There was a new sign out in front of the chocolate shop. That shouldn't have been a big deal, but Emma hadn't realized until she saw the hand-painted sandwich board on the sidewalk just how accustomed she'd become to the blessedly routine life in Hansondale. Whole months had gone by without a single change to the Main Street storefronts (well, the only street, really--everything off of Main was just houses) and Emma had grown accustomed to making the same stops in the same order every week when she went into down for supplies, and seeing the same people in the same places doing the same things. It was... comforting. Soothing. Emma was surprised to find out that she liked it that way.
Not that the sign was exactly ominous. On the contrary, it was a little silly; Maisie King had done a good job with it, but seeing the shakily hand-lettered 'HAZY DAZE!!' written over a wobbly black-and-white spiral made Emma snicker a little even before she got to the bottom and saw, 'You Won't Be Able To Resist These Bargains!' Emma didn't really understand why Maisie thought she needed hypnosis to sell her handmade chocolates, but she could talk about it with the older woman over a few coconut creams.
Emma started to go inside, but stopped dead when she saw a badly-printed sign on the door that said, 'HAZEE DAZE!!' over a painfully obvious clip-art spiral. Below the squiggly, eye-bruising logo, Emma saw more squiggly, eye-bruising text. 'July 15-21!! Mesmerizing deals!! You won't be able to stop yourself!!', the sign said, in a font that managed to somehow look too big and too small at the same time.
Emma winced, trying to unpick the different text effects that went into the mess and failing. It wasn't that Emma needed more work--she got enough business from her online clients to keep her graphic design company busy almost every day of the week. But she had a certain amount of professional pride, and seeing someone abuse Photoshop that badly made her twitch just a little bit. She pushed the door open and went inside, quietly resolving to maybe talk to Maisie about at least putting the same number of Es and Ys on each version of the sign.
Thankfully, the interior of Maisie's 'Maison du Chocolaterie' hadn't changed much. Apart from a stack of 'HAZEY DAYZ!!' pamphlets on the counter, it still looked just as comfortable and familiar as ever, with the chocolates arranged behind the counter in a pattern Emma knew by stomach as well as by heart. "Morning!" Maisie said from behind the counter, gesturing over to the pile of leaflets. "Getting excited for Hazy Daze yet?" She grinned with a twinkle in her storm-gray eyes that belied her crow's feet and graying hair. Maisie might be getting into her fifties, but Emma hoped she had half that energy in twenty years' time.
Even so, she couldn't help rolling her eyes a little bit at the older woman's transparent hucksterism. "What even is Hazy Daze?" she asked, smiling to soften the impact of her words. "Like, it's a sale, I get that, but..." She realized too late that she'd walked right into Maisie's trap, as the older woman triumphantly snatched up a brochure and thrust it at her with the speed of a pouncing mountain lion.
"Not just a sale,
the
sale!" Maisie crowed, as Emma reluctantly accepted the proffered leaflet. "Every store in town joins in for Hazy Daze, all the way up and down Main! There's tables on the sidewalk with extra-special deals, free goodies just for stopping by, and all sorts of surprises you won't even believe!" She winked. "Between you and me, it's mostly for the tourists, but I bet you'll get a kick out of it too."
Emma flushed a little, more than a tiny bit gratified that Maisie wasn't lumping her in with all the campers and fishermen who drove through Hansondale on their way from the Twin Cities to Big Sandy Lake. She'd somehow thought it would take longer to be accepted--she'd only bought her little cottage ten months ago, but it seemed like surviving a Minnesota winter qualified her as an authentic local. (And deservedly so. Emma had slept under so many layers of blankets she thought they'd need a Saint Bernard to find her come spring.)
"Now you just take that and read up on all my bargains," Maisie continued, seemingly oblivious to Emma's blushes, "and don't forget to grab everyone else's pamphlets too. Hazy Daze starts early, and the best deals get snapped up quick--you'll want to know where to go to get what you really want! Speaking of... I've got your usual assortment wrapped up and ready for you. Did you want a couple of extra coconut creams for the walk home?"
Emma's eyes sparkled with conspiratorial excitement as she said, "You know me too well, Miss Maisie."
When she got home, Emma was almost surprised to notice that she still had the pamphlet--she had only taken it to be polite, and it had slipped her mind almost as soon as she stuffed it into the bag with her purchases. Dutifully, she opened it up to at least take a look and see what magnificent bargains Maisie was cooking up, but the text was so misaligned that her eyes crossed trying to read it. She didn't know whether it was a printer's error, or whether Maisie had done more experimenting with font effects to try to make every single word 'pop', but every word looked squiggly and out-of-focus and overlaid onto itself in at least three other colors.
She held the leaflet at arm's length and unfocused her eyes a little, hoping that maybe she could get the text to resolve the way that she used to do with the Magic Eye pictures at the mall as a kid, but... nope. Squiggles. Squiggles that could have meant anything, from 'you are a happy shopper' to 'yeah, have a horny shower'. Emma wondered if Maisie had spent money on these, or if she'd just printed them herself. She hoped it was the latter--if someone had charged Maisie for these incomprehensible messes, they should pay back every cent and a little bit extra. Emma would be ashamed to have her name on something like this.