lights, the tree, the little jingle bells—to the fullness, sister!”
“Thank you,” I said.
“And this holiday latte—” Dexter raised his glass. “Sweet!”
“Sweet, huh?” Esther broke in. “Which one are you drinking? Because I still think Tucker’s candy cane concoction is borderline insipid.”
“Well, that one may be. But this one’s a marvel!”
Okay, now I was downright curious. It must have shown, because Matt caught my eye and explained.
“I asked Gardner to mix up Dex his Caribbean Black Cake from last night’s tasting.”
Dex took another sip. “The flavor of rum comes through first. Then the nutty sweetness of the brown sugar. And cinnamon is ticklin’ my tongue at the end, the way it tickled my nose at the beginnin’. I taste a note of heavy fruit flavor, too—”
“That’s the black currant syrup,” I said.
Dexter sipped again. “There’s a hint of somethin’ more. Somethin’ dark, sweet, earthy—”
“Chocolate.” I smiled. “Gard and I agreed that authentic black cake is so rich it tricks the taste buds into thinking chocolate is one of the ingredients; we compensated with a splash of my homemade chocolate syrup.”
“Clever! And what other flavors are you offerin’, Clare?” He glanced around the shop. “Where is your holiday menu?”
I shifted uneasily. “To tell you the truth: I had mixed feelings about putting it up. Something happened to a friend of mine last night and suddenly the whole Taste of Christmas thing feels . . . I don’t know . . . wrong.”
“Cha!” Dexter threw up his hands. “This Black Cake Latte brings me right back to the islands. I tell you that’s a gift, Clare, a gift for your customers, bringin’ them back to a time and a place with the simple magic of flavor. I sip this drink, and I’m with my madda and aunties again, weeks before holiday bakin’ day, when they all got together and started soakin’ their black cake fruits in wine.”
Before I could reply, he turned to my ex. “What do you think of these drinks, Matteo?”
“Sorry.” Matt shrugged. “Fa-la-la-la Lattes just aren’t my thing.”
Dexter frowned at his friend’s reply. “Hmmm, well now . . .” Dex said, catching my eye. “We know what is Matteo’s thing, don’t we, Clare?” He pointed to a very familiar glossy-paged publication among the papers and trade magazines on the café table.
I smirked when I saw it. Talk about being brought back to a time and a place. For my ex-husband, the Christmas season didn’t start until the Victoria’s Secret holiday catalog arrived in the mail. Perusing its pages was an annual event.
“You never change, do you, Matt?”
Matt squinted. “A man has a right to shop for lingerie gifts, doesn’t he?”
“Yes,” I said, “but my problem was never with your giving the gift of lingerie, just the number of women you gave it to.”
Dexter opened the racy catalog. Many of its pages were marked with Post-its—color-coded Post-its. What the coding system was, I could never bring myself to ask.
“That one’s a stunner.” Dex tapped one of the scantily clad models.
Matt frowned. “Are you blind? She’s got beady eyes, her lips are too thin, and her legs are bowed.”
Dex laughed. “Oh, mon! Haven’t your heard that ol’ island song? ‘How me love swimmin’ with bow-legged women.’ ”
Esther frowned. “Isn’t that a line from the movie Jaws?”
Dexter nodded. “It’s also a very old pirate ditty. Port Royal, you know, was once their biggest haven in the Caribbean.” He winked. “Underneath, we’re all buccaneers.”
“If you mean all men,” Esther said flatly. “I’m in complete agreement.”
Dex flipped through more glossy pages. “So, Matteo, what lady in here is to your likin’?”
Matt pointed to a leggy blonde.
“Her? Cha!” Dex shook his head. “She looks fenky-fenky to me!”
“What’s fenky-fenky?” Esther asked.
“It means she looks proud,” Dex said. “Stuck on herself.”
Esther snorted and leaned toward me. “Sounds like Matt’s new wife.”
I cleared my throat. “Well, we really should be going—”
“Don’t you know that ol’ Jamaican saying?” Dex interrupted as he thumbed through the Post-it-tagged models.
“Not another one.” Matt muttered.
“Sweet nanny goat have a runnin’ belly.”
“Excuse me?” Esther said.
Dex turned to face her. “It means, what tastes good to a goat at noontime might ruin his belly by nightfall.”
Esther adjusted her black glasses. “I need more.”
Dex shrugged. “Some things that seem good to a man now, can hurt him later.”
“Oh, I get it,” Esther said. “The running belly is the goat eating too much bad grass and then getting diarrhea.”
“Diarrhea!” Dex vigorously nodded, sending his dreadlocks bouncing again. “Now you’re gettin’ it, sister!”
“O-kay!” I interjected. “Now that she’s got