Winner of a 2015 Gourmand Cookbook Award For Fiction
Shortlisted for the 2015 ABIA Matt Richell Award for New Writer Christmas Livingstone has formulated ten top rules for happiness that she lives by: Nurturing the senses every day, doing what she loves, sharing joy... but the most important for her rules is absolutely no romantic relationships! Her life is good as the owner of the enchantingly seductive shop, The Chocolate Apothecary. In her shop she can explore the potential medicinal uses of chocolate that make people happy. Her friends surround her and her role as a fairy godmother to her community allows her to share her joy. What she doesn't need is a handsome botany ace who knows everything about cacao to walk into her life... Or does she... The Chocolate Apothecary is a glorious novel of a strong creative woman discovering that you can't always play life by the rules.

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The Chocolate Apothecary
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Literature1
Christmas Livingstoneās Top 10 Rules for Happiness
1. Do what you love and love what you do.
2. Never let yourself get hungry.
3. There is almost nothing that cannot be improved by chocolate.
4. Nurture all five senses each and every day.
5. Share joy with others and youāll feel joyful too.
6. Massage is not a luxury but a necessity.
7. Ask yourself, āWhat would Oprah do?ā
8. Your destiny doesnāt happen to you; you make your destiny.
9. Be on a quest at all times.
And, most importantly,
10. Absolutely no romantic relationships.
ā¢
It was Thursday, Holy Thursday, to be exactāthe day before the four-day Easter weekend, which also included the Evandale garden expo on Saturdayāand The Chocolate Apothecary was a bubbling pot of activity. Easter, Valentineās Day and Motherās Day were the biggest chocolate events of the year, and this time around, Easter was late enough to be just a week before Motherās Day.
Cheyenne and Abigail were working the floor, selling and waitressing like their lives depended on it, carrying silver trays weighed down with mugs of hot chocolate, mochas, and pots of tea, apple pie and cream, chocolate fondants, chocolate-coated raspberries, chocolate brownies and pralines. Biscotti. Macarons. Meringues. The aromas of them all swirled together around the shop in a magical, intoxicating perfume and rolled out onto the street, stopping people in their tracks so they followed the scent inside, as if hypnotised.
Lots of visitors were in town for the Easter break, and it felt as though theyād all ended up inside Christmas Livingstoneās stately Georgian building, hiding from the indecisive weather outside. She peeked out from the kitchen behind the swing doors, wiping her hands on her apron. The long communal table down the centre of the shop was full, with customersā chatter adding to the cacophony.
Sheād be up all night replacing the chocolates and baked goods the crowd was consuming today. Maybe she should call someone in to help. But who? She couldnāt very well expect Cheyenne or Abigail to stay into the night after working all day. Maybe her sister? Val couldnāt cook a single thing, let alone temper chocolate or decorate it once it was set. But she was tremendously pragmatic. She would wash, clean, sweep, carry, lift and load. And she would keep Christmasās spirits up when the fatigue hit. But Val had a man and three boys to look after.
That really only left Emily. She was working today but sheād be up for an all-nighter. Christmas would only have to sell it to her as a girly sleepover like theyād had when they were kids, and give her a glass of bubbly, and sheād be in. It was one of the many things she loved about Emily. She was always so keen to help.
Christmas pulled her phone out of her pocket, then hesitated. She hated asking for favours, even when she knew the other person would be happy to oblige. But the crowd out there wasnāt letting up and it was only going to get busier.
āJust do it,ā she told herself, and tapped out a message.
Emily responded instantly. Absolutely. Great timing! Iāve got a super surprise for you. I canāt wait!!!
A surprise? Christmas couldnāt even begin to guess what that might be. And she had no more time to consider it, because the postmanās squealing van had just pulled up outside the picket fence at the front of the shop.
āExcellent,ā she said aloud, pushing open the swing doors into the shop, stepping around a little boy rolling a toy train on the floor and a number of steel walking frames propped beside chairs at the small round tables where senior citizens rested with their hot drinks. Sheād put in an order for several kilograms of raw cacao butter to be sent express, just in case of a rush, and now she was exceptionally glad she had. She skipped the last two steps across the doorway to greet the postman, who was heaving out of his van a box with a Caution: Heavy Load sticker on it. He placed it on the ground while he fetched his paperwork and mobile scanner for her to leave an electronic signature.
Gordon Harding swooshed by on his penny farthing, his head bent low against the wind, his waistcoat buttoned tightly against the cold. She waved heartily. It was one of the things she loved so much about living in Evandaleāthe penny farthings, from another time entirely, still whooshing about poetically, refusing to give in to the pressures of time and technology.
āSign here,ā the postman said, handing her the clunky device and the electronic pen. She scribbled her initials and said thanks, waiting to see if he might offer to carry the box inside. He didnāt. So she waited until his van had moved on, then knelt beside the box and tested its weight. It was fifteen kilos, according to the sticker. She knew she was strong enough to lift that much, but she was wearing a skirt and it wasnāt easy to brace her legs as she needed to, and the box was large and the cardboard packaging slippery. She levered it a few inches off the footpath before it dropped down again with a thud. She glanced in through the door of the shop, half embarrassed and half hoping someone might help her, but both Abigail and Cheyenne were busy and most of the men inside were older than her ex-stepfather, Joseph.
She was considering her options when an orange taxi pulled up in the space where the van had just been. Through the window, she saw a man thrust a couple of notes at the driver; then he opened the door and stepped out, dragging a battered travellerās backpack that had certainly seen better days and looked as though its zips and buckles might pop open at any moment. The man straightened, adjusted a laptop bag slung across his body, closed the door, and the taxi left.
An easy smile broke through his dark beard, which was largely unkempt and messy but just within the bounds of still being rustic and attractive. But it was the way his smile reached all the way to his staggeringly blue eyes that hit Christmas hard. The air around her suddenly drained away and she was speechless for a couple of moments, unable to take her eyes off his.
āHi,ā he said. āIs this the chocolate place?ā He was walking towards her, his backpack abandoned on the footpath, peering through the window. āI picked up a brochure at the airport. I canāt believe Iāve never been here before.ā
Christmas found some words. āYou live here?ā Okay, not impressive words, but they were better than stunned silence.
He turned back to her, that smile still shining from his eyes. One side of his shirt was tucked into his pants but not the other, and for some reason this made Christmas feel wobbly. āI come from Tasmania but Iāve been overseas for work a lot in the past few years, coming back to live in my grandmotherās house in between gigs.ā
āIāve been open for three years.ā
āThis is your shop? Perfect. Maybe you can help me choose some chocolates for my grandmother. Sheās in a nursing home and has a terrible sweet tooth. All good up hereāā he tapped his templeāābut the bodyās letting her down. On my way to see her now. And Iām starving so I thought Iād grab some lunch too.ā
Christmas didnāt know where to look. She couldnāt keep looking at him because her body was reacting strongly to his presence. There was an aura about himāsomething magnetic. It was something she hadnāt felt in a long time. Perhaps ever.
And it wasnāt allowed. It was rule number tenāabsolutely no romantic relationships.
This wouldnāt do at all.
āWell, come inside and weāll sort something out,ā she muttered, head down, marching towards the door.
āHang on, is this your box?ā
She turned around and heād already heaved the box onto his shoulder as though it was a wildebeest heād just slain and was carrying home for dinner.
āYes. Thanks.ā
āIām Lincoln, by the way,ā he said, following her through the door, weaving his way through the tables and displays and behind the counter and through the swing doors into the kitchen.
āSorry itās such a mess,ā Christmas said, taking in the spilled chocolate that covered the stainless-steel benchtops, splattered up the fridge doors, ran across the floor and was generally sprayed from one end of the room to the other. It was like a graffiti attack, but a lovely one, made with chocolate.
āIāve just come out of the jungle in South America. Trust me, this isnāt a mess. Where do you want this?ā
āHuh? Oh! On the bench, somewhere, anywhere. Thanks.ā
Lincoln dropped the box with a thud. Then he stood, calmly, looking at her, still smiling, as though he was waiting for something.
She began to shuffle and find flecks of chocolate to pick off the bench with her fingernail. āAre you a musician?ā she asked, remembering that heād used the word āgigā.
āBotanist. But that sounds like a great alternative job if I need one.ā
She was silent for a moment, mesmerised by his eyes. āWell, thanks for carrying that in. We should get your chocolates. And shouldnāt you get your backpack?ā she said, suddenly realising theyād left it outside.
Lincoln shrugged. āItāll be right.ā
Christmas wished her heart wasnāt thumping so hard. āSo . . .ā she prompted.
āYou havenāt told me your name,ā he said, touching her arm and sending a twang through her as though heād plucked a nerve, blatantly flirting with her! It was incredible. No one flirted with her. Not here in sleepy old Evandale. She felt safe from romantic entanglements in this small town. With a population of only one and a half thousand, there simply werenāt enough people for romance.
āChristmas Livingstone,ā she said, as ordinarily as she could.
He whistled through his teeth. āI like that.ā
Oh boy, she needed to get out of this. āCome on. Weād better get you some food and your grandma some chocolate before it all disappears. Itās terribly busy out there today. You donāt want to miss out.ā And she turned on the spot and marched into the shop, not looking back but trying to sense the whole time how far behind her he was, whether he might be about to bump into her, if she stopped suddenly, for example.
Not that she would.
Not on purpose, anyway.
The rules, she reminded herself. The rules were there for her protection. The rules had served her well and kept her steady for the past three years. Now was not the time to abandon the rules. She had to get a grip.
Emily arrived that evening after The Apothecary had closed, pulling autumn leaves from her long unruly hair, and sniffing as though she was getting a cold. But still smiling.
āAre you sick?ā Christmas said, tossing some bowls and spatulas into the kitchen sink and turning on the tap.
Emily sniffed some more, hung up her handbag on the coat hook by the door, dropped her overnight bag on the floor and took off her leather jacket. āI think itās hay fever. Can you get it in autumn?ā
āI think you can get it any time. Thanks so much for coming. I owe you.ā Christmas headed to the fridge and pulled out a bottle of bubbly.
āRubbish. Think of it as thanks for helping me move into the townhouse over New Year.ā
āOh yeah.ā Christmas eased the cork out of the bottle with a satisfying pop and it hit the ceiling. āThat was hard work,ā she laughed. In fact, it had taken her nearly a week to recover. Emily was such a collector and hoarder, and where most people would see moving house as an opportunity to reduce the number of items they had to transport, Em actually seemed to have collected more. She still had dozens of boxes that werenāt opened or unpacked.
They clinked glasses. āCheers!ā
āSo whatās this surprise?ā Christmas asked, leaning against the bench. āIām intrigued.ā
Emilyās face lit up and she let out a little squeal. āI should make you wait until the end of the night, after weāve finished all the work, but I donāt think I can.ā
She placed her glass on the bench, went to her handbag and fished out an envelope. Returning to stand in front of Christmas, she held it in two hands by the top corners. āOkay, so you know how in the past youāve talked about Master Le Coutre?ā
Christmas frowned in confusion. This was unexpected. Master Le Coutre was a world-renowned French chocolatier, known for his brilliance, eccentricity, and the annual scholarship course he opened to anyone, anywhere in the world, where they got to spend a week with him absorbing his greatness. The arrogance was breathtaking; the competition for the scholarship, hysterical. The itinerary for his course changed each year, and no one knew what it would be when they applied. Previous recipients reported poetry readings, surprise flights to African cacao farms, sleep deprivation and all-night chocolate making, opera lessons, and camping out in tents under the stars while
Master Le Coutre lectured by fireside and stirred melted chocolate over an open flame; some even claimed they hadnāt seen him once during their stay. He was mad, they said. He was cruel, said some. He was a geniu...
Table of contents
- COVER PAGE
- TITLE PAGE
- COPYRIGHT PAGE
- CONTENTS
- CHAPTER 1
- CHAPTER 2
- CHAPTER 3
- CHAPTER 4
- CHAPTER 5
- CHAPTER 6
- CHAPTER 7
- CHAPTER 8
- CHAPTER 9
- CHAPTER 10
- CHAPTER 11
- CHAPTER 12
- CHAPTER 13
- CHAPTER 14
- CHAPTER 15
- CHAPTER 16
- CHAPTER 17
- CHAPTER 18
- CHAPTER 19
- CHAPTER 20
- CHAPTER 21
- CHAPTER 22
- CHAPTER 23
- CHAPTER 24
- CHAPTER 25
- CHAPTER 26
- CHAPTER 27
- CHAPTER 28
- CHAPTER 29
- TWO MONTHS LATER
- AUTHOR'S NOTE
- ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
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