Summary:
**NOW A HALLMARK CHANNEL ORIGINAL MOVIE!**
Do the Cupid chocolates from Lucy's shop really lead to true love?
Lucy Sweet has the magic touch when it comes to love. Rumor has it when you eat one of her Cupid chocolates on Valentine's Day, you'll meet your soulmate. Lucy is wary of putting too much faith in the legend, but she loves that How Sweet It Is has been a part of so many love stories...and if she wants to keep her great-grandparent's chocolate shop afloat, she needs all the help she can get.
Or is it all an elaborate con?
Ambitious and skeptical reporter Dean Chase doesn't believe in magic, and he's not too keen on love-at-first sight either. He prefers facts to fate, and he takes pride in his role as defender of the little guy. When a post about the Cupids goes viral, Dean is assigned to do a puff piece on Lucy and her shop. He's fully prepared to take down the chocolate shop taking advantage of romantic desperation, but he isn't prepared for Lucy.
Smart, funny, driven...she's not at all what he expected, and might be exactly what he needs. Will the legend melt like chocolate under closer inspection? Or could this cynic actually start believing in magic...and love?
Chapter One
There was nothing in the world so heavenly as the smell of fresh chocolate. Lucy Sweet had learned that at a very early age, standing at her great-grandmother’s knee in the kitchen of her family’s chocolate shop.
Burned chocolate, on the other hand? Not so great.
Which was why Lucy was currently hiding from the acrid, bitter scent—and the sneezing fit it had triggered—in the front area of How Sweet It Is. Her grandmother was training their new clerk, and Lucy was trying to stay out of their way, pretending to restock the display cases, while an ancient fan directed the charred chocolate fumes from the shop’s kitchen toward the back alley. Away from the sensitive noses of any potential customers.
Lucy wasn’t in the habit of burning chocolate. But then she wasn’t normally as distracted as she was today, obsessing over the sign that had appeared this morning on the empty storefront across the street.
COMING SOON: LA VIE DOUCE. FRENCH DELICACIES.
La vie douce. The sweet life.
Her stomach had been in knots ever since she’d spotted it, and the burned chocolate wasn’t the only casualty. She’d also ruined two batches of caramel before admitting to herself she was wasting her time…and ingredients.
Fortunately, her grandmother was too busy assisting their slow trickle of customers and training Georgie to notice the kitchen mishaps. She didn’t want Nana Edda worrying. Lucy had taken over How Sweet It Is when her grandfather had passed. Keeping it running was her responsibility and no one else’s. And she would figure out how to stay afloat—even if another sweet shop was opening right across the street.
Typically, when the shop was slow on a Friday afternoon, Lucy would retreat to the kitchen and take advantage of the quiet to whip up a batch of whichever sweet treat they were running low on, but she obviously couldn’t be trusted in the kitchen today. So instead, she crouched behind one of the display cases, rearranging it for the fourth time and trying to pretend she wasn’t quietly panicking, when the chimes over the etched-glass front door released a delicate cascade of sound, announcing a new customer.
Lucy looked automatically toward the entrance. Her best friend of twenty-five years struck a dramatic pose in the doorway, head thrown back, one arm in the air. At the sight, a smile broke through Lucy’s La Vie Douce preoccupation. Lena could always be counted on to jolt Lucy out of her worry-spirals. She was a human tidal wave of energy, crashing through life and leaving chaos and laughter in her wake.
“It’s official.” Lena thrust her left arm forward, elbow locked, fingers down. “We’re engaged!”
The diamond ring sparkled in the sunlight streaming through the shop windows as Tyler, Lena’s boyfriend—no, fiancΓ©, apparently—appeared in the doorway behind her. Tyler was tall and steady, as silent as Lena was talkative, and his lips quirked in an affectionate smile.
At the opposite end of the L-shaped counter, Nana Edda squealed with delight. “Lena!”
Her grandmother rushed around the counter toward Lucy’s best friend, dragging the new clerk Georgie in her wake. Even the two teenage customers, who had been debating the merits of various cocoa bombs for the last five minutes, rushed to gather around the newly engaged couple, but for a single stunned moment, Lucy didn’t move.
She crouched behind the display case, shock holding her in place as a single thought rang loud inside her mind.
She’s leaving me behind.
She rallied quickly, shoving the thought away and kicking herself into motion, hurrying around the counter to join the knot of noisy congratulations and jewelry admiration.
Lena beamed, glowing with the attention. She looked so happy. Lucy couldn’t imagine why she’d felt that little flicker of hesitation. It wasn’t exactly a surprise. Lena had been hurtling toward this moment since the second she met Tyler nearly a year ago.
“I thought for sure he was going to do it on Valentine’s Day,” Lena gushed to her eager audience. “Since that’s the anniversary of the day we met. But he knew I was expecting that and that I would obsess about every little detail, worrying about what I was going to wear, and whether I had anything in my teeth, so he surprised me last night. There we were, in the kitchen eating takeout kung pao chicken, and suddenly he’s down on one knee.”
Lena shot her quiet fiancΓ© a fond look, one that was returned with such affection that something twinged in Lucy’s chest. Something that almost felt like envy. She pushed it away, reminding herself that no matter how thrilled she was for Lena and Tyler, she didn’t have space in her life for romance right now.
Shoving aside her unexpectedly complicated feeling about the announcement, Lucy added an extra layer of cheer to her voice as she joined the chorus of well-wishes. “I’m so happy for you guys.”
Lena’s eyes locked on Lucy’s, forgetting the rest of the crowd. “Oh, Lucy!”
Lucy’s throat tightened at the joy in Lena’s eyes. A year ago, Lena had been nursing a broken heart after her breakup with Awful Adam, and now she was radiant with love. It felt like a puzzle piece falling into place. So why was Lucy also fighting back the sensation that something was coming to an end?
Lena pulled her into a hug, squeezing tight, then stepped back to arm’s length, her voice ringing with conviction as she declared, “It’s all thanks to you.”
“No, it isn’t.” Lucy’s face flushed as she found herself the focus of everyone’s gazes. Lena was a walking attention magnet, from her sunshine-yellow polka-dot dress to the hot pink daisy in her hair, but Lucy had always been happiest behind the scenes, tucked away in her kitchen in a chocolate-smudged apron.
She tried to step back, but Lena wasn’t ready to let her escape the spotlight.
“Are you kidding?” Lena’s grip tightened. “Of course it is! Tyler and I never would have met if it weren’t for the Cupid chocolates. Your magic recipe led me to my true love. And I am getting my picture on that wall.”
She thrust a freshly manicured finger toward the far wall, where a dozen framed photos were neatly arranged. The Cupid chocolate success stories.
Lena reached into the massive bag that was always hanging from her elbow. “I even came prepared.” She pulled out a framed photo of her and Tyler beaming into the camera. “I’m not gonna lie, I had this baby framed months ago so I’d be ready as soon as it happened. Our very own happily-ever-after!” She made an exaggerated pleading face for Lucy. “Can we put it up now? I want to get a picture of the Wall of Love with us on it.”
“The Wall of Love?” their new clerk Georgie asked, drawing Lena’s attention.
“You don’t know about the Wall?” She eyed Georgie’s crisp red apron with the How Sweet It Is logo in white across the chest. “Don’t tell me you’ve never heard of the Cupid chocolates?”
“It’s her second day,” Lucy explained, but Lena gasped as if she’d insulted St. Valentine himself.
“It should be the first thing you tell people! The Cupid chocolates are legendary.” Lena marched over to the display case that held the Cupids, gazing at them with near religious fervor. “Every year on February fourteenth, anyone who eats a Cupid chocolate with an open heart is guaranteed to find their true love.”
Lucy felt panic spike at Lena’s words, especially when she saw the teenage customers exchange eager looks. “We don’t actually guarantee—”
“That’s how I met Tyler,” Lena continued, oblivious to Lucy’s liability concerns. “And how each of these couples met and fell in love.”
She waved one artful hand, seamlessly transferring all three eager gazes—Georgie’s and the two teen customers’—to the Wall of Love.
Lucy couldn’t help but look, too. She was more than a little proud of that wall, even if she was nervous about claiming the Cupid chocolates guaranteed results. All of those couples had fallen in love after eating one of the Cupid chocolates on Valentine’s Day. Her chocolates. Coincidence or not, it was pretty special to have had a hand in that many love stories.
Her kitten heels clicking on the hardwood, Lena led her disciples over to the Wall of Love—which was a short journey. The shop was only twelve feet across at its widest point. Glass display cases showcasing their wares lined the L-shaped counter, but the far wall was unobstructed—and filled with photos. Twelve in all. Soon to be thirteen.
Lucy let her gaze drift over the framed photos of couple after couple. Maybe she didn’t need to worry about the shop across the street. Maybe the How Sweet It Is chocolate shop could survive a little competition.
“They really make absolutely anyone fall in love with you?” one of the teenagers asked.
“Oh, no, that isn’t how the magic works,” Lena exclaimed, her voice filling the shop—and Lucy tried not to cringe at the matter-of-fact, of-course-magic-is-real-and-we’re-selling-it tone. She believed in the chocolates, mostly—almost completely—but she’d always been wary of promising things the shop couldn’t deliver.
“The Cupid chocolates don’t make anyone fall in love,” Lena continued. “They guide whoever bites into them on Valentine’s Day with an open heart toward true love, but it may not be with the person you expect. Tyler and I were both on dates with other people when we realized we were meant to be with one another.”
“So they only work on Valentine’s Day?” the teen asked, an edge of disappointment coloring her tone. V-day was still several weeks away.
Again, Lucy opened her mouth to confirm that was, indeed, the belief, but her grandmother got there first. “Well, the magic is certainly most potent on Valentine’s Day, so be sure you come back then and bring your friends—”
“Nana…”
“I’ll take two,” the other teen ordered. Nana Edda quickly ushered the customers toward the main register.
Georgie went with them, and Tyler gave a sideways nod toward the Cupids. “I’ll get us a couple to celebrate.” He moved toward the others, leaving Lena alone with Lucy and the photos.
Lena held her picture up on the wall, trying out different spots, as Nana Edda waxed poetic about the family’s secret chocolate recipe. Lucy held back the urge to intervene as her grandmother stretched the truth to the breaking point and beyond. Nana Edda had always liked a story. So much so that Lucy wasn’t sure her grandmother even realized when she passed the threshold from truth into fiction. Lucy was the one who worried about the realities—such as the consequences for guaranteeing something they couldn’t deliver. She was the one who flinched every time her grandmother promised untold flights of romance with every purchase.
“What if we moved your great-grandparents’ picture?” Lena asked, pulling Lucy’s attention away from the Cupid discussion at the registers. “Gave them a place of honor. Maybe at the top? We can put Tyler and me in their old spot and then we won’t have to move the others around to make space for this one. What do you think?”
“That sounds good,” Lucy agreed. “I trust your eye more than mine.”
Lena was the one with artistic vision. Her family had run the flower shop down the street for nearly as long as Lucy’s had run the chocolate shop, and Lena did all their arrangements.
“You’re going to need a bigger wall after this year,” Lena commented, moving the photos around. Then she pulled a hammer and nail out of her giant purse to hang Lucy’s great-grandparents’ photo at the top, reigning over all the happy couples. Never let it be said that Lena didn’t come prepared to get what she wanted. She slanted a quick glance at Lucy. “And you’ll need a special spot for your own photo.”
Lucy groaned. “Don’t start.”
“I’m just saying that you have to try one this year! You’re the romantic enabler, making the dreams of all the people around you come true. Now it’s your turn to grab a little of that magic for yourself.”
“I’m fine just the way I am,” she insisted. She had too much on her plate to be adding romance to the mix. Ever since she’d taken over running How Sweet It Is, they’d been hanging on by their financial fingernails. Now, with La Vie Douce about to open across the street, she couldn’t afford to get distracted.
“This is not fine.” Lena frowned. “All you do is work. And I love this shop, but all work and no play isn’t fine.” She took one last look at her handiwork, and then turned to focus the full force of her attention on Lucy. “And besides, don’t you want to be more than fine? Don’t you want to be incandescently, deliriously happy?”
“I’ll leave that to you.”
Lena made a face, clearly prepared to argue more, but Lucy’s grandmother spoke before she could.
“Don’t mind her.” Nana Edda rounded the counter to join them. Lucy hadn’t noticed the other customers leaving. Tyler was still quietly taking photos of the Cupids while Georgie studied them as if looking for traces of magic. “She’s been grumpy all morning. Ever since they put up that sign across the street.”
Lena’s face twisted with sympathy. “I saw that.”
Lucy met her grandmother’s gaze. “I thought I’d done a good job of pretending not to notice.” She’d been trying so hard not to let her worry spill over onto anyone else.
Nana Edda’s eyebrows arched high over her glasses. “You burned two batches of caramel. And charred that dark chocolate to a crisp.”
“Oh, honey, are you okay?” Lena asked and Lucy squirmed under Lena and Nana Edda’s combined concern.
“It’s fine. I’m sure it’s fine.”
Lena’s face told her what she thought of fine, but this time, she didn’t argue. As one, they looked out the front window and across the street.
How Sweet It Is was a cozy little shop with an old-fashioned feel. They’d upgraded the display cases and added a credit-card reader since the days when her great-grandparents had first opened the shop on Watson Corners’ Main Street, but it still had an antique cash register that cheerfully binged every time they made change.
The kitchens were twice the size of the shop and gleaming with the results of the small-business loan Lucy had taken out to upgrade them when she took over the shop. The tiny little office in the back was lined with photos of her grandparents and great-grandparents, the history of the place surrounding her every time she sat down to do the books, a reminder of those who had come before.
And a reminder that if she didn’t manage to pay off the last of that small-business loan, she might lose everything that they’d built.
Watson Corners had been a cute little town when her great-grandparents had emigrated from Belgium and settled there. But in recent decades, the nearby city had expanded, and a posh suburb had slowly surrounded Watson Corners. The charming downtown area had stayed intact, but subdivisions of gorgeous new homes and manicured lawns had sprung up where open fields used to be.
Big businesses had followed, as well as many not-so-big businesses that flocked to the upscale suburb to cater to its posh new residents.
Like the fancy French whatever moving in across the street.
The hardware store in that space had closed down last year, the older couple who ran it for decades retiring and moving to Arizona. The storefront had been vacant for so long that the other shops along Main Street had started a betting pool on what would finally move into the massive space. It was easily triple the size of How Sweet It Is, even if she included the kitchens and the apartment above.
When construction had started, the windows had stayed covered with brown paper so no one could see what was being done inside, and the betting pool had gone wild. Lucy herself had wagered it would be a microbrewery. Or a new restaurant—maybe some fancy Michelin-star place that would draw more people to the area.
She hadn’t expected direct competition.
The swirly cursive of the “Coming Soon” sign had gone up this morning. And her stomach had instantly knotted.
“Maybe they’re a bistro. Or a savory-only French bakery,” Lena suggested with her usual degree of optimism. “Quiche and croque monsieur and baguettes and nothing else.”
“They’re huge,” Lucy said, staring at the building. She’d been so eager for a new business to open, but now she was dreading February first, the opening date listed on the sign. “It could be a chocolate factory for all we know. A French Willy Wonka.”
“Soups,” Nana Edda declared. “It’s all French onion soup and pommes frites, I bet.”
“Even if they are a bistro, they’ll have sweets, too,” Lucy said, always the voice of logic. “Pastries and tarts and chocolate croissants. And if people are already eating over there, they’re hardly going to walk across the street to get their dessert from us. People want one-stop-shopping, and all we are is chocolate.”
“We have a loyal customer base,” her grandmother insisted. “We’re a Watson Corners institution.”
And we’re barely hanging on as it is.
Lucy kept that thought to herself, just like she’d hoarded all the financial worry over the last few years.
Her grandmother was magic with the customers, but Lucy was the one who had taken business classes at night so she could run the shop when her grandfather passed away. It was all on her now, from placing the supply orders to making the chocolates to keeping the books. She’d grown up in these kitchens, learning the recipes from her grandfather and great-grandmother. How Sweet It Is was home. And she would not be the one who let it fail.
“I should get back,” Lena said. “But don’t worry, okay? I know that’s a big ask for you, but you’ve got this. Everyone loves How Sweet It Is.”
“Thank you, Lena.” She squeezed her friend’s hands, feeling the unfamiliar presence of the ring. “And congratulations again! Today is all about you and Tyler.”
“You bet it is.” Lena beamed, linking her arm with her fiancΓ© and sharing a look that made Lucy feel like she was standing outside on a snowy night, looking through a window at a warm, cozy fire.
Lucy waited until the bells above the door had rung over the exiting lovebirds before turning to her grandmother and arching her eyebrows. “Did I hear you tell those girls that the Cupid myth dates back through seven generations of Sweet women?” she drawled. “Don’t you think you got a little carried away with the lore there?”
“What?” Nana Edda asked with artful innocence. “We don’t know that the legend started with Gigi. Her ancestors probably meddled in love lives for centuries.”
“But they wouldn’t even have been Sweet women,” Lucy argued.
“They wouldn’t?” Georgie’s gaze pinged eagerly between Lucy and her grandmother. The grad student had been hired to give Lucy’s grandmother a break, but that had been before Lucy realized she was about to have competition directly across the street. Now she had yet another person on her payroll to worry about if the shop went under.
“Gigi married into the family,” Nana Edda explained. “Just like me.”
“And my great-grandparents changed their name to Sweet from Van Suyt when they emigrated to this country from Belgium. Which gives us, at most, four generations of Sweet women. If we include my mother, who also married into the family and has never made a chocolate in her life. Any more than that is just—”
“Adding a little flourish to the truth. It’s harmless.” Her grandmother dismissed her concerns with a wave of her hand. “People know I’m not serious. And they like the story.”
“They don’t know you’re not serious. And if they realize we’re lying about how many generations of Sweet women chocolatiers there have been, they might start wondering what else we’re lying about.”
“You mean the chocolates?” Nana Edda’s chin tipped up in affront. “We aren’t lying about the Cupid chocolates.”
“You can’t go around guaranteeing people that the Cupids will make them fall in love, Nana. We’re going to get sued by someone when it doesn’t work for them.”
“I didn’t guarantee. Who guaranteed?”
Lucy arched an eyebrow and her grandmother relented.
“Okay, yes, my language may have been a little on the guarantee-ish side of things, but no one is going to sue you over something your sweet little grandma said.” She fluttered her lashes, somehow making herself look small and helpless.
Lucy snorted, incapable of keeping a straight face. “Just try to go easy on the promises, okay? And maybe stop telling everyone the recipe is seven generations old? The fact that it was Gigi’s secret recipe is impressive enough.”
“It is when you say it. You can call her your great-grandmother, and it sounds like an ancient family secret. When I say it was my mother-in-law’s recipe, it has much less gravitas. Less sense of history.”
A history that might not last much longer if Lucy couldn’t keep things afloat.
She rubbed at her chest, worry pressing against her, tightening her lungs—and her grandmother caught the gesture.
“You should bite into one of those Cupid chocolates yourself. Fall in love. Let loose a little. You’ve gotten entirely too serious, Lucy Sweet.”
Lucy met her grandmother’s eyes, smiling helplessly at one of her favorite people on the planet. “I figure one of us ought to be.”
“Nonsense.” Nana Edda flapped a hand dismissively. “Seriousness is entirely overrated. Now love. Love is something the maker of the famous Cupid chocolates should fall into as soon as possible.”
What was it about one engagement that made everyone start looking for romance everywhere? “I’m fine just the way I am. Thank you.”
“I know, I know. Too busy for romance.” Her grandmother eyed her shrewdly. “But I also know you aren’t really worried about my harmless little exaggerations. You’re worried about that French place across the street.”
Lucy’s gaze went back to the frost-edged front windows of How Sweet It Is and the street beyond.
“Why don’t you do more to advertise the magic of the Cupids?” Georgie inquired. “I know someone who works for the local news station. I bet they’d love a story about magic Valentine’s chocolates.”
“Oh, that’s a wonderful idea!” Nana Edda exclaimed. “The Cupids are always our biggest sellers this time of year. People may not cross the street for any old candy, but they’ll come for love. Especially if we get the word out. I bet people would come from all around—”
Lucy held up both hands in stop signs. “No. No reporters.” She needed to keep her grandmother and her true-love guarantees as far away from reporters and their recording devices as possible. A lawsuit for false advertising was the last thing they needed. “The legend can spread the same way it always has—by word of mouth from happy customers.”
How Sweet It Is would survive the latest changes to Watson Corners. Just like it had for the last seventy years. Everything would be fine.
And if the current maker of the famous Cupid chocolates had never actually been in love…well. There would always be time for love later. Right now, she had a business to run.
A local chocolatier is rumored to have the secret recipe to finding true love on February 14th, drawing in a TV reporter to investigate.
Release Date: February 4, 2023
Release Time: 84 minutes
Director: David Weaver
Cast:
Eloise Mumford as Lucy Sweet
Dan Jeannotte as Dean Chase
Brenda Strong as Helen Sweet
Christin Park as Serena
Robert Underwood as Gary Shea
Jordana Summer as Georgie
Linda Ko as Nora Nguyen
Alexander Steele Zonjic as Tyler(as Alexander Zonjic)
Tosca Baggoo as Claire
Bobby Stewart as Malcolm(as Bobby L. Stewart)
Zack Currie as Mark Martinez-Spencer
Eduardo Britto as Pablo Martinez-Spencer
Jillian Knowles as Young Helen
Liam Boland as Scott Sweet
Nik Andrews as Wyatt Grace
Ron Holmes as Lucy's Opa
Cadence Compton as Young Luc
Contemporary romance author Lizzie Shane was born in Alaska and still calls the frozen north home, though she can frequently be found indulging her travel addiction. Thankfully, her laptop travels with her and she has written her way through all fifty states and over fifty countries.
Lizzie has been honored to win the Golden Heart Award and HOLT Medallion, and has been named a finalist three times for Romance Writers of America’s prestigious RITA Award, but her main claim to fame is that she lost on Jeopardy!
B&N / iTUNES / SMASHWORDS
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