Caught Up: Chapter 38
Caught Up (Windy City Series)
âHowâd it go?â Violet asks, following me around the bustling kitchen as I hustle to prepare for dinner service.
âIt was fine. The same as all the other blog interviews have been this week. Fine.â
Stepping into the walk-in, I use the clipboard in my hand to take inventory of the fruit delivery Mavenâs restaurant received today, making sure the kitchen has enough to get through until its next delivery on Wednesday.
âOkay, great,â Violet continues, stepping into the cold walk-in, head down, scrolling through her iPad. âSince the restaurant is closed tomorrow, I have another interview scheduled for tomorrow morning with this big-time blogger that goes by Pinch of Salt.â
âDo you really think thatâs necessary?â I mentally inventory the shelves, counting crates of persimmons, pears, and figs. âI have my Food & Wine interview tomorrow afternoon, and Iâm sure by now anyone who gives a shit is well aware that Iâm back to work.â
âMiller, weâre capitalizing. Striking while the ironâs hot.â
âWell, Iâd really like the iron to cool the fuck down so I can take a second to breathe. I havenât had a single moment alone since I got to LA unless Iâm showering or sleeping.â
âYeah, about that.â Violet continues, nose down, looking over my schedule. âWhat do you think about taking some phone interviews while youâre showering? You know, really take advantage of every minute of the day.â
I turn on her. âPlease tell me youâre joking.â
âOf course I am. Did you leave your sense of humor in Chicago?â
Sense of humor. Heart. Both are still there, I think.
âIâll tell you what, Iâll tell Pinch of Salt that itâll be a quick chat on Tuesday instead. Thatâll give you tomorrow morning off before your interview with Food & Wine.â
I nod. âI can do that.â
The walk-in door swings open to reveal Jenny, one of the two line cooks on desserts, holding a carton of raspberries in her hand. âChef, we have a problem.â
The kitchen is chaos behind her, busy bodies moving to get set up for the dinner rush.
âThe raspberries that were delivered today are sour. Real sour.â
I take one from the carton, holding it to my nose. Sheâs right, theyâre far more sour than they are tart, but I pop it in my mouth to be sure.
Shit. Theyâre bad, and I have a white chocolate mousse with a raspberry crémeux on the menu for tonight, one that Iâve been designing for the last two days and prepping all afternoon, minus the hour I took to interview with yet another food blogger.
âAll of them are like this?â I ask.
âAll of them. Maybe we can swap a blackberry crémeux instead? Those were also delivered today but they look good.â
âNo. It wonât have the right flavor profile.â
âYes, Chef.â Jennyâs eyes refocus on her feet.
âThatâs not a bad idea, though,â I quickly correct. âThe blackberries are a bit too tart for that dish, but youâre thinking on your feet. I like that.â
Her lips slightly lift at the corners. âThank you, Chef.â
My eyes dart to the box of pears that were also delivered today. Theyâre meant for the poached pear dish I have planned for Tuesdayâs dinner service, but I can figure out the future later.
âGet rid of the raspberries. Tell Chef Maven that weâre pulling the mousse and swapping it for the poached pear dessert I planned for Tuesday. The pistachio soufflé stays. And would you mind going to the freezer and checking on the chocolate sorbet?â
âYes, Chef.â
âAnd please make sure Chef Maven knows why weâre changing the menu. Your kitchen needs reliable suppliers and this one doesnât seem to be one.â
âOf course, Chef.â
Violet and I follow her out of the walk-in and my agent stays right on my heels as I continue to organize my station.
Tonight is my fifth dinner service at Lunaâs, Chef Mavenâs Los Angeles restaurant. While consulting, Iâm not typically on the line unless Iâm covering a call out, but I like to spend my first couple of weeks at a new job right here in the thick of it, figuring out how they communicate and what their timing looks like.
It helps me cater their menu to their kitchen.
âViolet, weâre about to start service,â I remind her while organizing my station.
My stack of clean dish towels are right where I like them and my knives are ready and laid out in the proper order.
âI know. I know. But I wanted to show you the Food & Wine layout. They sent it over to me this morning. It looks amazing and the photos are fantastic. Everything is ready to go. They just need to add your interview and itâll be off to the printers.â
Violet is nose deep on her iPad once again, looking through her emails to pull up the article.
âVi, would you mind showing me later? Tonight is kind of frantic with a whole new dessert I wasnât prepared to introduce until later this week.â
âOf course, Chef.â She stops what sheâs doing. âHave you eaten today? You need to eat before the rush.â
Lunaâs does a staff dinner every day before service starts. I, however, havenât been able to partake in one yet, seeing as Iâm using that downtime to interview with any and everyone who wants a piece of me.
âIâll grab something.â
Except, Iâm not hungry, and I canât remember the last time I was.
I look over my station again, making sure that Jenny and Patrick, the two line cooks who are in charge of desserts, have everything ready for tonight.
Besides the poached pear that needs a bit of prep, we are good to go.
Through the pass-through window, I spot Chef Maven getting into position, my cue that doors are about to open and service is about to begin.
âViolet, I gotta get to work.â
âOkay. I have your phone. Where do you want it?â
âWould you mind dropping it by the house rental? Itâs on your way home, right? I donât need it tonight.â
âYou got it! Have a great service.â
âViolet.â I point to my phone in her grasp. âAny important calls or texts?â
She hesitates. âAn important email, actually. The photographer from the Food & Wine shoot emailed an image that didnât make the cut for the magazine. You should check it out. Itâs beautiful.â
My heart sinks with disappointment. Another day without hearing from him.
âIâll look later. Thanks.â
âI need two Lobster Bolognese all day,â Chef Maven calls out to her line. âJeremy, less truffle froth on the Bolognese. Your plating is getting crowded.â
âYes, Chef.â
âChef Montgomery, youâve got two soufflés coming up. Table six and table ten.â
âYes, Chef.â I eye the oven door, checking the count I currently have baking.
Maven runs a tight ship, but thereâs not a person on her staff who isnât top tier.
I chose this restaurant because Iâve been eager to work with Maven since she hosted a seminar while I was in culinary school. However, tonight is only the second night Iâve gotten the chance to work alongside her.
Iâve come to find out that Maven only spends two nights a week on her line, letting her second in command cover the rest. She works on ordering, menus, and prep during the day, then entrusts her line with dinner service while she heads home.
And they kill it. Every night.
âChef Montgomery, I need one Bananas Foster all day.â
For the first time today, my heart skips, my hands freezing on the plate Iâm currently working on.
The Bananas Foster is rarely ordered. Itâs the off-menu vegan option, sauteed in a caramel-like sauce and served with a vegan butterscotch ice cream.
And I canât hear it ordered without thinking of Max because yes, something as simple as bananas has me missing him and our days in the kitchen together.
Just like that, Iâm jolted right back to that tearful goodbye seven days ago. How much it hurt to drive away from Chicago after leaving everyone outside of the stadium. How Maxâs little blue eyes started tearing up, though he had no idea why, only that he saw me and his dad crying.
Iâm convinced my heart has been ripped out of my chest and left with two boys two thousand miles away, and the only good thing about being so busy with interviews and line shifts is that, for the most part, Iâve been able to turn off my mind during those times and just work.
Reaching into my chefâs coat pocket, I run my fingers over the cardstock, always keeping it with me. The card they gave me is the one and only birthday card Iâve kept in my life, never one to be sentimental, but those two boys have ruined me to the point where not only have I kept it, but I keep it as close as possible.
âChef Montgomery?â Maven asks when I donât respond to her order.
I pull my hand from my pocket, quickly running by the sink to wash them. âYes, Chef. Sorry, Chef.â
With my hair slicked back and my chefâs coat back in place, I attempt to focus on the task at handâto get through this shift. Then to do it again tomorrow. Then again, every day after that, while I pray that this longing homesickness starts to ease.
Using the towel over my shoulder, I wipe the edge of the plate clean, delivering the Bananas Foster to Maven standing on the other side of the pass-through window.
âBeautiful, Chef,â she says, eyes flicking to me before I return to my station.
Sheâs not wrong. Itâs stunning. The problem is no longer that I canât do my job.
The problem is that now I donât want to.
The house rental Violet got for me is nestled in the Hollywood Hills, expansive and expensive with giant open windows so everyone in the valley below can witness just how lonely I am.
When I get back there after another late night at the restaurant, I only turn on enough lights to grab a shower and a glass of water, snagging my phone off the counter before walking right back outside to sleep in my van parked in the driveway.
This house may be beautiful, but itâs empty without Maxâs toys littering the living room or the dishes piling in the sink. Itâs too pristine. Too perfect. It makes it far too obvious how much I miss them.
The van is just as lonely, but with it being such tight quarters, I can justify that the lack of space is the reason why Kai isnât in bed next to me.
God, I miss him.
I miss his smell, his smileâthe tired one and the confident one. I miss his steady hold, and his overwhelming encouragement. I feel like Iâve been spinning off axis for the past seven days, but this was always the plan.
I was always going to be here, without him.
The short time before bed is the worst and best part of my days. Itâs when the loneliness starts to sink in because itâs the only free moment in my day to think of them, to focus on them, though thereâs an ache in my heart and a hollowness in my gut every hour of the day due to missing them.
We havenât spoken since that morning I left Chicago. My dad checked in every few hours of my two-day drive and when I got to California and asked him why he suddenly decided to become a helicopter parent, he simply said, âKai asked me to.â
Communicating would only make things harder. This is my life and thatâs his. Did I indulge in the thought that it couldâve been mine too? Sure. Am I still wanting it? Yes, absolutely, but I have responsibilities here. Responsibilities to these kitchens Iâm scheduled for and a responsibility to my dad to do something impressive with the life heâs given me. Iâm also responsible for living up to the James Beard Award I won. Responsible to the editors who chose to feature me on the cover of their magazine.
This must be how Kai feels. Responsible to everyone else, constantly trying to do right by others, and rarely choosing things for himself.
He did make one selfish decision this summer though, and Iâve got to say, it was the best thing thatâs ever happened to me.
Climbing into bed, I pull the covers up to my chest before checking my phone for the first time today.
There are a few texts waiting for me, but before I read any of them, I head straight to the Internet to find the results from Kaiâs game this afternoon. Today was his second start since I left, and his last game wasnât his best.
And judging by the headlines, todayâs was worse.
The Warriors lost five to two, and Kai was pulled in the third inning.
A short video clip shows the moment he got pulled with my dad and him meeting on the mound. They donât zoom in enough for me to get a clear image of his face, but I can read Kaiâs body language perfectly. Heâs upset. Not mad, but emotional. My dad gives him a nod and Kai jogs off the field, straight through the dugout, to the clubhouse, and out of the cameraâs view.
That right there is my fault.
Heâs not okay because of me.
And as much as I can pretend during work hours, Iâm nowhere near okay either.
Tears are already burning the backs of my eyes when my attention falls to the framed photo Kai gave me for my birthday. Me with my head on his lap and his son asleep there on the couch too.
I miss them. I ache for them, and Iâm mad at Kai for breaking me this way, for making me feel when I spent so much of my life unattached and untethered.
I hate that I love him so much.
So whatâs the harm in one little text? One tiny text to remind him that Iâm thinking of him.
I find my messages to do just that, but the time at the top of my phone blinds me with the realization that itâs almost three in the morning. It reminds me that Kai asked me not to give him any hope.
It reminds me that summer is over.
Regardless of the late hour, a text comes through from Chef Maven.
Maven: Sorry we havenât crossed paths much this week! Meet me at the restaurant tomorrow morning for coffee and we can sit down and go over your ideas for the menu?
So much for that morning off I was hoping for. But itâs probably for the best that I donât give myself time to think because thinking only leads to missing them.
Me: Sounds great. Iâll see you then.
Finally making my way into my other messages, I find texts from Kennedy, Isaiah, Indy, and my dad.
Nothing from Kai. His way to move on quicker, I guess.
I could be sick just thinking about it. Them with another woman in their lives, someone else loving Kai and Max the way I do. Thatâs what I should want for them, right? To have everything I canât give them. Everything they deserve.
Then why am I laying here crying in bed at the thought?
This is his fault too. I never used to cry. I never used to feel. Now itâs like a dam has been broken and itâs a non-stop flood pouring from my eyes when Iâm not at work. I never needed anyone before them and now Iâm laying here, a desperate, sobbing mess in the middle of the night in the Hollywood Hills because thereâs a baseball player in Chicago and his son who I miss. Who I love.
Who I canât have because nothing about our lives aligns.
Blinking through the blurry tears, I find my dadâs text.
Dad: Iâm sure you saw the game recap. Give me a call sometime so we can talk. I miss you, Millie.
I donât hesitate, calling him, needing to hear his voice, needing someone to tell me I made the right decision by going back to work because right now it feels all wrong. I know he of all people will find what Iâm doing impressive. Heâll find it worthwhile.
The phone rings until the call goes straight to voicemail because, of course it does. Itâs the middle of the night.
âHi, Dad,â I say into the receiver, clearing my throat in hopes he canât tell Iâm crying. âJust calling to say hi and that I miss you. I really miss you. But things are going great here.â God, is my tone too telling that Iâm full of shit? âI have my interview with Food & Wine tomorrow afternoon, so . . . thatâs exciting. Sorry about your game.â
I try so hard not to ask, but I canât help myself. âIs Kai okay? I hope he is.â I exhale a sad laugh. âBut I also hope heâs missing the shit out of me because Iâm missing him. And you. I miss you a lot, Dad. I wish you were here because I miss seeing your face. I got used to it this summer, I guess. I used to be so much better at this whole traveling year-round thing.â And Iâm rambling. âAnyway, call me when you can, and Iâll be sure to answer. I love you. So much. Talk soon.â
Loneliness sinks in again as I hang up and lay in my quiet van where only the sound of my sobs can be heard.
I hate it here, but this quiet moment is the only place where I can be honest about that.
I find my texts again, hoping something from one of my friends will make my self-pity shut up for a second.
Kennedy: Checking in on you. Howâs the restaurant? Isaiah wonât stop texting me about whether he should change his walk-out song and then proceeds to ask me what my favorite song is, you know, in case he wants to use it. And I miss you!
Finally, a genuine laugh escapes me.
Isaiah: Here with your daily dose of Max. He learned how to say âduckâ yesterday but definitely pronounces his âDsâ as âFsâ so that was a fun treat to hear. I took a video for you. Youâre missed, Hot Nanny.
He accompanies that with a video of Max sitting on his lap in the center of the Warriorsâ clubhouse.
âMaxie, what is that?â Isaiah asks, pointing to the book theyâre reading, which seems to be about a giant Mallard duck.
âA big fuck!â Max proclaims, so proud of himself.
The clubhouse erupts in laughter around him, and Max just sits there, clapping for himself, and the rest of the team joins in to cheer too.
Quickly, the camera pans to Kai, who is sitting in his locker stall shaking his head, a tiny smile fighting to break through before the video abruptly ends.
I watch it again with a smile on my face, catching Cody, Travis, and Kennedy all there, but then I pause the video on Kai.
Even when heâs sad, heâs devastatingly handsome.
I scroll down to Isaiahâs second text.
Isaiah: What do you think Kennedyâs favorite song is?
And lastly, a message from Indy.
Indy: We missed you and your desserts at family dinner tonight. But mostly we missed you! I wish you were going to be here next weekend.
Indy and Ryan are getting married next weekend. I wish my schedule allowed me to go, but Iâll send them a gift in my absence.
For the first time in my life I have friends. I have people I ache for, people I miss. People who are all within a thirty-minute drive of each other while Iâm out here on the other side of the country, trying to make a name for myself in this career that I once revolved my entire life around.
I donât know how so much could change in eight weeks. It doesnât seem possible. And it doesnât seem reasonable to make rash decisions based on those short two months. But the decision I made to come back to work, a decision based on years of hard work, feels like the wrong one. But it also feels like a decision that I canât change.
Climbing off the bed, I grab the framed picture Kai gave me for my birthday, bringing it to my bed. I leave it right there next to my pillow because Iâm sad and pathetic and donât know how to handle all these newfound emotions.
This picture is all I have of Kai and Max while Iâm off chasing a dream that feels more like a nightmare the longer Iâm away from them.