brought along cute boys. Some of them even returned to stay, opening up shops. Like Dale Holdsworth, who opened Kringle Mart and imported snow globes and handblown ornaments from Germany to sell to people who came to check out the newly minted tourist village. And Andy Marks, who started a small wood-carving shop, and Gerhardt Geissel, who built Gerhardtâs Gasthaus. The Mountain Inn got a face-lift and a new nameâthe Bavarian Inn.
By the time Muriel was in high school, the student body had nearly doubled in size. Now it was up to a whopping hundred and forty-eight students. Thirty-two of them, including Muriel and her friends, were seniors that year.
âWe may have more boys than we used to,â Olivia said, âbut most of them are underclassmen. Whoâs there in our class to choose from?â
For Muriel? No one matched the man of her dreams, the man she hoped would someday come into her life. Waiting for a perfect man seemed silly to her friends, but she was a big believer in true love. And in dreams. Her grandmother had dreamed an entire company into being, so Muriel had no doubt she could find the man sheâd envisionedâsomeone dashing and romantic, who would make her heart skip a beat.
âThereâs Arnie Amundsen,â Muriel suggested. For Olivia, not her. Arnie was skinny and wore glasses but he was sweet. Olivia could do a lot worse.
âHeâs got a crush on you,â Olivia said.
âEverybodyâs got a crush on Muriel,â Pat added in mock disgust.
âThat is a gross overstatement,â Muriel said.
Pat complained about being tall. She hated her auburn hair and lamented on a regular basis that she wasnât blonde like Olivia or a brunette like Muriel. Still, sheâd had her share of invitations to the senior prom, which had taken place the week before. Muriel had gone with Arnie. Just as friends, sheâd reminded him.
She wished heâd asked Olivia. Olivia had ended up with Gerald Parker, whoâd wanted her to go all the way. Theyâd come close but sheâd chickened out at the last minute. Now she was regretting her decision because Gerald was ignoring her, making her last week of school miserable. Heâd enlisted in the marines, though, and would soon be gone. Muriel was secretly relieved. Of course, she didnât want anything bad to happen to Gerald, but it was best to remove temptation from Olivia.
âThereâs Hank Carp,â said Pat.
Muriel frowned. âHeâs a hood.â
âBut heâs a cute hood,â Olivia said.
That was all Olivia needed, to get tangled up with Hank.
âIâd take him,â Olivia continued, âexcept he likes Stephie.â
âSheâs fast,â Muriel said.
âThatâs probably why he likes her,â Olivia muttered.
âAnyway,â Pat went on, âthat man is going nowhere. You can do better.â
âI donât think so,â Olivia said. âNobody wants a fat girl.â
âYouâre not fat,â Muriel insisted. âYouâreââ
âCurvy,â Pat supplied. âAnd boys like curves.â
âNo,â Olivia corrected her. âBoys like Muriel. I bet youâll be married by the time youâre twenty.â
Muriel shook her head. âNot if my father has anything to say about it.â She sighed. âHeâs got my whole life planned.â
âYeah, well, itâs tough having a family chocolate factory,â Pat said. âPoor girl. Youâll have to work there, get rich and eat all the chocolate you want.â She and Olivia giggled.
âI donât mind working there, doing fun things like helping with recipes or answering phones. I just donât want to run the place. I want to get married and have a family.â
âAnd be a famous writer,â Olivia reminded her. âDid you hear back from
Seventeen
yet?â
The rejection letter for her article,
Sharon Green
Laurel O'Donnell
David Bezmozgis
Trinity Blacio
Valerie Douglas
Mark Morris
Kaya McLaren
Annelie Wendeberg
Joanna Trollope
Shay Savage