The Chocolatier Read online




  Praise for Jan Moran’s Novels

  The Chocolatier

  “A delicious novel that makes you long for chocolate.”

  –Ciao Tutti

  “Jan Moran is the new queen of the epic romance.”

  — Rebecca Forster, USA Today Bestselling Author

  “The pacing is perfect, moving the reader along bit by bit, holding back just enough to maintain the mystery and suspense.”

  — Betty Taylor, Goodreads Reviewer

  “A feel-good book in which the love between family members and the love for chocolate is central.”

  — About My Bookshelf

  “Wonderful, smoothly written. The love of chocolate drips from the page. Full of intrigue, love, secrets, and romance.”

  — Lekker Lezen

  Seabreeze Inn and the Summer Beach Series

  “As delightful as the title sounds. An enjoyable, lovely read that will lift your spirits and have you looking up famous artists and seeing if the town is real or fictional.”

  — Silver’s Reviews

  “Quite simply a wonderful story that is a great read at any time of the year. Still, if you want a book that makes you feel like the sea breeze is streaming through your hair, this is for you.”

  — Laura Bradbury, Author of A Vineyard for Two

  The Winemakers (St. Martin’s Griffin)

  “We were spellbound by the thread of deception weaving the book’s characters into a tangled web.”

  – The Mercury News

  “Jan Moran weaves knowledge of wine and winemaking into this intense family drama.”

  – Booklist

  “Jan Moran rivals Danielle Steel at her romantic best.”

  — Allegra Jordan, author of The End of Innocence

  “Beautifully layered and utterly compelling.”

  — Jane Porter, New York Times & USA Today Bestselling Author

  “Readers will devour this page-turner as the mystery and passions spin out.”

  – Library Journal

  Scent of Triumph (St. Martin’s Griffin)

  “Heartbreaking, evocative, and inspiring, this book is a powerful journey.”

  – Allison Pataki, New York Times Bestselling Author of The Accidental Empress

  “A novel that gives fans of romantic sagas a compelling voice to follow.”

  – Booklist

  “Courageous heroine; star-crossed lovers; daunting saga; splendid sense of time and place, capturing the turmoil of the 1940s; an HEA...featuring a larger-than-life heroine.”

  – Heroes and Heartbreakers

  “A sweeping saga of one woman’s journey through WWII. A heartbreaking, evocative read!”

  — Anita Hughes, Author of Lake Como

  “A dedicated look into world of fashion; recommended.”

  — Midwest Book Review

  “A gripping World War II story of poignant love and heart-wrenching loss. Perfumes are so beautifully described, you can almost smell them.”

  — Gill Paul, USA Today Bestselling Author

  Jan Moran

  Copyright © 2020 Jan Moran

  All Rights Reserved

  All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions, including the right of reproduction in whole or in part in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means including information storage and retrieval systems, without written permission, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Moran, Jan.

  / by Jan Moran

  ISBN 978-1-951314-02-6 (softcover)

  ISBN 978-1-951314-04-0 (hardcover)

  ISBN 978-1-951314-05-7 (large print)

  ISBN 978-1-951314-06-4 (epub ebook)

  Also published in German by Goldmann Verlag / Random House and in Dutch by Karakter Uitgevers B.V.

  Cover design by ZERO Media GmbH, adapted by Sleepy Fox Studio

  Cover images copyright ArcAngel, FinePic Munich, Zero Media, and Deposit Photos.

  Sunny Palms Press

  9663 Santa Monica Blvd STE 1158

  Beverly Hills, CA, USA

  www.sunnypalmspress.com

  www.JanMoran.com

  Table of Contents

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Chapter 36

  Chapter 37

  Epilogue

  Books by Jan Moran

  Reading Guide & Discussion Questions

  Traditional French Wild Truffle Chocolate Confection

  Author’s Notes

  Acknowledgements

  For my sweet family, friends, and readers.

  Chapter 1

  San Francisco, 1953

  One chocolate truffle had changed her destiny. Indeed, it was one of Celina’s best—a silky cocoa powder-dusted truffle filled with raspberry-infused, dark chocolate ganache and enrobed with a couverture, a layer of rich chocolate that melted optimally with the warmth of the body.

  After she had offered one to a weary, dark-haired soldier who had just returned from the European front, he introduced himself as Tony Savoia, an Italian immigrant whose family had owned and operated Cioccolata Savoia before war rationing had made sugar difficult to obtain. The truffle had restored light to his eyes. Though she knew little else of the charming, impetuous man who wooed her with murmurs of love, they married within a few months.

  “That’s right. Cioccolata Savoia in Naples, Italy,” Celina said to the international operator, trying to keep the crack of emotion out of her voice. She repeated the foreign telephone number to the world-renowned chocolate company and hung up. The operator would call back when the connection was ready.

  A telegram wouldn’t do, not for this type of news.

  Anxious to reach Tony’s father, Celina had waited until midnight to place a call to his company. She perched on a little wooden chair in the narrow hallway of the tiny apartment near Union Square, poised to answer quickly to keep the trilling ring from waking her young son. Turning up the collar of her flannel robe against the chill night air that bathed her neck, she clutched a piece of notepaper and gazed out the living room window at the city lights that lined the sloping hillside street as it fell toward the bay. The brightly lit sign of Ghirardelli, the chocolaterie that had been serving up chocolate for the past hundred years in San Francisco, illuminated the Golden Gate Strait. How many times had she gazed at that sign, a beacon of what she, too, might achieve with hard work? Yet now, her future seemed as foggy as the mist hovering over the city.

  Months ago, Celina had written to her husband’s family in Italy, notifying them as she felt she should, regardless of Tony’s strained relationship with his parents. Just as he’d warned her, they had never replied. Had they even received her letter? She felt a duty to inform them, as well as reaching out on behalf of little Marco—her son and their gra
ndchild—even though Tony had always forbidden contact with them. That had been his only rule.

  She drew a trembling hand across her forehead. Six months. How could that be? Every day since then had been an exercise in suppressing her grief to get through the day. She felt adrift without her husband, without a real home or family. Through the open window, foghorns bleated in the distance as if to signal danger in the murky depths of her memories.

  A second letter she’d sent to Tony’s parents had also been returned to her just last week. Invalid address. Undeliverable. She’d even wondered if his parents were still living, though she knew his family’s company had resumed operations in Italy after the war. Among connoisseurs of chocolate, Cioccolata Savoia was famous. From Torino to Amalfi, experts lauded the family’s legendary chocolatiers for fusing the smooth, delicate flavor of Criollo chocolate with Sorrentino and Amalfitano lemons. Chocolate aficionados around the world had celebrated the reopening.

  When the telephone jangled on the wall, Celina snatched the receiver. “Hello?”

  The telephone line clicked.

  “Who is this?” an angry male voice demanded. “Who is calling this time of night?”

  She considered herself lucky to have a telephone line at all, though she had to share a party line. Hearing her son whimpering, she cupped her hand around her mouth and the receiver, shielding the noise.

  “Mr. Albertson, this is Mrs. Savoia,” she said, lowering her voice. “I’m sorry, but I have to place a call to Italy.” His wife chatted on the phone so much that Celina could hardly get a call through when she needed to. “Please go back to bed.”

  “Can’t do that during daylight hours? Some of us have to sleep.”

  Mr. Albertson muttered something else Celina chose to ignore. If Tony had been around, he would’ve leapt to her defense. At the moment, an argument wasn’t worth it.

  “Excuse me,” the operator intoned. “I can connect you to Italy now.”

  Celina clutched the phone. “Mr. Albertson, please hang up, this is important.” At the sound of the disconnection, she blew out a breath in relief.

  “Hold, please. I have your party in Italy. Connecting now.”

  As the operator switched the call across transatlantic lines, Celina heard a series of clicks. Moments later, a tinny voice echoed toward her.

  “Pronto? Cioccolata Savoia. Pronto?”

  “Posso parlare con il Signor Savoia, per favore,” Celina said, raising her voice as she read from the paper she held, asking to speak to her father-in-law. “Sto chiamando dagli Stati Uniti.” I’m calling from the United States. She had visited the library and used an Italian dictionary to form the words she would need to say. She’d been practicing how to deliver such dreadful news in a language with which she struggled. When she spoke Italian, Tony had often laughed—lovingly, at least—at her efforts.

  “Si, si. Un momento per favore.”

  Celina could hear crinkling and bustling, and she imagined that the secretary was rushing to find Tony’s father. She drew in a breath to quell her nerves. This call wasn’t one any parent wanted to receive.

  “Lui non è qui.”

  Pent up air surged from her lungs. He wasn’t there. She was half-frustrated, half-relieved. This call wasn’t one anyone wanted to make either.

  “Qual è il tuo numero di telefono, per favore?”

  Slowly, Celina recited her number. The woman said something else, but Celina couldn’t make it out. “Mi dispiace, non capisco.”

  After saying good-bye, Celina returned the receiver to its hook and stared from the window.

  Non capisco. She still didn’t understand why Tony had to be taken from them, repeating the pattern of her childhood, yet ruminating on this regretful coincidence wouldn’t bring him back. As a parent, her son depended on her. She no longer had the luxury of childhood, fretting about her turn-out in ballet class or practicing her piano scales as she had before her father had died and her mother had returned to work full time as a chocolatière. Now she knew how her mother had felt. Resolutely, she rose to prepare for bed.

  She was in a deadened sleep when the telephone rang again.

  Recognizing her party line ringtone, Celina whipped off the duvet and bounded toward the phone, her feet slapping the oak hardwood floor. Marco cried out as she passed his room, but she couldn’t stop to comfort him.

  “Hello?” Pushing her tangled hair from her forehead, she stood barefoot, shivering from the damp morning chill off the bay that seeped through her cotton gown. The moon illuminated the room, glancing off trees that lined the street outside and projecting alien shapes into her home. “Pronto?” She held her breath. Eerie shadows swirled before her like wispy wraiths twisting in a silent, moon shadow dance. Turning from the window, she hugged an arm around her midsection and rested her forehead on the wall. “Hello?”

  The line crackled, and from half a globe away a man’s deep voice reverberated through the connection. “This is Lauro Savoia. May I help you?”

  “I called earlier.” He spoke in accented English, but the smooth, rich tenor of his voice made Celina grapple for the wooden chair. Trying to dispel the nocturnal fog from her brain, she rubbed her eyes.

  “Mi dispiace, it sounds like I woke you.” He hesitated. “You are in New York, no?”

  “San Francisco.”

  A small silence ensued. “Sono le cinque di mattina. Forgive me, it must be five in the morning. I will call back later. It is too early for business.”

  “This isn’t a business call,” she blurted out. Squeezing her eyes, she struggled for composure. “I’m calling about your son, Tony.”

  The line fell silent, and Celina thought she had lost the connection. “Are you still there?”

  “Sì. I am Lauro Savoia. Do you mean Antonino? He is my brother...”

  Brother? Tony had never mentioned any siblings, but maybe this was better. And he spoke English. “Yes, Antonino.” Tony was her husband’s nickname. But before she could go on, Lauro’s voice rippled across the line.

  “I cannot help you,” he said. “Antonino went missing at the end of the war.”

  “No, that’s not right. He was in America.” Her words tumbled out. “We were married. We have a son. But something terrible happened, and I thought his family should know.” Celina paused before delivering the words she knew would break his heart, just as they had devastated her when she’d received the telephone call that foggy evening.

  “Hurry up, girl.” On the other side of the glass case filled with handmade chocolates, a plump woman in a woolen overcoat snapped her fingers at her. “I haven’t got all day.”

  Jarred from her thoughts, Celina blinked at the imperious cook who stood before her. Mrs. McCloskey, who worked for the Davis family’s eldest son, tapped the tip of her umbrella on the French tiled floor of La Petite Maison du Chocolat, a jewel-box of a shop that catered to Nob Hill aristocrats. Chastising herself, Celina yanked her mind from its wretched recesses, where she tried to keep herself from going day after day. Nothing good would come from that.

  “Yes, ma’am,” Celina said, returning her attention to the tray of creamy fruit-filled chocolates that sat before her. Scents of raspberry and apricot teased her nose. With a deft hand, she nestled each silky delicacy with care into a cardboard box.

  Celina had grown up with the aroma of chocolate wafting through her home. As a young woman, her mother had studied at a chocolaterie in Paris before the war, and she had taught Celina how to make handcrafted praliné or truffles, the molded or rounded chocolates filled with delectable centers, such as caramelized nut paste of noisettes or amandes. For hers, Celina often chose apricot, cherry, salted caramel, cream liqueurs—or any other filling that might catch her fancy. Lately, she had been experimenting with the delicate flavor of green tea she’d found in San Francisco’s Chinatown.

  She secured the lid on the box and unfurled a length of twine. Perhaps she’d bring a treat home to little Marco today, though not one of these chocola
tes. He’d surely like one of the miniature bunnies she’d made this morning. Without his father around, she indulged the six-year-old perhaps a little more than she should in an effort to bring a smile to his solemn face. His grief seemed even deeper than hers, though he had fewer words and ways to express it. Even now, she often heard his quiet sobs in the night. She would hurry in and stroke his back, reassuring him until he fell asleep again.

  Reaching for scissors, Celina darted a glance across the busy commercial street to the apartments stacked above the shops. Theirs was a third-floor walkup, a far cry from the gaily painted Victorian home they’d lived in until last year, though she’d sold it for a good price. She couldn’t bear waking in the same bedroom she’d shared with her husband. Returning to work at the chocolaterie where she’d met Tony was hard enough, but at least the job provided for them and kept her mind occupied.

  Lifting her gaze, she caught a glimpse of her little boy through a window at a neighbor’s apartment, where he stayed while she worked. Her heart full, she smiled at the sight of him, his head bent over a toy truck. It wasn’t the comfortable life she’d once enjoyed when her days were filled with taking Marco to the park or the bay to watch boats, but it worked for them for now.

  Whizzing past her field of vision, a wiry teenaged boy in a uniform and riding a red bicycle jumped the curb and wheeled to a stop at the entrance to her apartment building. She watched as he pushed up his Western Union hat at a rakish angle and pressed the buzzer.

  Even now, years since the war had ended, the thought of a telegram still filled her with dread. So many of her uncles and cousins and childhood friends had never returned from foreign shores—their parents informed only by a telegram sent from the Secretary of War. With deepest regret... An involuntary shudder coursed through her. Tony had survived the war, only to lose his life on the Golden Gate Bridge. To this day, she couldn’t understand why he’d gone out so late that night.

  If only that man with a thick New York accent hadn’t called. She had no idea who he was. It was almost ten in the evening when she had answered the telephone, and after Tony had spoken to the man, he told her he had to do something. When she asked what, he scowled, saying it was men’s business. Whatever that meant.