Katie's New Recipe Read online




  Contents

  Chapter 1: It’s a Cupcake Code Red!

  Chapter 2: What’s Up with Mom?

  Chapter 3: Middle School Spirit!

  Chapter 4: I Spy

  Chapter 5: Sleepover Drama

  Chapter 6: A Cupcake Alliance

  Chapter 7: The Challenge

  Chapter 8: Mia’s Fashion Splash

  Chapter 9: Things Suddenly Get Weird

  Chapter 10: “Your Dad, Marc Donald Brown”

  Chapter 11: Emma and the Egg

  Chapter 12: A Big Decision

  Chapter 13: Alexis Heats Up

  Chapter 14: Sharing the Secret

  Chapter 15: Chez Freak-Out

  Chapter 16: Heartbreak

  Chapter 17: A Little Spicy, a Little Sweet

  ‘Mia, a Matter of Taste’ Excerpt

  About Coco Simon

  CHAPTER 1

  It’s a Cupcake Code Red!

  Make me a doggy! Make me a doggy!”

  I started to sweat as the adorable five-year-old in front of me looked up with pleading eyes. I knelt down and waved a round helium balloon in front of his face.

  “It’s not the kind of balloon that you can make into animals,” I said, using my sweetest voice. “It’s just a regular, fun, yellow balloon, to match the cupcakes! See?”

  I pointed to the cupcake table across the small yard, where my friends Alexis and Emma were busy placing dozens of yellow and green cupcakes on matching paper plates.

  The little boy’s lower lip quivered. “But . . . I . . . want . . . a . . . doggy!” Then he began to bawl.

  Panicked, I turned to my best friend, Mia, who was filling balloons behind me.

  “Mia! We’ve got a code red!” I cried.

  “Katie, what’s wrong?” Mia asked.

  I pointed to the sobbing boy. “He wants a dog-shape balloon. I don’t know what to do.”

  Mia quickly retrieved a black marker from her bag under a table and took the balloon from my hand. The marker squeaked as she drew a cute doggy face on the balloon, complete with droopy ears and a tongue sticking out. Thank goodness for a friend who can draw!

  She handed it to the boy. “How’s this?” she asked.

  The boy stopped crying. “It’s a doggy! Woof! Woof!” Happy again, he ran off.

  I let out a sigh. “Mia to the rescue! Thank you. I knew this wasn’t going to be easy. Running a party for a bunch of five-year-olds? It’s much easier when we bake the cupcakes, serve the cupcakes, and then get out.”

  A while ago, my friends and I had started a Cupcake Club. We’d turned it into a pretty successful business, baking cupcakes for all kinds of parties and events.

  “It’s like Alexis said, it’s healthy to branch out,” Mia pointed out. “We’re making a lot more money by running the games and activities.”

  I gazed around the yard. We had worked hard on this cupcake-themed party for a five-year-old girl named Madison. Last night we were up late baking cupcakes in Madison’s favorite colors, yellow and green. This morning we got up early (which I never like to do on a Saturday) to set things up. We had a table where the kids could decorate their own cupcakes.

  Later, we were going to set up the stuff for the games. We took regular party games and cupcaketized them. You know, instead of Hot Potato, we were going to play Pass the Cupcake. And instead of a donkey, kids could pin a cherry on top of a giant picture of a cupcake. It was going to be fun, but it was definitely a lot of work.

  “Well, money isn’t everything,” I declared. “If Alexis wants us to do this stuff so bad, she can come over here and make balloons. I’m going to go work at the cupcake table. At least I know what I’m doing there.”

  “Aw, come on, Katie, balloons are fun!” Mia said, bopping me over the head with a green one.

  I stuck my tongue out at her. “But crying kids are not! I’ll see you later.”

  I walked across the room to the cupcake-decorating table.

  “Alexis, you need to switch with me,” I said. “I can’t do the balloons. I just don’t have it in me.”

  Alexis nodded, her wavy red hair bouncing on her shoulders. “No problem. There’s not much more setting up to do. Mrs. Delfino said that the kids are having pizza in a minute, and then we’re going to play some games before we do the cupcake thing.”

  Alexis walked away, and I took her place behind the table, next to Emma, who really loves dressing up for any event. She wore a light yellow shirt with a short green skirt that matched the cupcakes perfectly. A yellow headband with tiny green flowers held back her straight, blond hair. I had tried to get in the party spirit too, with a yellow T-shirt and green sneakers.

  “Katie, you look miserable!” Emma said. “Come on, it’s not so bad, is it?”

  “I think it’s because I’m an only child,” I admitted. “I don’t know how to deal with little kids.”

  “That’s not true. You’re so great with Jake,” Emma said. Jake is her six-year-old brother. “He adores you!”

  “That’s different,” I protested. “Jake is only one kid. This is, like, a hundred!”

  Emma laughed. “It’s only sixteen. But I know what you mean. When Jake’s friends are over, it can be too much sometimes.”

  As we spoke, a woman with curly brown hair stepped into the yard.

  “Okay, everybody! It’s pizza time! Everyone inside!”

  The kids cheered and raced inside, accompanied by the moms who had decided to stay for the party. Alexis approached the cupcake table.

  “We should set up the games while everyone eats,” she suggested. “Then we’ll be ready when they come back out.”

  “Good idea,” Emma agreed. We started to set things up for the games, and after only about ten minutes, the kids came racing back outside.

  I shook my head. “Back already? What did they drink with their pizza? Rocket fuel?”

  “Games! Games! Games!” the kids started chanting.

  Mrs. Delfino smiled at us apologetically. “I hope you don’t mind.”

  “Of course not,” Alexis said crisply. When she’s on a job, she’s all business. “We’re ready.”

  “Come on, kids!” Emma said loudly. “Who wants to play Pass the Cupcake?”

  Sixteen hands flew into the air at once. “Meeeee!”

  I kind of got into it when we played the games. We played Pass the Cupcake first. Mia had sewn a cute cupcake out of felt, and the kids sat in a circle and passed it around when the music played. When the music stopped, the kid holding the cupcake had to leave the circle.

  It went pretty well until one little girl started crying when she got out. I almost panicked again. But then I had an idea. I grabbed the girl’s hands.

  “Everybody outside the circle gets to dance!” I cried, and then I started to dance and twirl around with her. It worked! She stopped crying, and soon all the kids outside the circle were laughing and dancing.

  After that, we played Pin the Cherry on the Cupcake using a beautiful poster of a cupcake Mia had drawn, and big cherries cut out of paper. Then we did cupcake relay races, where the runners had to balance a cupcake on the end of a spatula while they were running (instead of the usual egg on a spoon). There was a lot of icing on the grass, but the kids seemed to really like it.

  “Great job, everybody!” Alexis called out. “And now it’s time to decorate cupcakes. Madison, since you’re the birthday girl, you get to go first.”

  “Yay!” Madison’s big brown eyes shone with excitement as she ran to the cupcake table. Her party guests were excited too, and they quickly crowded around her.

  “One at a time! One at a time!” Alexis yelled, but the five-year-olds ignored her, swarming around the table and grabbing the cupcakes, sprinkles, and candy toppings.
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  “Hey! There are spoons for that!” Alexis scolded.

  Mia, Emma, and I quickly jumped in to help. I picked up a spoon and tried to show one blond-haired boy how to gently sprinkle some edible green glitter on to his cupcake. He took the spoon from me, dipped it in the glitter . . . and then threw the glitter all over the little girl next to him!

  The girl looked stunned. She brushed the green glitter off her face . . . and then started to cry.

  “Oh no. Not again,” I said, moaning. I didn’t think dancing was going to help this one. “We’ve got another code red!”

  But everyone was too busy to come to my rescue. Emma was wiping off frosting from Madison’s face, Mia was patiently creating a smiley face made out of candies on another girl’s cupcake, and Alexis was marching up and down the table, trying to regain order.

  “Icing goes on the cupcake, not on your hands!” she shouted. “And, Leonard, do not put the sprinkle spoon in your mouth!”

  Within minutes, the kids were more decorated than the cupcakes.

  Mrs. Delfino approached the table, looking flustered. “Oh dear! This is quite a mess!”

  We stopped and looked at one another. Our client did not look happy—and that was bad for business.

  “It’s, um, all part of the fun,” I said cheerfully. “And don’t worry, we’ll clean it up. Who wants to play the Clean-Up Game?”

  Sixteen sticky hands flew in the air. “Meeeeeeee!”

  Luckily, Emma had thought to pack a big tub of wet wipes. I got out the box and gave one to each kid.

  “Okay, now it’s time to clean our hands, hands, hands,” I instructed in a singsong voice, and luckily, the kids all played along. Next, I had them clean their faces, elbows, and even their knees (that’s how messy everyone was!). In the end we had one big pile of messy wet wipes and one yard full of clean kids.

  “It’s time to sing the birthday song!” Mrs. Delfino announced, and as the kids followed her inside, we collapsed on the grassy lawn, exhausted.

  “Katie, you were so good with the kids!” Mia said.

  “Yeah, I’ll have to remember that clean-up game for Jake,” Emma said.

  I frowned. “Well, thanks, but that was still awful. Doesn’t this prove we should stick to just cupcakes from now on?”

  “Absolutely not,” Alexis said. “It just means we need to perfect our plan. Until that big cupcake mess, everything was going really well.”

  “Yeah.” Mia nodded in agreement. “It was kind of fun, too.”

  “Definitely,” said Emma. “And let’s not forget the extra money. It’s worth it.”

  I sighed. “I guess you’re right. You know me. I don’t really like changing the way I do things. In fifth grade, I wore the same pair of purple sneakers every day for a year. My mother said she had to peel them off my feet, literally.”

  Everyone laughed.

  “Don’t worry, Katie,” Alexis said. “Our new business plan is going to be great. You’ll see.”

  “Fine,” I said. “But next time, let’s leave the icing on the cupcakes, okay?”

  CHAPTER 2

  What’s Up with Mom?

  I was so tired from the party that I did not want to get out of bed the next morning.

  “Katie, it’s time to get up!” my mom urged.

  I groaned and pulled my pillow over my face. Mom gently tugged the pillow out of my grasp. I opened my eyes to see her brown eyes staring at me through her eyeglasses.

  “You know, for years you would wake up at five thirty every morning, no matter what, and come wake me up,” Mom said. “And now I can’t get you out of bed.”

  “So . . . tired . . . ,” I said dramatically.

  “Well, I made pancakes,” Mom said. “So please come down and eat them before they get cold.”

  I quickly sat up. “Blueberry?”

  Mom smiled. “Of course,” she replied, and then she left my room. That got me up. Mom’s pancakes are the best, even if she sometimes still makes them with little smiley faces with the blueberries. It’s like she forgets that I’m in middle school now.

  A few minutes later I was sitting at the kitchen table, eating pancakes with my mom.

  “So I didn’t get the details about the party yesterday,” she said. “How did it go?”

  “It was a mess!” I said, and then I told her everything that happened.

  Mom laughed. “Well, it sounds like it worked out all right in the end.”

  “I guess,” I said. “But I hope we don’t do too many more parties like that. It’s a lot of work!”

  “A little hard work never hurt anyone,” Mom said, and I shook my head.

  “You sound like Grandpa Chuck,” I said.

  “Speaking of work, what’s your homework situation?” Mom asked.

  I had to think. “Um, one math worksheet and an essay for English,” I reported. “I’ll do it right after breakfast.”

  “Do you mind if I go for a run, then?” Mom asked. “I mean, unless you want me to wait for you.”

  “Go ahead,” I said with a yawn. “I’m too tired to run today, anyway.”

  Mom smiled and then started to clean up the breakfast dishes. She started to sing a song while she worked.

  “Mom, it’s my turn to do those,” I said. “I just want to sit here for a few minutes first.”

  “Oh, don’t worry about it,” Mom said cheerfully. “I don’t mind.”

  Then she started singing again.

  Wow, Mom’s in a good mood today, I thought.

  After breakfast I showered, put on a tie-dyed T-shirt, and jeans, and then settled down at the clean kitchen table to get my homework done. If I don’t start it in the morning, then Mom starts asking what the “plan” is for the day. She gets kind of mad when I leave it all for Sunday night. I was halfway through my math worksheet when Mom came into the kitchen.

  “I’ll be back in about an hour,” she said.

  “I’m already doing my math worksheet,” I said, holding up my paper. That’s when I noticed Mom’s outfit.

  Normally, Mom wears her favorite sweatpants when we go running, the blue ones with the big white streak across the front from that time she accidentally got bleach on them. She pairs them with any old T-shirt and doesn’t care if it matches. And she pulls her curly hair back into a ponytail. Sometimes, in the winter, she even runs in her pajamas.

  But today she had on a pair of black running pants that looked brand new, and instead of an old T-shirt, she had on a pretty lavender top I hadn’t seen before, with flowers stitched around the neckline. She wore a matching light purple headband in her hair, and she even had on lip gloss. And it wasn’t clear—it was pink!

  “Mom, why are you so dressed up to go running?” I asked. “You usually only ever wear lip gloss when we go out to a fancy restaurant or something.”

  Then I also noticed that she wasn’t wearing her glasses, either! “And why do you have your contacts in? You always complain about your contact lenses and try to wear them as little as possible. You never run with your contacts.”

  Mom blushed. “It’s no big deal,” she said. “It’s kind of a New Year’s resolution to spruce myself up a little bit.”

  “But New Year’s was months ago,” I pointed out.

  “Well, a belated one,” Mom said. “Mia’s mom is such a fashion plate. I didn’t want you to feel like you have the slacker mom.”

  “I’ve never felt that way!” I insisted. “Besides, I’m your slacker daughter. We match.”

  When I said it out loud, I realized that I like how Mom and I are alike in some ways, besides the fact we both have brown hair and brown eyes. My dad left my mom and me when I was just a baby, so it’s just been the two of us for my whole life. We’re like a team.

  Mom laughed at my slacker comment. “Well, it makes me feel good to dress up a little,” she said.

  “Suit yourself,” I told her. “But I am telling you I am not wearing lip gloss the next time we go running. You are on your own with that s
tuff.”

  “I don’t expect you to,” Mom said. She leaned over and kissed my forehead. “Be back soon.”

  I shook my head as she left. Parents can be so weird sometimes! But if it meant I got pancakes and Mom did the dishes, then whatever was going on was okay with me.

  CHAPTER 3

  Middle School Spirit!

  So, this year of middle school has been a lot easier in some ways. I know my way around now, and I’m used to changing to a different teacher for every class. I have also mastered the art of opening up a combination lock, which isn’t as easy as it looks.

  In other ways, it’s been a little bit harder. Like, when the school year started, Mia made friends with this new girl, Olivia, and I thought she was going to replace me as Mia’s best friend. That wasn’t fun. But Olivia ended up being friends with the girls in the Best Friends Club instead, so everything worked out okay. Besides, I know that even if Mia makes new friends, she will always be my friend too.

  Another hard thing—well, not hard, really, maybe more like strange—is my friendship with George Martinez. We’ve known each other since kindergarten, and I think he’s really funny. But a while ago we started liking each other. You know, like, liking each other. He asked me to dance at the fall dance, and we went to the pep-rally parade together. And that was nice and everything, but now when we’re in a normal situation, like riding the school bus, it’s kind of awkward. I don’t know what to say or do around him.

  I guess that’s one example of how I don’t like when things change. Before George and I liked each other, everything was simple. But now it’s kind of complicated.

  Anyway, I don’t have to worry about George or Olivia at lunch, because George sits with his friends, Olivia sits with the BFC, and I sit with the Cupcake Club. On Wednesday, the Cupcake Club and I were talking about the big announcement we’d heard in homeroom that morning.

  “I can’t believe it’s only a few weeks until Spirit Day,” Alexis complained. “Ugh!”

  “I thought the last one was fun,” Mia said.

  “That’s because you were on a team with cool people,” Alexis pointed out. “I got stuck with Sydney, remember?”