Chapter 9
Chapter Nine
Elias
The Thursday kitchen had become something I waited for without admitting it to myself.
The serious equipment, the worn table, the window above the sink that looked out on the alley behind Langston's.
It was the time itself, the particular quality of a morning when the shop was closed and the town was at work elsewhere.
I had hours ahead of me with no interruption but what I brought on myself.
Pearl left me alone in it more often now.
She trusted me with the keys, with the inventory, with the small decisions about what to make and when.
She appeared sometimes, tasting what I had prepared, offering a word or two that was always worth hearing, then retreating to the front or out to run errands, leaving me to the rhythm of the work.
This Thursday was different.
I arrived to find her already in the kitchen, not at the counter but at the long wooden table in the center, a spread of ingredients arranged with the particular care she brought to everything.
Buckwheat honey in several small pots, each labeled with a different farm name.
Butter, eggs, flour. A bowl of blood oranges that caught the morning light through the window, their color almost too vivid against the neutral tones of the room.
"Today you cook with me," she said, not looking up from the notebook she was writing in, her hand moving in the careful script I had learned to recognize as her own. "Not for the shop. For the practice."
I set my bag on the hook by the door and went to wash my hands at the sink. "What are we making?"
"Galettes. The honey goes in the filling with the blood oranges.
" She closed her notebook and looked at me, her honey-colored eyes holding mine with the expression she used when she was about to show me something that mattered.
"The trick is balance. The honey is dark, almost bitter.
It needs the acidity of the fruit, the richness of the butter.
Too much of any one thing and the whole collapses.
" She rose from her chair and moved to the other side of the table.
"Come. I'll show you once, then you do it. "
We worked side by side at the table. She demonstrated the method for the pastry, the cold butter worked into the flour until it resembled coarse meal, the ice water added sparingly, the gentle handling that kept the layers distinct.
Her hands moved with the confidence of decades, and I watched the way she touched the dough, not pressing but guiding, letting it come together on its own terms.
"The mistake most people make is rushing," she said, her voice low and unhurried, the rasp in it familiar now, almost comforting. "They want the dough to be ready before it is. They force it, and it becomes tough. You have to wait for it to be ready. It will tell you, if you're paying attention."
I nodded and began my own when she set hers aside to rest, trying to replicate the lightness of her touch, the patience of her approach.
She watched without commenting, letting me find my way, correcting only when I was about to make a mistake that would cost us the batch.
At one point I caught her looking at my hands rather than the dough, her expression doing something I could not quite read.
"You hold it differently than I do," she said, her eyes still on my hands. She said it like an observation, not a correction.
I looked down. My hands were cupped around the dough rather than working across it, a technique I had not been conscious of using. "My grandmother had narrow hands," I said. "She taught me to work with the heel rather than the fingers. Less heat transfer."
Pearl looked at me for a moment. "That is better than what I do," she said, as if the admission cost her nothing, and went back to her own preparation. I kept working.
The filling came next. She sliced the blood oranges with precise arcs, the segments falling away from the membrane in clean wedges. She warmed the buckwheat honey slightly, just enough to loosen it, and added a splash of something from a small bottle.
"Orange flower water," she said, catching my glance. "Just a few drops. It bridges the honey and the fruit together."
I watched her combine the ingredients, tasting as she went, adjusting by increments until she nodded, satisfied.
She offered me the spoon and I tasted, and the complexity of it spread across my palate, the dark honey, the bright citrus, the subtle floral note underneath, all three distinct but speaking to each other in a way that worked.
"How did you know?" I asked, the question arriving before I had fully shaped it. "How to find that balance?"
Pearl set the spoon down and looked at me, her expression settling into something I hadn't seen from her before, a seriousness that was not heavy but was deep, the weight of a philosophy fully lived.
"You pay attention," she said. "To the ingredients.
To what they are, not what you want them to be.
The honey is bitter. You don't try to make it sweet.
You find what works with the bitterness, what makes it meaningful. "
She turned back to the filling, but her words hung in the air between us, carrying something beyond the instruction.
We assembled the galettes, the rough free-form tarts that Pearl favored, the edges folded casually over the filling in a way that looked careless but required precision.
Into the oven, the heat rising around us, and then the waiting.
Pearl poured tea, the chamomile she had offered me that first day. We sat at the table with the dough scraps cleared away and the galettes baking, and she looked at me with an expression that held no demand, just the willingness to speak if I was willing to hear.
She had a photograph on the wall near the counter, a younger Pearl with her arm around a man with a kind face, both of them laughing at something outside the frame. I had noticed it before without asking. I found myself looking at it again now.
"Your husband?" I said, and then felt the question land too bluntly, the way questions do when you ask them without deciding to.
Pearl glanced at the photograph without appearing to mind.
"Martin," she said. "He died eleven years ago.
Heart, very sudden." She turned her mug in her hands, the same gesture she used when she was thinking something through.
"He was the one who named the shop. Said Langston's sounded like a place people would stay awhile.
He was right about most things like that. "
I didn't say I was sorry. She hadn't offered it as something to be sorry about, and I was learning to take my cues from her. "Do you cook differently now," I asked, "than when he was here?"
She considered that seriously, the way she considered everything.
"Yes," she said. "For a long time I cooked less.
It felt like speaking into an empty room.
Then I started the Thursday arrangement, letting people use the kitchen, and it came back to me.
Cooking for others." She looked at me with an expression I was learning to read.
"Which is a long way of saying I understand something about what you're doing here, even if you haven't said it. "
I wrapped my hands around my mug and looked at the table. I hadn't said it. I wasn't ready to say it. But I nodded, and she accepted that and moved on, the way she always did.
"You're good at this," she said, the words carrying a different weight now than they had before.
"Not just the technique. You understand something about why we do it.
The care of it. I wasn't certain, when you first came.
Many people cook well without understanding what they're doing.
They follow recipes, they execute, but they don't feel it. "
"My grandmother felt it," I said, Nana's presence in the room suddenly vivid, almost tangible. "She used to say that cooking was a way of speaking when words weren't enough. That you could say things with food that you couldn't say any other way."
Pearl nodded, once, the small movement that meant she was hearing something important.
"She was right," she said. "Food is the oldest form of love, Elias.
Older than language, older than any of the ways we have of telling each other what we mean.
Every meal you make for someone is a love letter, whether they know it or not.
Whether you intend it or not. The care you put into it, the attention, the time, that's all love.
That's all speaking." She paused, her mug turning once between her palms. "Most people can't read it.
They eat and they're fed, and that's all they receive.
But some people can. And those are worth cooking for. "
I sat with that. It was comforting and devastating in equal measure, and I wasn't sure which feeling was stronger.
I thought of the meals I had made since coming to Haven's Rest, the soups and breads and pastries, the careful attention I had brought to each one without knowing why, only that it was necessary.
I thought of Nana's kitchen, the years of standing beside her, learning not just how to cook but how to be present in the cooking.
I thought of the way she had fed me after Pop died, the meals that appeared without my asking, the nourishment that was also grief, also love, also the refusal to let me disappear into myself.
The oven timer chimed. Pearl rose to check the galettes, and I sat at the table with the tea going cool in my hands and tried to hold what I had just understood.
The cooking was not just survival, not just competence, not just the memory of Nana's teaching.
It was love, spoken into the world without a recipient, offered to whoever would receive it, the only language I had left that felt true.
Pearl brought the galettes to the table, the pastry golden and slightly cracked, the filling bubbling at the edges. She cut one open, the steam rising, and offered me a piece.
"Eat." She set the plate in front of me and stepped back to watch. Pearl's expression held nothing but patience, and I ate.
"You found it," Pearl said, not a question. She took her own piece and ate it with the satisfaction of someone who had seen the path clearly from the beginning.
We ate in silence, the morning moving around us, the shop closed and the town beyond it going about its business.
After a while Pearl said, "Your grandmother. What was she like?"
The question was simple and it hit somewhere unguarded.
I looked at the table for a moment before I could answer.
"Practical," I said. "Funny. She had opinions about everything and was usually right.
" I paused. "She knew how to be in a room with someone who was hurting without making it about the hurt. She would just start cooking."
Pearl was quiet for a moment. "She sounds like she was very good at the most important things," she said.
We sat with that until the tea was gone. When we were done Pearl packed the remaining galettes into a box for me to take back to my room, and she walked me to the door.
"Come next Thursday," she said, her hand resting briefly on my shoulder before falling.
"We'll work on something else. And Elias.
" She paused, her eyes holding mine with the particular warmth that was her Alpha presence at its quietest. "What your grandmother knew, what I'm telling you now, it's true whether there's someone to receive it or not.
The love is in the making. That's where it lives. "
I walked back to Lark Street with the box of galettes and the afternoon light turning gold around me, the particular gold of late afternoon in Haven's Rest that I had learned to wait for. I thought about what she had said all the way home, and for a long time after.
I sat in my room above the ceramics shop and ate a galette slowly, tasting it fully.
I thought about Nana, about the meals she had made and the love she had spoken without ever using the word, about the understanding of what food could do that she had left me without meaning to leave it.
I thought about Pearl, about the Thursdays that had become the architecture of my weeks, the kitchen that was not mine but was becoming mine.
I decided to keep writing the love letters.
That was the whole of the decision, made in the late afternoon with the smell of buckwheat honey still on my hands.
I would keep cooking with care, with attention, with the patience to wait for the dough to be ready.
I would keep speaking this language, even if no one was listening, even if the speaking was all there was.
Thursday evenings became a standing truth after that.