care of that when he gets the passengers out."

When the serviceman had confirmed her findings, Jackson recalled thinking that he'd better hire her, just so he could be around on the off chance that she might ever be proven wrong about anything. At the moment, as he pried the reluctant elevator door open, he felt pretty certain she hadn't been wrong about much of anything since.

"Call downstairs and tell them to place Out of Order signs on the west elevator on each floor, and call the repair service, will you, Susannah?" he asked his assistant as he passed her desk. "The doors are sticking. I think it could be the drive belt again."

"Will do," she returned as he entered his office and dropped into the chair. "Andy Drummond phoned. Says your cell goes straight to voice mail."

Jackson had turned it off after it rang about thirty times during his meeting with the front desk manager, and he'd forgotten to turn it back on.

"You can reach him on his cell for another thirty minutes."

"Thanks."

Jackson pulled his cell phone from his jacket pocket and dialed Andy. "Hey, buddy. It's Jackson. What's up?"

"Cats are away," Andy announced. "Mice must barbecue. You in?"

"What can I bring?"

"Whatever strikes you."

"What time?"

"Six thirty?"

"I'm there. You invite Sean since he's on his own too?"

"He's bringing soda and garbage bags."

"Garbage bags?"

"We're out. I thought since he was going to the store for drinks anyway—"

Jackson laughed. "Whatever. Later."

He ended the call and checked his watch. Twelve forty p.m. The growl from his stomach rumbled with regret that there wasn't time enough to grab some lunch before Bingham arrived for their one o'clock meeting.

Jackson produced a manila file of notes from his briefcase and opened it on the desktop. He'd been preparing all week to meet with Rod Bingham, and he probably didn't need to review the notes yet again. But he did anyway.

The possibility of franchising The Tanglewood into a start-up of six wedding destination hotels across the country flicked the back of his brain with excitement. Who could have ever imagined such a thing just a couple of years back when they'd opened their doors?

Desi.

More than likely, Desiree would have imagined it. The place had always been her dream more than his, but the death of his late wife had choked the life out of things for a while. Once his sisters, and eventually Emma, hopped onboard, however, he'd caught the fire, and The Tanglewood Inn had become a well-known and successful venture. Now someone wanted to clone the place, setting up Jackson for making a fairly obscene amount of money in the process. Maybe it would allow him to become a little more hands-off for a while and to pursue other interests and challenges. Maybe after the wedding, he and Emma could even travel a little and leave The Tanglewood in other capable hands for a bit now and then. Not forever. Just for a while. They'd swum around in that Paris-for-a-year dream often enough that it surfaced almost immediately every time he considered cutting back on hours and responsibilities.

"Jackson Drake! How are you, my friend?"

"Rod. Good to see you," he said, standing to shake Bingham's hand.

"I'm really enthused about our meeting, Jack." Tapping his briefcase with a grin, Rod added, "I think I've got something here that's going to put some real wind in your sails. Are you ready to talk?"

"I'm ready," he said, and they both sat down and faced each other from opposite sides of the large maple desk. "Tell me what you've got."

"Well, first of all," Rod blurted, "this thing is bigger than even I had guessed. Hold on to your hat, Jack. And tell me what you think about this idea. Not only would Allegiant Industries be interested in planting wedding destination hotels all across the United States, Canada, and Europe over the next five years—while making you a very rich beneficiary in the process, by the way—but they would also be interested in purchasing the original hotel from you."

"Purchasing ... this place?"

"That's right, buddy. Allegiant wants to buy—"

"The Tanglewood?"

"Yes, indeedy."

"What do you mean?"

"What do you mean, what do I mean? They want to buy—"

Jackson gulped back the bubble of air stuck in his throat. "You want me to sell?"

"Yes. And not just for a song, Jack. For a symphony!"

He sat there quietly for a moment and rubbed his temple while the idea settled down on him.

"You want me to ... sell The Tanglewood?"


* * *

"Dude. What is wrong with you? Have you had a mental break?"

"No, I haven't had a mental break, Fiona. And you're not helping."

"Just decide. It's not like this isn't your forte, right? I mean, cakes are what you do. Picking a wedding cake design should be a piece of it for you."

The conversation was momentarily sidelined by the ghastly slurping sounds Sherilyn made from where she sat across from them, cradling a bowl on her basketball-shaped belly and scraping out the leftover chocolate muffin batter with a large rubber spatula.

"Sher, you're gonna make yourself sick," Emma scolded.

"No, I won't. It's just what was left in the bowl after you poured the rest out."

"Still. That can't be good for the baby."

"It's fine. It won't make me sick."

"Then it'll make us sick," Fee cracked. "Dude, you're gross."

"Anyway," Emma said with the shake of her head. "It's just not that simple, Fee," she retorted. "I'm a cake designer. How am I supposed to pick just one for ... Oh, you just don't understand."

"No. You're right. I don't understand. You've got the greatest guy in the world convinced that you're a catch. So like, maybe, you should, you know, pitch or get off the mound."

"Don't say that! How could you say something like that?" Emma groaned and tossed herself into the thick cushions of the couch.

"Okay," Sherilyn said, licking the chocolate batter from her finger before setting the bowl on the table in front of her and struggling to stand up. "Okay, that's good. We're communicating. We have a dialogue going."

Emma shook her head, her sigh morphing into the Pffft sound of a deflating balloon.

"But ... Fee ..." Sherilyn continued with caution, "maybe a little less aggression in our communication would better suit what we're trying to accomplish here. How about this? Can I get anyone some more iced tea? The muffins should be out of the oven soon, shouldn't they? Do you want me to make coffee?"

"Just stop it, Sher. No need to play nursemaid here, okay? Just drop into a chair and prop up your feet before they spring a leak."

Sherilyn stood there, in the center of the room, her swollen pregnant frame wobbling from side to side as she glanced from Emma to Fee and back again.

"Relax, will you?" Emma said, more softly this time, punctuating her words with a smile. "Let's focus on the things we can accomplish, okay?"

Sherilyn sighed with relief and waddled over toward her. "Really?"

"Yes. I can't think about the cake. It's too much pressure. But how about we look at those flower pictures you mentioned on the drive down here?"

Sherilyn's blue eyes shimmered as she plopped down on the other side of the sofa, and a grin pushed her plump cheeks upward. "Great! Yes, let's talk flowers."

"I'm going for a walk on the beach." And with that, Fee hopped to her feet and headed out the door.

"Turn on the floodlights," Sherilyn instructed. "It gets really dark out there at night. The switch is on the—" With a single thump, the door closed, cutting her helpfulness in two. Deflated, she sent the rest of her words into the air over Emma's shoulder. "—wall by the door."

"You know Fee," Emma comforted. "She got married in a hallway at the hotel, for crying out loud. The details just aren't her thing."

"I know."

Sherilyn's pouty face made Emma chuckle. "Let's have a look at those flowers of yours, my wedding planner friend"

"Oh. Right."

Emma watched as Sherilyn struggled to balance the neon-pink laptop on her beach-ball belly. A few clicks later, she surrendered the fight and set the computer on the coffee table in front of them.

"Here. This will be easier."

Emma leaned forward and peered at the screen as Sherilyn arranged four rectangular photographs into symmetry.

"I thought because you chose such a lovely, simple silhouette for your dress, the flowers should—"

"Simple?" Emma interrupted. "Do you think it's too simple?"

"Not too simple, no. It's beautiful, Emma. It's just not one of those elaborate numbers where the flowers have to be bold and make a statement to stand out."

"Do you think Jackson will be disappointed? Because you know his family would so prefer some big extravaganza with three hundred guests and—"

"Emma Rae, of course not. Stop it." Sherilyn reached out and grabbed Emma's hand and shook it gently. "This is about what the two of you want. And I think you chose the ideal dress for an elegant, intimate ceremony. You're going to look so beautiful in your gown, Em. Timeless and perfect. Jackson is going to have to work to catch his breath when he sees you in it."

"Really?"

"Really."

Emma sighed and glanced down at the stunning platinum and diamond ring on her left hand. She heaved one more sigh. "You're a good friend."

"Yes, I am."

"And the flower choices are all really beautiful. What do you think, Sher?"
(Continues...)


Excerpted from Always the Baker, FINALLY the Bride by Sandra D. Bricker. Copyright © 2013 Sandra D. Bricker. Excerpted by permission of Abingdon Press.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

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