The Parisian Christmas Bake Off

The Parisian Christmas Bake Off by Jenny Oliver Page A

Book: The Parisian Christmas Bake Off by Jenny Oliver Read Free Book Online
Authors: Jenny Oliver
Tags: Fiction, General, Romance, Contemporary, Contemporary Women
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for Philippe to do the same. ‘If you can bear it,’ he added.
    It was only when Philippe dug his fork in that Rachel saw it—the slice. A cut the size of a Sabatier knife, stabbed into her right-hand side.
    She gasped. Someone had murdered her soufflé.
    ‘It is delicious,’ said Philippe, surprised.
    ‘
Mais oui
, the girl, she can cook. She is simply a disaster.’ Chef licked the last string of cheese off his fork and they walked over to Marcel.
    ‘Delicious,’ Philippe said again before leaving, but Rachel could only nod, distracted.
    She looked round the room again and she tried to get Abby to look at her so she could mouth what had happened but she wouldn’t.
    ‘Abby,’ she muttered in the end, but Abby bent down to rummage on her shelf.
    And that was when Rachel saw the missing slot on her knife roll. The twelve-inch blade empty. Probably in Abby’s sink, slimy with congealed parmesan and Gruyère.
    ‘You!’ she whispered.
    Abby looked back at her this time, but did a face of pleading innocence before turning away as the men appeared at her station and rhapsodised over her white-chocolate creation.
    Rachel stayed in the competition by the skin of her teeth. Luck was on her side as Ali’s and George’s were both dreadful.
    Ali stormed out refusing to talk to anyone after he was dismissed. George stayed and cleared up his table. ‘Oh, well.’ He shrugged. ‘Back to my little business. Dreams of stardom over. Too old anyway.’
    Rachel watched his back as he walked over to the coat stand and pulled on his tweed blazer followed by his Peter Storm cagoule.
    She wanted to stop him and say it was unfair. That there had been sabotage and cheating. ‘You’re not too old, George,’ she said instead.
    ‘You’re very sweet. It was enough for me. I’ve reached my limit. It’s hotting up. If it had been anyone else I’d have said, no, it’s time for me to go. I can feel it.’ He smiled. ‘And you, young lady, need to pull yourself together. You’re at the end of your nine lives. You hear me?’
    She nodded.
    ‘Good.’ He pulled on his flat cap. ‘I expect you to win.’

Chapter Eleven
    There were no drinks in the bar that night.
    Marcel sloped off almost as soon as Chef left. Abby seemed to be absorbed in a task that prevented her from leaving. Rachel grabbed her bag, pulled on her hat and mittens and stalked out. In the corridor she passed Lacey, who was tapping into her mobile over her bifocals. Neither acknowledged the other. It was competition now. War.
    Rachel took a couple of paces outside and then ducked into an alley and waited. The snow was like a sheet shaken from a balcony—a wall of white coating cars in foot-deep white. Kids were pulling sledges down the street while businessmen slipped in leather shoes.
    She blew on her hands, white misty breath in the freezing air, and listened to the accordion music drifting out of the pâtisserie as it closed.
    When she heard familiar footsteps Rachel stepped out onto the cobbled pavement and said, ‘Why did you do it?’
    Abby hoisted her bag further up on her shoulder. ‘I don’t know what you’re talking about.’
    ‘Yes, you do. You sabotaged my soufflé. Why would you do that? After I saved you yesterday.’
    ‘Oh, yeah, great, you saved me. Aren’t you a star? I heard what he said, Rachel. When he called you back. I waited in the doorway. All good bakers have a signature.’
    ‘So?’ she said.
    ‘So he didn’t say he couldn’t see mine, did he? It was that he saw yours. He thought I had no signature. Well, I do. I do have a signature and I wanted him to taste it.’ She wiped her nose with her glove and then thrust her hand in her pocket.
    ‘So show him yours! Make something amazing like you did. That doesn’t mean you have to ruin mine.’ Rachel couldn’t believe it.
    Abby scoffed. ‘You really think that? You really think he’d have noticed mine after tasting yours?’
    ‘Yes, Abby. Yes, I do. If it was that bloody good.

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