Schulz takes Goldy home to the mansion and General Faarquar settles them in the living room with coffee and brandy. Now this story seems more of a mystery than a culinary menu of delicious meals. Her friend Tom Shultz shows up and hugs her to comfort her as she shivers with cold and fear. Author Davidson makes this happen so quickly that it’s almost real. A patrolman speaks to Goldy and asks her to describe the accident. Philip’s car swerves across the double line then close to the edge of the mountain, then suddenly crashes and Philip is a bloody mess. Goldy can’t believe it and honks her horn to get his attention. The recipes are here for readers to cook and the light-hearted story has turned serious with Goldy trying to find the cause of Philip’s death.Ī Porche, a bus, and Philip’s BMW are on a collision course. Philip is dead and a voice in her ear tells Goldy to let him rest in peace. When he crashes, a patrolman speaks to Goldy and asks her to describe the accident. At a recent brunch Philip arrives late and when he leaves, drives his new BMW like a crazy man, speeding around the curves in the road. Goldy often fixes brunch for groups of twenty or more and for fund-raisers for her son’s school. Richard Korman is her ex-husband but she is now crazy about Tom Schultz and Philip Miller a psychologist she’s been seeing. “Dying for Chocolate” by Diane Mott Davidson is the story of Goldy Bear, a caterer who is now a live-in cook at a fancy mansion with her son Arch.
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