Total pages in book: 138
Estimated words: 126823 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 634(@200wpm)___ 507(@250wpm)___ 423(@300wpm)
Estimated words: 126823 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 634(@200wpm)___ 507(@250wpm)___ 423(@300wpm)
“I’m going to make my rounds and give the personal touch to the customers. I want to check in with Eve and Felicity to see how they’re doing. Keep everyone moving. We’ve got to clear the tables fast, Vaughn.”
“We’re on it.”
Fortunately, most of the food for the café was prepared in advance. She served a limited menu each day. The customers were aware of that before they entered. She posted the menu outside on the wall so it was easily read before they chose to eat or just get coffee and pastries or sandwiches for travel.
As she went down the line of booths and tables, she stopped to greet the customers and see if they had any questions about the town or places to shop or just ask if they were on their way to Sunrise Lake or Yosemite. She was fortunate in that she easily retained names and faces and spoke several languages so she could make her customers feel welcomed and at ease within a few short minutes. That was what she loved most about having her café.
“Hey, gorgeous,” Deacon called out as she bypassed their table. He leaned out with a long arm in an effort to grab her wrist.
Shabina glided away from him, but half turned to look at him over his shoulder. “Did you need something, sir?” She glanced around the café. “Your waiter is Tyrone. Let me call him for you.”
“I need something from you,” Deacon countered, winking at the other men at the table.
Sean grinned like an ape. “We all could use a little something from you.”
Shabina lifted an eyebrow, shook her head and signaled to Tyrone, but she kept walking. It was too bad Sean was teaching his ways to impressionable young interns. Deacon made his kissy noises, and his two friends and Sean uttered a couple of catcalls. She didn’t turn around.
“Are they always like that?” Felicity asked. She pulled up a chair from a nearby table and patted the seat. “I know you’re super busy, but sit for a minute.”
Shabina glanced around the room. Her staff had things under control, breaking down tables and seating new customers. “Unfortunately, there are a couple of locals who have taken a dislike to me, although they come here frequently to eat. That’s their form of harassment. I don’t like seeing it taught to the students they mentor.”
“Those kids aren’t younger than you, Shabina,” Eve said staunchly. “They should know better than to act that way.”
Shabina forced an easy smile. “I’ve made a lot of mistakes in my life, so I do my best to give people the chance to grow and learn from their mistakes.” She gave a little wave of her hand as if dismissing the conversation. “I want to hear how you’re doing.”
The two women exchanged a look. Again, Felicity answered. “We’re contemplating making a move here. It’s so peaceful. And Freda loved this area so much. She talked about it all the time. Just the time we’ve been here makes us feel different. When we’re back in Galaxy, Maine, it seems like we don’t have the time to take a breath.”
“Galaxy? What a nice name for a town,” Shabina said.
“Very small town,” Felicity said. “Here, the views insist you sit back and enjoy them.”
“The sunsets,” Eve added. “And the sunrises. We feel closer to Freda here.”
Felicity nodded. “We’re trying to learn as much as we can about hiking from guides and books, but I still don’t understand fully what happened to that section of trees where Freda and her family were found. Why would they go there? The trees were black and twisted, with no leaves at all.”
“We were told that trail had been closed. It was grown over, but we didn’t see any sign saying the trail was closed,” Eve added. “When we read the final report, it said they had entered a trail that had been marked closed.”
Shabina had hoped she wouldn’t have to discuss their tragedy, but clearly, they were trying to understand.
“We don’t want to make the same mistakes,” Felicity said. “We don’t have Emilio and Freda’s hiking experience. We’re going on trails that are on the maps, and we do ask others, but it doesn’t make sense that Freda got so far off trail if it was closed to hikers.”
“Maintaining trails is difficult in the wild,” Shabina explained as gently as she could. “Crews are hired, but it requires money and it’s a lot of work. Not all trails can be rehabilitated right away or kept up. The main trails are first priority. The trees were compromised by some change in the underground water. I don’t honestly remember what happened off the top of my head, but in that area the trees and all the brush died. A fire swept through the area not long after that. The trail was closed as soon as it happened. There were clear signs put up warning the trail was closed. As time went by, the trail became overgrown.”