Maddie felt like a bit of a pack mule.
Some people liked sunny holidays, others liked rock concerts but the tall blonde liked cookery demonstrations. This, however, was not her first rodeo. She'd come prepared. She'd brought a large wicker shoulder bag with her that was currently weighing her down, full to the brim with ripe fruits and spices and nuts and the occasional whisk.
Like a magpie, she was constantly becoming distracted. In preparation, she'd asked her older brother, Ben, for some cash. It was under the premise that she needed a quick loan to pay the rent on her Parisian apartment but really, it was so she could go bananas in this vast, sweet-smelling arena. Ben, being the angel that he was, hadn't asked any questions. All he said was that if she was ever in financial trouble, she should speak to their dad. Madeline would rather set fire to her own hair.
"Wait," the baker panted as she jogged after Johnny, almost slipping. "Slow down. Oh no! My nutmeg!" As the taller man grabbed her shoulders, she wobbled, the force knocking a small brown paper bag filled with the finely ground brown spice to the floor. "Eh?" She asked, blinking in confusion as Johnny wandered off again. She frowned a little as she picked up her bag again, mildly offended that he hadn't said that
she was the most beautiful thing he'd ever seen in his life.
After all, she'd made an
effort. She and Johnny had always been friends but a very small part of her always resented the fact that he never thought of her as a sexually viable creature. He'd made it very clear that he just thought of her as one of the lads.
"It's not
shite," Maddie replied primly. "It's haute cuisine and it's taking numerous years to hone my craft. My petit fours are amazing," she added with another scowl. He wasn't the first person to casually pooh-pooh her schooling. There was so much more to making cakes. She attacked it with scientific precision, treating her kitchen like a potions lab. She woke at three in the morning and didn't sleep again until way past midnight. She'd suffered countless burns and cuts and meltdowns in the process. It wasn't just something anyone could walk into it. This was her life.
Suddenly, her demeanour changed. "Do we have to?" She asked Johnny in a very soft voice, gulping as she saw the people cooking along with varying amount of success. Unlike the fellow baker, Maddie wasn't a natural showman. She didn't like the limelight and she wanted to be left alone. Like being wrapped up in a sugary whirlwind, she tripped as she jogged after him, letting him propel her through the crowds, issuing apologies as she went. She gave Johnny's hand an imperceptible tug, trying to pull him backwards as she chewed on her lower lip nervously.
They were in Italy so what could they make? Cannoli? Biscotti? As he mentioned macarons, she was about to tell him that she could already make them. But then she thought on. She was about to get up in front of everyone and she was not about to make a fool of herself. "Macarons might be good," she said as casually as she could manage as she reached up and tied back her curls into a ponytail. She still wasn't keen on the idea but she could make macarons in her sleep, blindfolded and with one hand tied behind her back. Cheater? Absolutely. No one said her moral compass pointed due north.
"Hello," she said to a pretty young woman with long dark hair who passed her a clipboard. Maddie signed her name and passed it over to Johnny as she looked up at the stage. It wasn't huge. There was room for maybe six people, plus the instructor. The instructor faced the audience (thankfully) which was made up of around ten or so people, sitting in chairs. There were two long benches, all complete with utensils and ovens at the edge. With shaking legs, Maddie climbed the stage and took her place, silently cursing Johnny whilst offering a small smile to Frederico, the flamboyant chef with a shock of dark hair, super white teeth and a pink flower behind his ear.