A pastry chef with something to prove. A small-town chef who never stopped loving her. A rain-soaked festival supper that could bring them together or break both their hearts again.
Merritt Langdon never planned to return to Claymere Falls as anything less than a success. After three years away chasing a city pastry career, she comes home bruised by failure, determined to help her beloved Aunt June through one important festival week at The Hearth & Kiln Bakery, then leave before anyone mistakes her return for surrender.
But Claymere Falls remembers too much.
It remembers Merritt as the girl June raised after loss changed both their lives. It remembers Graham Roane, the steady chef behind Creekstone Kitchen, and the love Merritt left behind when ambition and fear pulled her away. And it remembers the old legend of Old Kiln Bridge, where love was never just a promise. It was something built by hand, stone by stone, table by table.
Graham has his own dream on the line. The Claymere Table Festival could help launch his year-round Supper Table Series and keep Creekstone strong through the quiet winter season. Merritt's bakery work could save June's struggling business and restore The Hearth & Kiln's place at the center of town. Their forced collaboration on the festival's final Bridge Course should be simple: June's apple stack cake, Rowan Ridge apples, Cora's handmade pottery, Graham's service timing, and Merritt's refined pastry skill.
Nothing about it is simple.
As rain threatens the outdoor Long Table Supper, old ovens falter, secrets surface, and the whole town gathers to protect the meal, Merritt must decide whether home is a debt she owes or a place she can choose. Graham must learn that loving someone does not mean staying silent enough to let her leave.
Warm, emotional, and richly atmospheric, A Place at the Long Table is a clean and wholesome small-town culinary romance about second chances, family legacy, handmade food, honest love, and the courage to take your place at the table.