Caught Up: Chapter 27
Caught Up (Windy City Series)
Violet: Please tell me youâve got your new recipes locked in and youâre back on track in the kitchen? Also, the Food & Wine photoshoot is happening next Tuesday. Theyâll be at the house at 6 a.m. to set up.
Me: Finalizing those recipes tonight. Kai planned a whole thing for me. Itâs really sweet. And Tuesday doesnât work.
Kai has a road game.
Violet: Canât you stay back from one? Iâm sure he can handle one trip on his own. This is important.
Me: No, I canât miss it. Howâs that following Friday?
Violet: Iâll check with the shoot coordinator. Chef Maven asked me what day youâre planning to be in California. Can I confirm that itâs the 1st? Youâll be starting your drive from Chicago on Sunday the 29th, correct?
Me: Right. In two weeks.
Violet: Thank God. The food world is missing you, Miller. I have an inbox full of emails from food bloggers wanting to interview you about your little summer hiatus, not to mention Iâve already added another year of consulting gigs onto your schedule in the past couple of weeks!
Me: Great. Canât wait.
Violet: Your sarcasm is loud and clear, but youâre blowing up right now, Chef. This is exciting. Itâs only the start of it all for you. See you in two weeks!
âThatâs the one,â Isaiah declares, pointing to the final plate I put in front of him.
Heâs deemed every single one of my desserts as âthe oneâ tonight.
Cody moans around a mouthful, Travisâs eyes go wide, and my dad is simply wearing a proud smile as he has all night. Iâve found myself looking for his approval first before checking in with everyone else.
âWhatâs that one?â Isaiah takes another mouthful before going in for his third bite, but Kai knocks his spoon out of the way to fill his own because he hasnât had the chance to try it yet.
I wipe my hands on the towel thatâs draped over my shoulder. âThat is a lemon curd glazed with strawberry. That slight shock you feel on your tongue is a homemade pop rock, paired with a rosé sorbet. Thereâs also a bit of Voatsiperifery pepper in there which is a peppercorn that has a bit more herbal and floral notes to it. Itâs typically reserved for cooking, but I think it pairs well with the lemon.â
The boys all stop their chewing, looking at me as if Iâve grown a second head. When I talk about a dessert with colleagues, Iâm understood, but when I explain to others outside of the industry, itâs as if Iâm speaking another language to them.
âI have no idea what that means,â Isaiah says. âBut itâs amazing and you should do this for the magazine.â
âI think the flavor profile is a bit too summery for the fall release of the article, but I saw the strawberries and the lemon and thought, what the heck. Iâll have some fun and experiment.â
Iâve experimented all right. Making five new desserts for the boys to try. The dark chocolate cylinder filled with a smoked hazelnut praline cream that I thought of when we were at the bakery in Boston was an instant success, and I even impressed myself when I created a mozzarella cheesecake topped with a blackberry compote.
I didnât burn a single thing, didnât struggle with any part of it. I was happy and excited to feed the people Iâve come to care about more than I knew I was capable of. So much relief courses through me knowing I can still succeed in what Iâm best at.
âDad, what do you think?â
The one person I want to impress takes another bite of the lemon curd. âPhenomenal. As always.â
I can feel my smile beaming under the lights in the kitchen, seeing him so proud of me. This is why I do what I do, to make sure he knows Iâm doing something with my life thatâs made it worth him giving up his own.
I feel better today, like Iâm on the right track to getting back to where I was before all the pressure hit, and I know a huge reason for that is Kai.
The fact that he would organize this for meâno one has ever done something so thoughtful. He played sous chef all night, getting me ingredients when needed and cleaning up after I was done using a bowl or spatula. He wore the proudest grin on his face the entire time and Iâve never loved being in the kitchen more than I did with him here next to me. The only thing that wouldâve made it better was for Max to be sitting on the counter too, but itâs long past his bedtime.
I was clean tonight, organized too. Nothing like I am when I bake with Max. I was more of the well-known pastry chef who helps kitchens earn Michelin stars, though I still had my tattoos showing, my septum ring in, and felt more like myself in the kitchen than I ever have before.
But the scary revelation is, I truly donât know how Iâm supposed to go back to work without Kaiâs encouraging words quietly spoken in my ear or his hand resting on my lower back to check if I need anything.
Tonight was perfect. He was perfect because he always is.
And in two weeks, I wonât have him next to me any longer.
I meet him at the sink where heâs washing dishes, wanting to be wherever he is. I lean back on the counter, facing him.
âGreat job, Mills,â he says, a proud smile quirking his lips.
âThank you. And thank you for tonight. This was . . . just what I needed.â
âFeeling better?â
I nod, wanting to lean up on my toes and break my own rules, to press my mouth to his and thank him. Heâs so handsome, so kind. Cares so much for his people.
I want to hide myself in his home forever just so I can call myself one of those people.
Whoa . . . no, I donât.
âYouâre pretty like this,â he says, continuing to wash the dishes I used. âApron tied around your waist. Hair thrown on top of your head. Creative brain of yours at work. I love getting to see the polished pastry chef not so polished under her chefâs coat.â
âWell, lucky you, maybe tonight youâll get to see whatâs under the apron too.â
âMaybe?â His eyes lighten with excitement. âWeâre past playing hard to get, donât you think?â
I lean into him. âYou and me, Malakai, will never be done playing hard to get.â
Bending down, he presses a chaste kiss to the top of my hair, chuckling as he does.
âViolet texted with a date for the photoshoot. Does the Friday before I leave work to have the shoot here?â
âYou can do it whenever, Mills. Even if I have to go on a road trip, Iâll figure out childcare for Max.â
âYou have a home game that night,â I tell him. âI checked your schedule before I offered that date. Thereâs something called âFamily Dayâ on the team calendar the following day. Iâm not sure what that is.â
Family Day also lands on my birthday, but Kai doesnât know that.
He swipes the sponge on the inside of a mixing bowl, not meeting my eye. âItâs an event that team management puts on for all the families to come together on the field. Every team Iâve played for has hosted one. There will be food and drinks, that kind of thing. Itâs during the series against Atlanta.â He finally looks my way. âDo you think youâll go to it?â
He doesnât have to say it, but I know heâs never had anyone there for him at one of these events. I would guess Isaiah had always been too busy with his own season that they couldnât be there for each other, and yes, this year heâll have his son, but heâs also going to have me.
âIâm sure your dad would want you there,â Kai adds.
His tone is casual, easy, and detached, just the way Iâve asked him to be, but he shouldnât be detached when it comes to asking for someone to finally support him.
Hand on his forearm, I trace my fingertips up the thin skin on the inside. âIâll be there,â I say with conviction. âFor you.â
I donât miss the way his eyes soften before drifting back to the island to check on his teammates and coach, reminding me that theyâre here, and maybe wondering why Iâm suddenly okay with a bit of PDA.
I lean my head on his bicep, hand wrapped around his arm to hold him while he washes the dishes, forgoing my rules for the moment. âThank you for tonight.â
He leans his cheek on my hair. âIâd do anything for you, Miller.â