Скачать книгу

slowed the bus down, and a young man in a fluorescent jacket waved her into position. Sally arranged the trays of bakes strategically around the serving hatch while Charlie jumped down from the bus and, registering nervously how spongy the grass was, slid her menu into the frame Clive had bolted on next to the opening. She was offering a selection of sweet and savoury treats, including a sausage roll with flaky pastry and a herby sausage-meat filling. Ideally they’d be served warm, but they tasted delicious cold as well.

      ‘Ready to go?’ she asked Sally, who was smoothing down her apron and staring at the sausage rolls as if they might bite. ‘It doesn’t open officially for another half an hour, but it may be that other traders will want a snack before the general public arrive.’

      Sally had only been working at The Café on the Hill for two weeks, and behaved as if everything was a potential threat. Charlie knew she’d come out of her shell sooner or later, and thought that a day spent at a fair, where almost anything could happen, would be good for her.

      ‘I’ve arranged all the cakes and pastries,’ Sally said, giving Charlie a nervous smile.

      ‘They look great. Shall we go and hang the banner up?’

      She’d had it made at one of the local printer’s; a beautiful sign in tarpaulin-weight material that would run the length of the vehicle, declaring it to be The Café on the Bus in burgundy writing on a cream background. Beneath it, in a forest-green font, it read: An offshoot of The Café on the Hill. It had brass-capped eyelets threaded through with thick chord, so she could attach it easily over the upper deck windows. Even Bea had widened her eyes appreciatively when she had showed her, rolling it out along the tabletops in the café.

      She had also added a couple of photos of Gertie to The Café on the Hill’s Instagram page, and had received 117 likes on the picture she’d posted yesterday. It needed work, but it was a solid start.

      Now Charlie led the way up the narrow staircase, the metal rail cool under her hand, and passed one end of the banner to Sally.

      ‘We’re going to have to hang it out of that end window, and then I’m going to have to grab it and unroll it outside, going to each window in turn to get it running the whole length of the bus. So just hold on, OK?’

      ‘OK,’ Sally parroted back.

      It was hard going. She had to lean her arms out of adjacent windows so she could hold it up and then unfurl it further, but after ten minutes of sweating and muttered swearing, she was tying her end of the banner firmly onto the window. It was the right way round. It wasn’t upside down. Quietly triumphant, they rushed outside to look at their handiwork, and Charlie grinned. ‘The Café on the Bus,’ she declared. ‘We are open for business!’

      Within two minutes of the banner going up, she had a queue of five people looking eagerly up at her through the serving hatch.

      ‘What’s this, love,’ said an old man with a flat cap pulled low over his eyes. ‘Hal’s old bus getting a new lease of life?’

      ‘Absolutely,’ she replied. ‘He left it to me, and I’m giving it a fresh start as a food truck. What do you think?’

      ‘I think my Daphne will miss the tours,’ he said, accepting a sausage roll and a black coffee in a sturdy takeaway cup. Charlie hadn’t had time to get them branded, but had picked out cream and green cups to tie in with the bus’s colour scheme.

      ‘Lots of people will,’ Charlie admitted. ‘Hal ran brilliant tours, but I can’t do that.’

      ‘Someone else could mebbe take them on, then,’ he added thoughtfully, and bit into the sausage roll. He eyed it appraisingly, and then her, and then shrugged. ‘Not sure it’s meant to be a café bus, like.’

      Charlie kept her smile fixed. ‘I’m just giving it a go. This is our first outing together.’ She patted the side of the bus, feeling like something out of a cheesy Sixties film.

      ‘I say good luck to you,’ called a tall man in a navy fleece from further back in the queue. ‘Coffee out of a bus is a marvellous idea. Gives it a bit of individuality. You going to serve three-course dinners from your little window, too?’

      ‘Oh, shush your mouth, Bill Withers,’ said a bright-faced, plump lady Charlie recognized from the chemist’s in town. ‘This young lass is using her initiative. Would you rather the bus stayed locked away in a garage until it rusted to nothing? We all know Hal wouldn’t have wanted that.’

      ‘I just think it’s hilarious,’ Bill countered, while Charlie tried to serve and not let embarrassment overwhelm her. ‘Serving food from Hal’s old bus. Whatever next? Driving to work in the Indian takeaway?’ He laughed a loud, unbridled laugh that had several people turning in their direction.

      ‘Oh, don’t mind him,’ the woman said as she reached the front of the queue. ‘He’s so far stuck in the past he should be wearing black and white.’ She rolled her eyes, and this time Charlie’s smile was genuine.

      ‘It was only an idea,’ she replied. ‘Hal left me the bus, and I wanted to put it to good use, to have it out in the open, like you said. I’m a baker, so I thought I could combine the two.’

      ‘And it’s a grand idea,’ her supporter said, accepting a slightly haphazard-looking Eton Mess that was living up a bit too well to its name – Charlie would have to do something to keep her puddings upright when they were driving across rough ground. ‘You iron out a few … wrinkles, and it’ll be a triumph. Don’t listen to the naysayers. You do you,

      Конец ознакомительного фрагмента.

      Текст предоставлен ООО «ЛитРес».

      Прочитайте эту книгу целиком, купив полную легальную версию на ЛитРес.

      Безопасно оплатить книгу можно банковской картой Visa, MasterCard, Maestro, со счета мобильного телефона, с платежного терминала, в салоне МТС или Связной, через PayPal, WebMoney, Яндекс.Деньги, QIWI Кошелек, бонусными картами или другим удобным Вам способом.

/9j/4AAQSkZJRgABAQEBLAEsAAD/7Ym8UGhvdG9zaG9wIDMuMAA4QklNBCUAAAAAABCaia1dKG26 IQLIy6lnBT/bOEJJTQQ8AAAAAFEDAgAAACBjYU0AAAAAYnBsaXN0MDDUAQIDBAUGVVZYJHZlcnNp b25YJG9iamVjdHNZJGFyY2hpdmVyVCR0b3ASAAGGoK8QGQcIESkqKywtLi8wMTI2Nz0+P0BBQkZK TlFVJG51bGzUCQoLDA0ODxBeTlNQTVBhZ2VGb3JtYXRfEBFOU1BNUHJpbnRTZXR0aW5nc1xOU0F0 dHJpYnV0ZXNWJGNsYXNzgBWAF4ACgBjTEhMMFB4oV05TLmtleXNaTlMub2JqZWN0c6kVFhcYGRob HB2AA4AEgAWABoAHgAiACYAKgAupHyAhISMkICYmgAyAD4AQgBCAEYASgA+AE4ATgBRZTlNQcmlu dGVyXxAWTlNIb3Jpem9udGFsbHlDZW50ZXJlZF1OU1JpZ2h0TWFyZ2luXE5TTGVmdE1hcmdpbl8Q FU5TSG9yaXpvbmFsUGFnaW5hdGlvbl8QFE5TVmVydGljYWxQYWdpbmF0aW9uXxAUTlNWZXJ0aWNh bGx5Q2VudGVyZWRbTlNUb3BNYXJnaW5eTlNCb3R0b21NYXJnaW7SDDM0NVZOU05hbWWADoANXxAP VE5CLTE2LTAzIDIwMTgu0jg5OjtaJGNsYXNzbmFtZVgkY2xhc3Nlc1lOU1ByaW50ZXKiOjxYTlNP YmplY3QJIkKQAAAQAhAAIkK0AADSODlDRF8QE05TTXV0YWJsZURpY3Rpb25hcnmjQ0U8XE5TRGlj dGlvbmFyedJHDEhJV05TLmRhdGFPERzNPD94bWwgdmVyc2lvbj0iMS4wIiBlbmNvZGluZz0iVVRG LTgiPz4KPCFET0NUWVBFIHBsaXN0IFBVQkxJQyAiLS8vQXBwbGUvL0RURCBQTElTVCAxLjAvL0VO IiAiaHR0cDovL3d3dy5hcHBsZS5jb20vRFREcy9Qcm9wZXJ0eUxpc3QtMS4wLmR0ZCI+CjxwbGlz dCB2ZXJzaW9uPSIxLjAiPgo8ZGljdD4KCTxrZXk+Y29tLmFwcGxlLnByaW50LlBhZ2VGb3JtYXQu Rm9ybWF0dGluZ1ByaW50ZXI8L2tleT4KCTxkaWN0PgoJCTxrZXk+Y29tLmFwcGxlLnByaW50LnRp Y2tldC5jcmVhdG9yPC9rZXk+CgkJPHN0cmluZz5jb20uYXBwbGUuam9idGlja2V0PC9zdHJpbmc+ CgkJPGtleT5jb20uYXBwbGUucHJpbnQudGlja2V0Lml0ZW1BcnJheTwva2V5PgoJCTxhcnJheT4K CQkJPGRpY3Q+CgkJCQk8a2V5PmNvbS5hcHBsZS5wcmludC5QYWdlRm9ybWF0LkZvcm1hdHRpbmdQ cmludGVyPC9rZXk+CgkJCQk8c3RyaW5nPlROQl8xNl8wM18yMDE4Xzwvc3RyaW5nPgoJCQkJPGtl e

Скачать книгу