When Candy Bouquet first opened, my family noticed it everyday we walked by. One day, we decided to go into his shop. As we walked in, we heard the jingling of bells on the door. Inside his shop, I nearly shot up into the air. There was so much to see. On the left, there sat Mr. Candy Guy, the shop owner (his name is not really Mr. Candy Guy but that's what I call him).
On the right, there were 10 cent and 12-for-a-dollar candies. On the left, further down, there were chocolate cigars and licorice. And if you look straight ahead, you can see a big block full of cotton candy, bon-bons, and salt-water taffy.
And if you're lucky, and Mr. Candy Guy gets up to get something, and he walks through a little doorway, and opens the door to the storage room, and you peek inside, you will see boxes and bags full of any candy you can imagine, plus a lot more.
I chose out a tub of cotton candy and my brother got something else that I can't remember. When we got home, I ate my cotton candy out on the porch. It was blue and pink. It was sugary and sweet. And it dissolved in my mouth like all cotton candy does. It was good.
About a month later, Ben came over and we went to Mr. Candy Guy's shop. We each got four candies for only one dollar. You should go to Mr. Candy Guy's shop. It is so cozy.
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