Winter's Revenge
The morning light crept through the kitchen window, casting long shadows across the worn wooden table where Emma and Ryan sat, their mugs of coffee steaming gently. The kitchen, with its cracked tiles and shelves cluttered with mismatched jars, was a familiar place for both of them, a sanctuary where countless conversations had unfolded. But today, the air felt different, as if something unsaid hung between them.
Emma stirred her coffee absentmindedly, her eyes focused on a tattered, leather-bound cookbook in front of her. It had belonged to her great-aunt, a woman known for her sharp tongue and even sharper instincts. Emma had grown up on stories about her, tales filled with whispers of old grudges and mysterious family recipes.
“I’ve been thinking about trying one of her recipes,” Emma said, breaking the silence. She glanced up at Ryan, who sat across from her, relaxed but attentive. His eyebrows lifted slightly, inviting her to continue. “It’s called ‘Winter’s Revenge.’ Cold soup. I’ve never made it before, but she always said it was... special.”
Ryan leaned back in his chair, curiosity flickering in his eyes. “Special how?”
Emma flipped open the cookbook to a yellowed page, the title "Winter's Revenge" scrawled in faded ink. The recipe itself was simple, yet there was something about it that made her pause. Her great-aunt had never been one to mince words, but she’d always hinted that this particular dish wasn’t just about flavor. It was about something deeper, something darker.
“She used to say it wasn’t just food. It was a way to settle scores, a dish served cold for a reason,” Emma said quietly, her fingers tracing the edge of the page.
Ryan frowned, his gaze narrowing as he studied her. “You’re not seriously thinking of making it because of… her, are you?”
Emma’s lips tightened into a thin line. “It’s not about her,” she said, too quickly. “It’s just… I need to make it. I want to understand what it meant to my aunt. Why it was so important.”
Ryan’s expression softened, though there was still a glint of concern in his eyes. “Alright,” he said gently. “Let’s make it together.”
As the day wore on, the two of them set to work in the kitchen, the room filled with the sounds of chopping vegetables and the quiet clatter of utensils. The recipe was deceptively simple—onions, leeks, potatoes, broth. But it was the final ingredient that puzzled Emma: a rare, wild mushroom that her great-aunt had insisted was the key to the entire dish.
Emma frowned as she rummaged through her pantry, finding everything but the mushroom. “I thought I had it,” she muttered, frustration creeping into her voice. Ryan came to her side, glancing over her shoulder.
“Maybe we can head to the market,” he suggested. “There’s a stall that sometimes carries specialty ingredients.”
But Emma shook her head. “No. I need to find it myself. It’s important.” She didn’t explain why, but Ryan sensed that there was something more to her determination, something more personal than just the recipe.
Hours passed, the sun sinking lower in the sky, casting a warm orange glow through the kitchen windows. Despite her best efforts, the mushroom remained elusive. Emma’s frustration mounted, her movements becoming sharper, more hurried. She tore through the pantry again, knocking jars to the floor as she searched.
“It’s like it doesn’t want to be found,” she muttered, her voice tight with a simmering anger.
Ryan watched her, concern deepening with every passing moment. “Emma, it’s just a mushroom,” he said, trying to keep his tone light, but the tension in the air was thick. “We can finish the soup without it.”
Emma whirled around, her eyes flashing. “It’s not just a mushroom! It’s the whole point. Without it, the recipe doesn’t work. Don’t you understand?”
Ryan held up his hands in surrender, taken aback by her intensity. “Okay, okay. We’ll keep looking.”
As the hours ticked by, the kitchen grew quiet again, the only sound the gentle simmer of the soup on the stove. The clock on the wall seemed to move in slow motion, each tick a reminder that time was slipping away. Emma’s frustration deepened into something darker, a quiet rage bubbling beneath the surface.
Just when she was on the verge of giving up, her eyes landed on a small, unassuming package sitting on the kitchen counter. She hadn’t noticed it before, but there it was—labeled “Wild Mushrooms.”
Emma’s heart leapt as she rushed over, tearing open the package with trembling hands. Inside, she found a single, shriveled mushroom, its surface cracked and dry. It wasn’t the vibrant, exotic ingredient she’d been searching for, but it was unmistakably the right kind.
Her excitement quickly turned to confusion, then suspicion. She turned to Ryan, who was watching her carefully.
“You… you didn’t mention you had this,” Emma said, her voice low.
Ryan didn’t flinch. “I didn’t think it was important,” he said casually. Too casually.
Emma’s hands clenched into fists. “Where did you get it?”
Ryan hesitated, just for a fraction of a second, but it was enough. Emma’s heart sank as the realization hit her. “You’ve known all along, haven’t you?” she whispered, her voice trembling with betrayal.
Ryan’s expression hardened. “It’s not what you think,” he said, though the lie was obvious now.
Emma’s mind raced, piecing together fragments of conversations, half-heard rumors about her great-aunt’s past. She’d always suspected there was more to the story of her aunt’s grudge, but she’d never imagined that Ryan—her closest friend—had been involved.
“You were working with her,” Emma said, her voice deadly calm. “With the woman who wronged my aunt.”
Ryan’s face paled, but he didn’t deny it. “It wasn’t supposed to be like this, Emma. I didn’t want you to find out.”
But it was too late. The kitchen, once warm and welcoming, had become a battlefield. The simmering soup on the stove was forgotten, its gentle bubbles a stark contrast to the storm brewing between them.
Emma’s eyes burned with a fierce determination as she stepped closer to Ryan, her voice low and steady. “My aunt was right. Revenge is a dish best served cold.”
With a swift, deliberate movement, Emma scooped the withered mushroom from the package and dropped it into the pot. The soup hissed as the mushroom hit the liquid, the final ingredient completing the recipe.
Ryan took a step back, his expression a mixture of fear and regret.
But Emma’s face was unreadable now, her focus solely on the simmering pot. “I guess you’ll find out how it tastes,” she said, her voice icy as winter’s chill.
And with that, the kitchen fell silent, the only sound the steady tick of the clock, counting down the moments before Winter’s Revenge would be served.
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Reese, just so you know, Jonathan Foster's review was AI generated. Feel free to ignore it. I've been a proud member of Reedsy and its supportive community. I hope this is the one and only time we will see Ai reviews. My suggestion is to read as many stories as you wish, leave 'likes' and/or comments. (real) People will read yours and give you feedback. Welcome to Reedsy.
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