But you better not get used to it, Bren Matthews. Because if you do, you’ll find yourself flying straight out of the frying pan and into the fire.
He smiled back at me, then focused in on his work again, heating the pans and sautéing the almonds while I imagined myself falling so far and so deep I wouldn’t know where I ended and he began. No. Not gonna happen. “You know, you’d think that it would have been a huge toll on them, what happened with my mom, but my parents really made the best of it. Every day we did something together as a family. I mean, I know now that was because we didn’t know how many days my mom might have left, but then?” He shrugged a shoulder, then moved back to the fridge for a forgotten ingredient. “It was just, I don’t know, good. To see my parents together and happy together in spite of everything. It makes you feel like anything is possible, seeing two people like that.”
“I know what you mean.” I’d said the words without thinking—or rather, without realizing what I’d done. I didn’t want to open the door to my past. Not yet. Maybe not ever.
Of course, he would have to meet my mother eventually, and when he did, the whole sordid affair would come out—how happy my life had been when my parents had been together. And how completely and totally inconsolable she had been since my dad’s passing.
My throat tightened, and I cleared it as I watched him move around the kitchen. Mason went right back to preparing dinner and didn’t seem to notice all the words that remained unsaid.
He tossed two cloves of garlic and a bundle of thyme into the heating pan, and a savory, mouthwatering aroma filled the air.
“Anyway,” he said. “I feel like I talk all the time about myself and I don’t know enough about you.”
I blinked. “Well, what do you want to know?”
“Anything, anything at all. Like, why do you go by your middle name?”
“My middle name is Brennan, but I prefer Bren,” I said.
“That’s cool.” He nodded. “Why did your parents name you Ashley?”
I rolled my eyes. “The stupidest reason you can imagine.”
“You have to remember I’ve seen a lot of people name babies stupid things for stupid reasons. Ashley hardly seems far out there.”
“Right,” I said. “Well, my mom and dad met at an old-timey sort of movie theater and it was playingGone With the Windthat night. So, you know, my mom named me Ashley because she fell in love with that character.”
“That’s not stupid. That’s actually very sweet.” The steak sizzled in the pan behind him and he turned around to tend the meat. “Ashley was a middle name, too. It could have been worse, because they could have used his first name and called you George.”
I snorted and leaned back in my chair. “I like Bren a lot better. It’s a family name. My grandma was Bren, too.”
He nodded. “Family connections are important. But it’s nice to have a love story in your name. Like a little reminder.”
All the more reason to go by Bren, I thought. Every sorrowful lilt of my mother’s voice was reminder enough of my parent’s tragedy of a love story—I didn’t need to add my name to the list.
“Are your parents still together?” he asked.
A knife dug between my ribs, and I chewed on the inside of my cheek, wondering how best to answer him. I wasn’t about to lie to him—but I didn’t need to say all of it either. Not now. Not yet. Maybe not ever.
“No,” I said simply.
He nodded, and silence fell between us for a long moment before he slid a plate—steamy and hot—in front of me. On it was a massive serving of porterhouse and green beans amandine.
“Wow, this looks incredible,” I said, then waited as he slid a knife and fork toward me and then joined me at the island to eat.
“Your steak is smaller than mine,” I said. “Let’s swap.”
“You said you like your steak with more steak, and you might be eating for two.”
“And if I’m not?” I said.
“Then you still get more steak. Seems like a win-win to me.” He cut into his steak, then said, “Shit, I forgot to ask—are you okay with medium?”
“Perfect,” I said, then started in on my food. With every bite, I was more amazed with his prowess in the kitchen, and I was on the point of telling him as much when he started to speak again.
“Your job is amazing,” he said. “Watching what you do.” He shook his head. “I’m impressed.”
“Well, I don’t save lives or anything.”