The Chocolate Lovers' Club (40 page)

Read The Chocolate Lovers' Club Online

Authors: Carole Matthews

‘You’ll be wonderful,’ Tristan urges. ‘The customers will love you. We couldn’t leave our business in safer hands.’

‘I don’t know,’ I say hesitantly. ‘Last time I offered to help out you were worried that I’d eat my way through your business.’

‘We’ve had a change of heart,’ Clive assures me. ‘You can do it. We know you can.’

So they’re desperate. But what if I do scoff all of their profits and they have no business left by the time they return? It’s a distinct possibility.

‘Do it,’ Chantal urges. ‘What have you got to lose?’

‘Go on,’ Nadia says. ‘This is your dream job.’

It is really, isn’t it? This could have been what I’ve been waiting for all of my life.

‘You’re a natural,’ Autumn adds.

I realise that Clive and Tristan are both holding their breath.

‘Guys, this is going to seriously sabotage my diet.’

They both gasp and Clive asks, ‘Does that mean you’ll do it?’

My face breaks into a grin. ‘I guess it does.’

Clive punches the air. ‘Yeeessss!’ The boys hug each other joyfully. Then they hug me and cover me with kisses. Let’s hope they still feel like this in a few months’ time. Already I need more vodka.

The door opens and Crush walks in just as Clive and Tristan are detaching themselves from me. ‘Thought I’d find you here, Gorgeous.’

‘I have a new job,’ I announce brightly.

‘Oh?’ he says. ‘And how are the management at Targa going to cope without you?’

‘Quite well, I should imagine,’ I tell him.

‘I’ll be the judge of that,’ he says, as he slips his arms around me and kisses me warmly.

‘Don’t you want to know what my fabulous new job is?’

‘So now it’s a
fabulous
job?’

‘It is.’ I smile happily at Clive and Tristan. We haven’t discussed terms, conditions, pay or anything yet – although I already know what the perks will be. But whatever the deal, I know that I’ll be in my element doing this. And I can do it. I can rise to the challenge. How hard can it be? ‘I’m going to be running this place while Clive and Tristan are away.’

‘That sounds like a match made in heaven.’

‘Chocolate Heaven,’ I add. ‘It’s a match made in
Chocolate
Heaven.’

Tristan finds Crush a glass and splashes in some chocolate vodka.

‘To Lucy,’ Clive says.

My friends and my lover echo, ‘To Lucy!’

A lump comes to my throat. What would I do without these people who love me so much? I’m so grateful that I have all the finest things that life has to offer. I lift my glass, ‘To good friends, a gorgeous man and great chocolate.’

What more could I possibly want?

~ The End ~

Read on for a preview of Carole Matthew’s sequel to
The Chocolate Lover’s Club:

The Chocolate Lover’s Diet

The Chocolate Lover’s Diet

Chapter One

T
here are two types of women, I’ve found. There are those who are addicted to chocolate and there are bitches. Bitches are the sort of women who say, ‘Oh, I couldn’t possibly eat a
whole
Mars Bar, they’re
so
sickly!’ Or, ‘I find
one
square of dark chocolate is
more
than enough, don’t you?’ Or, even worse, ‘I’m not really that
keen
on chocolate. I’m more of a savoury person.’ All said whilst nibbling conservatively on a Twiglet as if it’s a sufficient substitute for sheer pleasure. What’s all that about?

We, the members of The Chocolate Lovers’ Club, are out-and-out addicts. We love the world’s finest foodstuff in all its varied forms. No shame in that.

Today, my good friends and I are assembled at our club headquarters, a cosy haven in one of London’s more salubrious back streets. It’s called Chocolate Heaven – and chocolate heaven it is.

It’s also a week before Christmas and I’d like to describe an outdoor scene of Dickensian snowiness and charm, but I can’t because this is London in the era of global warming and, as such, the sky is school-skirt grey, it’s sheeting down with rain and there’s a gale blowing. We care not. Despite the elements raging around us we’re out in force. Chantal, Autumn, Nadia and I, Lucy Lombard – chocoholic supreme and founder member of the club – are hunkered down on the sofa in front of the fire. It might not be a roaring log fire, but it’s the modern gas equivalent and works just as well for us, as we’re dug in for the duration. Frankly, no one else is going to get anywhere near our
prime space this side of closing time. We have a plate of chocolate fancies in front of us – featherlight sponge topped with a swirl of cappuccino icing – and some delectable fudge brownies. There’s also a selection of the finest truffles known to man made with fresh cream and Madagascar chocolate – a personal favourite. Because they’re made of fresh cream they only last for a couple of days – as if that’s ever going to be a problem! Believe me, this is the closest you can get to an orgasm in a public place. A little appreciative moan escapes my lips.

The owners of Chocolate Heaven, Clive and Tristan, are gloriously gay men – you’re not going to get straight guys running a chocolate shop, right? – who indulge us as we’re their best customers by far. If they’d let us rope off this area and have a
VIPS ONLY
sign put up just for us then we would, but they churlishly insist on having other customers in this place even though they don’t eat nearly as much chocolate as we do.

Our damp coats are steaming gently in a heap next to us. My youthful blond bob, styled into a wondrous arrangement with a pair of straightening irons and pound of Frizz-ease, is now clamped flat to my head. Still, things are looking up. We all have glasses of hot chocolate, spiked with the intense flavour of red chilli and topped with a veritable excess of whipped cream. My taste buds don’t know whether to swoon or set on fire. Contentment is but a hair’s breadth away. Well, it would be, except for one slight snag.

On the wall of Chocolate Heaven there is a cheery, pottery plaque. Clive, in festive mood, has covered it with a swathe of silver tinsel. It reads:

Survival tips for times of stress

1. Take deep breaths

2. Count to ten

3. Eat chocolate

This is our policy statement. Our solemn edict for the way we live our lives. I take a deep breath, get as far as three, then I push in another truffle. A deep sigh of relief escapes before I can edit it out. This is a time of
great
stress. I’m wearing my knickers that bear the legend
FORGET FALLING IN LOVE, I WANT TO FALL IN CHOCOLATE
– which might give you some hint as to the nature of my predicament.

‘Haven’t you heard from Crush yet?’ Nadia wants to know from beneath her frothy, cream moustache.

And that’s the slight snag. I shake my head. My current boyfriend, Mr Aiden Holby – aka Crush – is presently Missing In Action. In Australia.

Somehow, being MIA in Australia, on the other side of the globe, makes it worse. If he was MIA in, say, Belsize Park, then I could go round there on the bus or Tube and bang on his door at regular intervals until I could find out exactly what was happening. As it is, I’m a bit stuck. My fervent emails to him have remained unanswered. My calm but concerned phone calls to him all trip straight to voicemail and, even though his computer tells mine that he’s online, there’s no response. I know not why. We were having long, transcontinental calls via our respective webcams – some of which were getting rather pleasantly steamy. Long live modern technology! Then nothing. Absolutely nothing.

‘I can’t understand it,’ I say. ‘It’s not like him.’

Chantal snorts, loudly. It’s a snort that says, ‘He’s a bloke, what do you expect?’

‘Really,’ I insist. ‘He’s not like other guys.’ For ‘other guys’ read he’s not like Marcus, my bastard, bollocky, recently ex-fiancé, who was the most unfaithful man on the planet. Even if you count Bill Clinton, Tom Jones and Darren Day.

My American friend with the perfect hair and the overflowing bank account snorts again. I try to bite my lip. Even though she’s one of my very best mates in the world, relations between Chantal and me are still a little strained at the moment. This is due to the fact that she dated my ex-boyfriend – not Marcus, but another, much nicer one called Jacob. It’s a very confusing time for me right now. My love-life has been the romantic equivalent of a major pile-up on the M1. Tangled metal, sirens wailing, total gridlock, destruction, bodies everywhere. Excuse me, but I’ll have to ingest some more chocolate simply to keep my system going . . .

Let me fill you in while my chocolate hit kicks in. Jacob and I enjoyed a brief but mutually satisfying fling, despite never having got down and really dirty, through a combination of very unfortunate circumstances. He was, unlike Marcus, a very lovely guy. Although the shine did rather go off the relationship when I discovered his chosen method of earning a living. Jacob told me he worked in the leisure industry, which wasn’t strictly a lie. It was just that he turned out to be a male prostitute. Why do I always find out that the men in my life have hidden depths way, way too late? My dear friend, Chantal,
did
know about Jacob’s choice of employment, however. And, I suppose, all things considered, that she didn’t really date him, she simply rented him by the hour. The knowledge that she slept with Jacob, even in a professional capacity – while I didn’t get anywhere near his underwear despite wanting to – has, as you can imagine, left things somewhat scratchy between us. Then I got back with Marcus which was a Big Mistake to end all Big Mistakes. He just proved to me that, basically, he cannot be trusted as far as I can throw him. He will never change his philandering ways and I will never again believe that he will. That phase of my life is now over. The debris has been cleared, the motorway of my life is flowing smoothly once more. I’ve matured emotionally and have moved on. Thankfully, I’m now in a loving relationship with my old boss, Aiden ‘Crush’ Holby. Except that he seems to be temporarily misplaced. Maybe it’s nothing more than a pesky traffic cone in the way.

‘Aiden will turn up,’ Autumn says, as if she’s talking about some slippers that I’ve recently lost. She twines a finger round one of her crazy, red curls and gazes earnestly at me. I’d love to be like Autumn, whose glass is perpetually more than half-full. I mainly have one solitary drip left lurking miserably at the bottom. ‘There’ll be a perfectly plausible explanation,’ she continues. ‘You just wait and see.’

‘I’ll try him again later,’ I tell them. Then I stuff in a few truffles in a desperate manner and my aloof façade is completely blown.

Keeping a relationship going over such differing time zones was, I guess, always going to be a trial, but – believe me – Crush is worth it. He’s lovely, lovely, lovely. By far and away the best boyfriend I’ve ever had, and while it may not be an extensive list, there have been a few.

Aiden Holby and I both work for Targa, a data recovery company that, well, recover data. Don’t ask me anything more technical than that. As I’ve said, Aiden was my boss, which is where my little ‘crush’ on him began – hence the nickname foisted upon him by The Chocolate Lovers’ Club. Now Crush has been promoted to Head of International Something-or-another, terribly important, and that’s why he’s in The Land Down Under while I’m stuck in London in the Sales Department in a temporary and unspecified role and pretty much pass the time trying to avoid doing anything too taxing. I may be the most permanent temp that Targa has ever had, but I don’t intend spending the rest of my days there. Oh no. I’m waiting to find my predestined role in life, you could say. Which, of course, is currently eluding me.

I was supposed to be joining Crush in Sydney to start a new life of fun and frolics as a bona fide, signed-up, full-time girlfriend. We were going to live together and everything. The whole Happy Ever After. But, as luck would have it, I broke my leg falling downstairs when some of the practice frolicking got a bit out of hand. Then, to add insult to injury, I was banned from flying for weeks due to my cumbersome plaster cast.

Crush had to zoom off to Australia without me – an important job waits for no man. But he was supposed to be getting things ready so that I could join him as soon as possible. However, now that my fractured limb is mended and the plaster has come off, I can’t afford the air fare out there at this time of goodwill and extortionately jacked up prices. And, in the meantime, lovely overseas boyfriend Crush, it seems, has vanished from the face of the earth.

‘You don’t know if he’s coming home for Christmas then?’ Nadia says.

‘No. He did talk about it, but . . .’ But he hasn’t been returning my bloody phone messages, emails or anything. Instead of checking out the beer, barbecues and Bondi Beach, aforementioned boyfriend has gone walkabout. This definitely calls for more chocolate and a reinforcement of our policy statement. A bit of that fudge brownie looks as if it will just do the job.

Breathe. Count. Eat. Mmm. Ah, that’s better . . .

~To Be Continued…~

You can buy
The Chocolate Lover’s Diet
now on Amazon to find out what happens next.

About the author

Carole Matthews is a
USA Today
and
Sunday Times
Top Ten bestselling author whose unique sense of humour has won her legions of fans and critical acclaim internationally. Her book
For Better. For Worse
was a Reading with Ripa book club choice on
Live with Regis and Kelly
. She’s published in over 30 countries and received an award for her Outstanding Contribution to Romantic Fiction from the Festival of Romance.
Welcome to the Real World
and
Wrapped Up in You
were both short-listed for the Romantic Novel of the Year Award by the Romantic Novelists’ Association.

Previously very unlucky in love, she now lives happily ever after with her partner, Lovely Kev, in Milton Keynes, England. She likes to drink champagne, eat chocolate and spends too much time on Facebook and Twitter.

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