A stake in the cake take
A stake in the cake take
Ros Thomas
The Weekend West
Published Saturday August 3, 2013
Sometimes the mother of all inventions should keep her ideas to herself. But it was a slow Sunday morning, so I suggested we should play pretend shop in the front yard with our favourite kids across the road. The smart alec I live with said: “Why don’t you sell real food for real money!” The kids leapt all over him, squealing his praises.
I helped my brood make gingerbread. They created biscuit men with round bellies and stumpy legs modelled on their father. There were biscuit cats and biscuit dogs who crossbred in the oven and came out fused together in awkward positions. The mum over the road wisely kept her three mess-makers out of the kitchen and produced a fat sponge in record time.
My 3-year-old daughter skipped around in her improvised shopkeeper’s outfit – a ballerina’s leotard that kept riding up to expose one cheek of her bottom. Her six-year-old brother took charge of the till. He found an empty Taco box and sealed it with half a roll of sticky tape. He cut a tiny slit in the top of the box so the coins, needing to be forced through the slot, would make a satisfying thump as they hit the bottom of the box. His father baffled the kids by calling out: “Don’t forget to register an ABN!”
At 2pm sharp, our pop-up patisserie opened for business in the driveway. Pre-primed, the couple from next door wandered up, ooh-ing and aah-ing at the spread. My lad absentmindedly fingered his gingerbreads to make them more appetising. The neighbours chose two pieces of virgin sponge. “How much is that please?” the wife asked.
“That’ll be fifty-cents” said six-year-old firmly.
The wife handed him a shiny two-dollar coin and my son pushed it through the slot in his taco till.
“What about her change?” I asked him.
He looked at me, puzzled. “Nothing comes out of the till, Mum – it only goes in.”
Isobel, the old dear from the corner house, stopped at our gate.
“What are you raising money for?” The kids looked at each other nervously.
“Savings!” said the neighbour’s nine-year-old.
“You are not!” piped up my 3-year-old, “You’re gonna buy lots of footy cards!” Isobel winked and bought two gingerbread men. Two 20c coins vanished into the taco box.
“I wanted to do the money!” wailed my toddler, tearing off her leotard and storming into the house, both cheeks now on display.
Business became slow. Nanna arrived as the neighbour’s kids abandoned shop and went scooting up the street to find more customers. My lad, left in charge, was eating the smartie buttons off a gingerbread man, having already licked off its icing smile and dotted eyes.
“Can I re-sell him?” he asked. “Not to me” said Nanna, “I like my men with all their faculties.”
She handed over a fiver and asked for a smorgasbord. “Don’t expect change,” I whispered.
By the time the shop closed at 4pm, the taco till was rattling impressively. My son, corrupted by his new-found wealth, refused to let anyone help him count out the proceeds. His father growled:
“Listen up! Five of you ran the shop, so five of you share the profits.” Small boy took off up the stairs shouting “It’s not fair! That’s my money – I was in charge of it!”
Delusions of power run in the family. One taste of the free market and my six year old had become a tyrant. At his age, I was greedy too.
When I was six, Mum caught me stealing a pet rock from a souvenir shop in Rotorua. One shiny pebble had caught my eye. It was smooth and honey-coloured with little stick-on eyes. I’m sure the shop owner put those pet rocks on the counter because he knew they were irresistible. And so I reached up and stroked that rock and before I knew it, I was walking out of the shop with my new pet clenched in my fist.
I showed it to Mum. “Look! Isn’t he beautiful?”
“Where did you get that from!”
Her arm tightened around mine and she marched me back into the shop. Mum yanked me up to the counter and demanded I own up to my crime.
I’ve never forgotten the hot stabbing shame, my stammering apology and the crushing realisation that my silky smooth pet rock was not coming home on the plane.
And here I am, about to teach my six-year-old tycoon why the proceeds from our cake shop don’t belong solely to him.
I find him face down on his bed, still moping. I cut a big hole in the Taco till and shake the money out. He perks up at the sound of paydirt and helps me sort the coins into piles: “We made fifteen dollars!” he shouts excitedly, “I’m going to buy a soccer net!”
“Not so fast,” I say. “You get $3 each remember?”
“Yes I know Mum. But the shop’s open every day of the holidays. We gotta start making more gingerbread!”