Submitted to: Contest #294

Mystery of the Ugly Baker

Written in response to: "Create a title with Reedsy’s Title Generator, then write a story inspired by it."

Fantasy Fiction Mystery

*Title created by Reedsy Title Generator*


There are three things everyone in the town of Piecrust knows:


  1. Don't ask Madge about her third husband. (It's a long story)
  2. The cat at the post office is a reincarnated mailman named Greg.
  3. Lester Crumb is the ugliest baker who ever lived—and possibly, the most cursed.


Now, it's not polite to call a person ugly, which is why everyone in Piecrust just called him "That Poor Man," or when they were feeling generous, "Lester." But he was ugly. The kind of ugly that made onions cry. His face looked like it lost a bar fight with a sack of doorknobs and then sued the sack of doorknobs for emotional distress.


But Lester could bake. Sweet merciful pastry gods, could he bake. His eclairs were borderline erotic. His danishes could broker peace treaties. And his sourdough? If you left it alone in a room with a nun, there was a chance she'd marry it.


Still, no one visited Lester's bakery. Not anymore. Not since the... incidents.


The first incident happened during the Piecrust Pumpkin Festival two years ago. Lester entered the pie contest with his now-infamous Spiced Pumpkin Persuasion Pie, a recipe so deliciously aromatic that it triggered a small riot among the judging panel. Three of them are still in therapy. One became a monk.


The pie won. Obviously. But the very next morning, Judge Millicent Burble's eyes melted. Just... melted. Right out of her face as though she'd watched too much reality TV and her soul gave up.


Doctors couldn't explain it. Millicent herself said she had no regrets. "Best damn pie I ever ate," she whispered before relocating to a cave in Wyoming.


After that came the scone incident, the cream puff collapse, and the very unfortunate Death by Sticky Bun, which was ruled both accidental and erotically charged.


Lester stopped baking for others.


He now lived alone with his parrot, a foul-mouthed macaw named Señor Buttwings who may have been possessed by the spirit of a 17th-century Spanish libertine.


“You smell of failure and nutmeg!" Señor Buttwings screeched, pausing his elaborate courtship dance around the stand mixer. "Disappointment wrapped in a Christmas sweater knitted by an alcoholic grandmother.”


Lester sighed and adjusted his flour-covered apron. "You're a parrot. You don't know what failure or disappointment smells like."

"I've known brothels more successful than you!" the bird squawked.


That is probably true.


***

It was Tuesday when things got weird. Which is to say, weirder than usual.


A stranger came into Lester's shop. This was rare, as Lester's bakery had become the Piecrust equivalent of the Bermuda Triangle—people talked about it, vaguely remembered its location, and avoided it like gluten at a yoga retreat.


The man towered in the doorway. A black trench coat writhed around his frame. He didn't so much walk in as slither upright through the door. His eyes seemed to see through Lester, as though he knew about every cursed pastry, every disastrous dessert that had ever left this kitchen.


"You bake," the man said.


Lester nodded slowly. "Yes?"


The man placed a single silver coin on the counter. It had an eye engraved on one side and a screaming face on the other. Classic limited-edition nightmare currency.


"I want the Cake of Remembrance."


Lester blinked. "The what now?"


"The Cake of Remembrance. As described in the Grimoire de Patisserie Noire. You do have it, don't you?"


Lester stared. Then blinked again, hoping maybe that would reset the universe.


Señor Buttwings flew in from the pantry and landed on Lester's shoulder. "This guy's got necromancer breath," he muttered.


"I—listen, sir," Lester said, "I mostly do bread. Sometimes tarts."


The stranger leaned in. His breath reeked of black licorice.


"You are Lester Crumb. The One Who Bakes but Must Not Be Observed. The Ugly Oracle of the Oven. Don't lie to me."


Now, Lester had inherited a few weird cookbooks from his great-aunt Agatha, who was either a pastry chef or a minor demon. One of them was bound in what looked like human skin and smelled like burnt cinnamon rolls.


But he'd never opened it. Mostly because it screamed whenever he got near it.


"I'll give you until the full moon," the man hissed. "Bake the Cake of Remembrance. Or the town pays the price.” The air crackled as he spoke, and outside the window, Lester saw several birds drop from the sky, their wings turned to stone.


Then he was gone. Just evaporated with the efficiency of an unpaid intern dodging tasks.


***

Lester didn't sleep much that night. Great. Just great. Not only am I cursed to make pastries that cause bodily harm, now I've got to bake some mystical remembrance cake for Creepy McTrenchcoat or the whole town gets stoned like those birds. Perfect career trajectory, Lester. Baker to apocalypse catalyst in one easy step.


He went down to the basement, past the sacks of flour, the backup sourdough starter ("Bubba Yeast"), and the heavily padlocked fridge labeled DO NOT OPEN, EVEN IF IT BEGS, until he reached the old trunk.


He opened it.


Inside was the Grimoire de Patisserie Noire, bound in flesh and smelling faintly of cardamom. Lester opened it slowly, using tongs. The pages fluttered in protest, and one tried to papercut his thumb. Even the book wants blood, Lester thought.


The recipe sprawled across the pages. Written in blood, jam, and what might've been raspberry fondant.


The Cake of Remembrance

  Ingredients:

  • One egg from a chicken that's seen the void
  • Two cups of weeping flour
  • A dash of bitter tears
  • And one memory worth reliving


   Instructions:

  • Bake at 375°F until your regrets rise.
  • Do not frost. Frosting invites the dead.
  • Serve with tea and quiet despair.


"Seems doable," Lester muttered.


"Wanna use the memory of when you clogged the toilet at the mayor's gala?" Señor Buttwings offered helpfully.


"That was not a fond memory," Lester said.


"Was for me!"


The chicken was the hardest part. After three failed attempts, Lester found Gloria behind Old Man Jenkins' barn—a one-eyed fighting chicken with PTSD who'd survived the infamous Rooster Rumble of 2020. She'd seen things. Terrible things. She laid the egg while staring unblinkingly at the void. It gleamed with the intensity of a glow stick.


The weeping flour? Simple. Just take regular flour, whisper all your childhood disappointments to it, and wait.


The bitter tears were plentiful.


But the memory? That was the tricky bit.


"What do I have that's worth reliving?" Lester asked aloud.


Señor Buttwings stared at him for a long time, then gently pooped on his shoulder.


Lester took that as support.


Eventually, he chose the moment when his mother first taught him to bake—her flour-dusted hands guiding his clumsy ones, her laughter echoing through the tiny kitchen. Before the world got cruel. Before he learned what it meant to be different.


He folded it into the batter.


The oven devoured the pan with a groan of anticipation. The vents hissed secrets in a language only sourdough could understand. Butter wept from the walls like the tears of dairy gods, and the kitchen light dimmed to the murky glow of a fortune teller's parlor. This is either going very right or catastrophically wrong, Lester thought. With my luck, probably both.


***


The cake emerged from the oven, wafting scents of childhood, heartbreak, and something eternal.


At five minutes to midnight, Lester stood alone in his bakery. The cake sat on the counter, occasionally whimpering. Señor Buttwings had locked himself in the pantry, refusing to be in the same room as 'that culinary abomination against nature.' Can't blame him, Lester thought. The damn thing's been humming funeral dirges for the past hour.


The man in the trench coat returned at midnight.


Lester handed him the cake. It trembled slightly in the box.


"Eat it here," Lester said. "That was the deal."


The man nodded, unhinged his jaw slightly, and took a bite.


He stopped chewing. Tears rolled down his face.


"My mother," he said softly. "She sang to me. I had forgotten."


The coat slid off him. His face changed. Softer. Kinder.


He vanished in a shimmer of warm light.


Behind him, a note floated down: Thank you. The town is spared.


That night, everyone in Piecrust had the same dream—of fresh bread, of childhood kitchens, of a moment when everything felt right. They woke with a hunger that couldn't be explained by breakfast cereal.


***


The next morning, people lined up outside Lester's bakery.


They didn't know why. Only that something smelled like home. Like something they hadn't known they missed.


For the first time in years, Lester felt different as he kneaded dough. His hands moved with certainty, without that tingle of disaster that had plagued him since the incidents began. Whatever magic had cursed his baking seemed to have been satisfied by the Cake of Remembrance.


Lester opened the door. His face hadn't changed—but maybe the world had.


"You're open?" said Madge, holding a coffee and a wary look.


"Just trying something new," Lester said.


Behind him, Señor Buttwings flapped around in a chef's hat.


“We're back, baby! I'll bring the sex appeal, he brings the gluten!” The bird flew to the shoulder of the first customer, whispering something that made her laugh for the first time since her divorce. Turns out, a possessed parrot was exactly what the town therapist ordered.


And so Piecrust was saved—not by heroes or swords, but by a very ugly baker, a possibly possessed parrot, and the healing power of carbs.


The Grimoire was returned to its trunk, though sometimes at night, it hummed recipes to itself. The dead stayed mostly dead, though Greg the postal cat occasionally sorted mail in his sleep. And Lester? His face still resembled the aftermath of a barroom brawl between gravity and a meat tenderizer—gravity won, and the meat tenderizer got drunk and returned for round two, but no one in Piecrust seemed to notice anymore. They were too busy remembering what mattered—that beauty comes in many forms, most of them involving carbohydrates.


Lester was happy, for once.


Ugly as sin. But happy.

Posted Mar 21, 2025
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44 likes 57 comments

Anna Vyush
15:47 Apr 04, 2025

That was such a funny story, I loved it!

Reply

Mary Butler
11:50 Apr 14, 2025

Thank you for reading Anna!

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Graham Kinross
03:04 Mar 30, 2025

“Sweet merciful pastry gods,” I lost all faith in the authenticity of this story reading this line. The pastry gods are anything but merciful. They take no pity on anyone who opens the oven door for a peak or leaves the crust to brown for a moment too long while they check the news to see how rich old men are killing the young poor people today.

“Pie, a recipe so deliciously aromatic that it triggered a small riot among the judging panel. Three of them are still in therapy. One became a monk,” no one talks about it but another is still experiencing persistent loud arousal and has been diagnosed with PGAD brought on by the aroma.

Creepy McTrenchcoat worked at my high school for a while before being fired. We never found out why.

Were you possessed by Douglas Adams while watching the Great British Bake Off?

“beauty comes in many forms, most of them involving carbohydrates,”
https://youtu.be/6JCoN23b1-s?si=BEtIbOhyB0yQ3_hX

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Mary Butler
21:15 Mar 30, 2025

Graham, thank you for this chaotic pastry-fueled sermon. You clearly speak fluent Ovenese and have communed with the same vengeful tart deities who once cursed my shortcrust for crimes I barely committed.

You're absolutely right—the Pastry Gods are not merciful. They are flaky, temperamental, and demand burnt offerings (usually in the form of whatever I forgot on the bottom rack). I suspect they derive sustenance from soggy bottoms and the quiet sobs of contestants eliminated before bread week.

Also: PGAD from pie aroma?? Sir. I spit out my tea. That poor judge is probably still wandering the produce aisle, weeping softly by the canned pumpkin. Nobody told them Lester baked with forbidden spices and unresolved trauma.

Creepy McTrenchcoat worked at your high school?! That tracks. I bet he ran detention like a séance and handed out tardy slips engraved in obsidian. Probably left because the vending machine started speaking Latin.

As for being possessed by Douglas Adams while watching GBBO—I can neither confirm nor deny. But I did black out during biscuit week and woke up in a bathrobe holding a mixing bowl and asking strangers if they remembered the smell of their grandmother’s kitchen.

Thank you for that video link. I clicked it, I cried, I carbed up.

Never stop writing comments like this. We need more of it in this cruel world.

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Graham Kinross
10:27 Mar 31, 2025

“I spit out my tea.” that’s a compliment on Arakis.

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Charis Keith
22:54 Mar 29, 2025

There are three things everyone in the town of Piecrust knows:

Don't ask Madge about her third husband. (It's a long story)
The cat at the post office is a reincarnated mailman named Greg.
Lester Crumb is the ugliest baker who ever lived—and possibly, the most cursed.

Mary. My friend. HOW?!?! This is pure gold!! How this did not win I will never know. This is freaking hysterical - I laughed multiple times!!
You had me roped in from the opening lines (we need a spin-off backstory for Greg, stat).
I am in awe. Mazel Tov.

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Mary Butler
00:30 Mar 30, 2025

Charis! 😄 Your comment made me grin like a gremlin who had some Cake of Remembrance after midnight. Thank you so much!

Honestly, I had way too much fun writing this one—I’m pretty sure Lester, Señor Buttwings, and Greg now occupy permanent brain real estate. And YES, Greg absolutely deserves his own gritty reincarnated-mailman origin story. (“Going postal” takes on a whole new meaning when you've got nine lives and a vendetta.)

Also, I do have backstories for Greg, Madge, Gloria, AND Señor Buttwings—just waiting for the right unhinged prompts to let them loose. I think sometimes my flavor of weird short-circuits the judges' logic circuits, LOL, but I’m totally planning to revisit this world and do some spin-offs and continuations. It’s too ridiculous not to.

Thank you again for the love and laughter—you made my day! 🧁🦜✨

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Charis Keith
00:45 Mar 30, 2025

Muahahaha...

You absolutely must write those backstories!!! It is not optional.
Or; maybe your flavor of weird is just what the judge's pot of soup needs!! I know it certainly brightens up my plate ;)

Any time, Mary!!

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Mary Butler
00:52 Mar 30, 2025

Backstories will be written. It is now a sacred pact, sealed in pastry and parrot feathers. Greg’s tragic postman-to-tabby tale, Gloria’s gritty poultry war memoirs, Madge’s mysterious matrimonial misadventures—it’s all coming. And Señor Buttwings? Let’s just say his scandalous pirate past demands a novella.

And hey, maybe you're right—maybe my weird is just the umami hit the judge soup’s been missing. Either way, I’m thrilled it adds a little something to your plate! 😄

Thanks again for being the kind of friend who fully embraces the chaos—I appreciate you so much! 💛

FYI - Dead(ish) is the newest tale for contest #295. When you get a chance you may like that one also!

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Charis Keith
22:12 Mar 30, 2025

Ooooh, I await the arrival of these backstories.
<3 <3 <3

Aww, I appreciate you too!! I love clicking on the laptop and seeing, "Mary Butler left a comment on..."

I will definitely check it out!!

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Barrel Coops
14:01 Mar 28, 2025

Brilliant, not sure what to say, I think it has all been said. Great imergy keep it up.

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Mary Butler
15:33 Mar 29, 2025

Thanks so much, Barrel! I really appreciate you taking the time to read and drop such kind words. I'm glad the imagery resonated with you—means a lot!

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Marty B
04:57 Mar 28, 2025

As a baker, and more importantly, an eater, I understand the power of a damn good pie!
It is life and death, and I appreciate what Lester had to go through to save the town!

Some fantastic lines-
'But he was ugly. The kind of ugly that made onions cry.'
“You smell of failure and nutmeg!"
'people talked about it, vaguely remembered its location, and avoided it like gluten at a yoga retreat.'
And so Piecrust was saved—not by heroes or swords, but by a very ugly baker, a possibly possessed parrot, and the healing power of carbs.'

Reply

Mary Butler
15:36 Mar 29, 2025

Marty, as a fellow lover of all things baked (cookies and cake are absolutely my jam!), your comment made my day. I'm so glad the story—and especially those ridiculous lines—landed with you! 😂

I love that you felt the life-or-death seriousness of a good pie. Lester would 100% agree. Thanks so much for reading and taking the time to share such a fun comment. Wishing you many delicious bakes and zero possessed parrots in your kitchen!

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Keba Ghardt
01:22 Mar 28, 2025

Loved it. Great tone, great names, kept me guessing and wanting more. Playful and irreverent, such an oddly erotic eldritch treat. Five stars.

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Mary Butler
15:37 Mar 29, 2025

Thank you so much, Keba! I'm really glad the tone and weirdness landed for you—"oddly erotic eldritch treat" might be my favorite phrase ever now. I had a blast writing this one, and it's awesome to know it kept you guessing and entertained. Your kind words totally made my day!

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16:44 Mar 27, 2025

Every writer would do well to have an imaginative repertoire of comparative phrases/metaphors, adjectives, imagery, and descriptions like yours. Reading, I remained in awe, smiling at the bizarre scenes, my mind constantly in a state of 'WTF, how did she come up with that?'
"...avoided it like gluten at a yoga retreat."
"His face looked like it lost a bar fight with a sack of doorknobs and then sued the sack of doorknobs for emotional distress." and on and on.
Have you considered writing "A Dictionary of Metaphors for Writers'.

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Mary Butler
16:13 Mar 29, 2025

Barney! Your comment had me grinning like Yogi Bear who just discovered an unattended pic-a-nic basket. Thank you so much for the kind words—it means the world to hear that my oddball metaphors and weird little comparisons found a home in your imagination!

I honestly never thought about writing A Dictionary of Metaphors for Writers, but now you’ve got the wheels in my head turning like a hamster on double espresso. I might just have to start jotting down all the strange images that pop into my brain at 2 a.m.

Seriously though, I’m thrilled the story made you smile and kept you guessing. That’s the dream. Thanks again for reading and taking the time to leave such an encouraging note—it truly made my day!

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Thomas Wetzel
22:05 Mar 25, 2025

Great work with the auto-generated title, Mary! This was so clever. I love all the names; the townspeople, the cookbooks, the ingredients and, naturally, Señor Buttwings,

I feel a prequel is in order though. I need to learn more about how Gloria, the one-eyed chicken who stares into the abyss (well, half of it anyway) while the abyss stares back into her, and how she inexplicably survived the infamous Rooster Rumble of 2020. Sounds terrifying.

Exceptional writing, as always.

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Mary Butler
16:16 Mar 29, 2025

Thank you so much, Thomas! I’m so glad the names gave you a chuckle—Señor Buttwings definitely strutted in demanding a starring role. 😄

And oh man, the Rooster Rumble of 2020... Gloria’s still not ready to talk about it. One day, maybe. But I agree—a prequel might be in order. There’s a whole chaotic farmyard saga lurking in the shadows. I will speak to her about the possibility. It may help her work through her PTSD.

Appreciate your kind words and support—means a lot as always my friend!

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Kostas Paschos
17:01 Mar 25, 2025

I really adore the way that your story is unwrapping. I was like an intruder in the small but fascinating world of the beautiful town (with the great name of Piecrust). Very inspiring work and excellent written tale. Keep it up!

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Mary Butler
16:17 Mar 29, 2025

Thank you so much, Kostas! That really means a lot to me. I'm glad you felt like you were stepping into Piecrust alongside the characters—it's exactly the kind of immersive experience I was hoping for. Appreciate your kind words and encouragement!

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15:57 Mar 25, 2025

Loved all the weird and strange things in this fantastic, dark and humorous tale! Brilliant!

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Mary Butler
16:18 Mar 29, 2025

Thank you so much, Penelope! I'm really glad the weirdness and dark humor hit the mark for you—it was such a fun one to write. I appreciate you taking the time to read and leave such a kind comment!

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Rebecca Hurst
14:32 Mar 25, 2025

This is soooo funny, Mary! Could easily be a children's tale, but works so well with adults too. A fine piece of work!

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Mary Butler
16:19 Mar 29, 2025

Thank you so much, Rebecca! I’m really glad the humor came through — I was hoping it would strike that balance between playful and a little mysterious. I love that you saw it as fitting for both kids and adults; that’s such a kind compliment. Appreciate you taking the time to read and share your thoughts!

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James Scott
06:39 Mar 25, 2025

Very single line is as hilarious as it is unique. I chuckled so many times at how ludicrous yet compelling this story was. Poor Lester, so harsh toward his ugliness and I loved the parrot!

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Mary Butler
16:20 Mar 29, 2025

Thank you so much, James! I’m really glad the absurdity landed well for you—I had way too much fun leaning into the ridiculousness. Lester’s self-loathing is a little tragic, but also kind of his whole brand 😂 And I’m so happy you loved the parrot! He might be the wisest (and sassiest) character in the whole story. Appreciate you reading and taking the time to comment!

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Emily Glenn
02:38 Mar 25, 2025

This was so funny and enjoyable to read. Thank you!

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Mary Butler
16:21 Mar 29, 2025

Thank you Emily. I am so glad that you enjoyed this story!

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Paul Hellyer
01:45 Mar 25, 2025

Some very witty descriptions.

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Mary Butler
16:21 Mar 29, 2025

Thank you Paul!

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Kate Winchester
01:36 Mar 25, 2025

This is great! I loved the humor!

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Mary Butler
16:21 Mar 29, 2025

Thank you so much Kate!

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Rebecca Detti
16:59 Mar 24, 2025

The kind of ugly that made onions cry. So funny and I need to see if I can use some of these lines in everyday life!:-) brilliant

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Mary Butler
16:22 Mar 29, 2025

Haha, thank you, Rebecca! That line was a fun one to write—I'm so glad it gave you a laugh! Feel free to use it in real life (I’d love to hear how it goes over, haha). Really appreciate you taking the time to read and comment. 😊

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Rebecca Detti
12:39 Mar 31, 2025

I’ll let you know when I use the line!😂

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Maxwell Pacilio
13:48 Mar 24, 2025

I can feel your enthusiasm and joy writing this very fun, whimsical, slightly ominous story of a man whose lost the passion in his calling and the town that forgot the gift of his labors.

I particularly liked the recipe breakdown and how Lester had to acquire each ingredient. The "weeping flour" was my favorite detail and made me chuckle.

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Mary Butler
16:23 Mar 29, 2025

Thank you so much, Maxwell! I'm really glad you picked up on the slightly ominous undercurrent—I wanted the whimsy and the melancholy to dance together a bit. And I'm thrilled the "weeping flour" made you laugh! That one was weirdly satisfying to write. Thanks again for reading and for such thoughtful feedback—it truly means a lot!

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Alexis Araneta
17:29 Mar 23, 2025

Mary, this was incredibly imaginative. It reminded me a bit of the telly series 'Pushing Daisies'. Brilliant use of imagery here. Great work !

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Mary Butler
10:17 Mar 24, 2025

Thank you so much, Alexis! That’s such a wonderful compliment—Pushing Daisies is one of my favorite shows! I still mourn the lack of more seasons like it's a long-lost pie (baked by Ned, of course). I'm so glad the story gave you a bit of that same whimsical, slightly eerie, sweet-but-dark vibe. Thanks again for reading! 💛🥧

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Maisie Sutton
14:27 Mar 23, 2025

Mary, this story is fantastic!! I fell in love with the town of Piecrust and its unique inhabitants, especially Señor Buttwings😆

It was so incredibly creative and your phrases and metaphors killed me: "Disappointment wrapped in a Christmas sweater knitted by an alcoholic grandmother” was one of my favorites.

I could feel how fun this clever story was to write and I'm so glad you chose to make Lester the hero, and that his cake didn't doom the town. Carbs really are healing, aren't they? But poor Lester, it's a shame that gravity won with his face.

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Mary Butler
10:20 Mar 24, 2025

Maisie!! This comment made my whole week—thank you so much! I’m absolutely thrilled you enjoyed your visit to Piecrust and fell under the... unique spell of Señor Buttwings (he's very flattered and is now insisting on a book deal and his own brand of hot sauce). 😆

I had such a blast writing this story, and it means the world that the weird metaphors landed—“disappointment in a Christmas sweater” almost didn’t make the cut, but clearly Lester’s roast level needed to be just right. And YES, carbs are 100% the unsung heroes of emotional recovery.

Poor Lester... gravity was truly undefeated, but at least now he has carbs, closure, and a cursed cookbook humming lullabies in the basement. 💀💕

Thank you again for reading and for this amazing comment! 🧁✨

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Jim Parker
08:59 Mar 23, 2025

"The damn thing's been humming funeral dirges for the past hour." Made me laugh out loud. This town, this baker, this recipe, this world is remarkable and unforgettable. And now I'm hungry to boot. Missed your work.
Jim

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Mary Butler
11:13 Mar 23, 2025

Jim, thank you! I'm thrilled that line made you laugh out loud. I swear, that cake was one funeral dirge away from starting a goth bakery boy band.

It means a lot that the town and its oddball residents stuck with you—Piecrust is weird, cursed, and slightly buttery, and I love that you found it unforgettable. And if it made you hungry and entertained, then mission deliciously accomplished!

I missed writing (and sharing) too! I was sick for most of January but once I finally escaped the clutches of the tissue box, I was catching up on my writing projects and building an author website because the books want somewhere to live once they're self-publish. It feels so good to be back and flexing the weirdly comedic creative writing muscles again. They've been twitching impatiently.

Thanks again for reading and for such a lovely comment—it means the world!

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