“I don’t pretend anything,” he says.
“I’m not convinced. You’re the biggest charmer I’ve ever met. Were you yourself at that Reporters’ Ball, with the date you brought? Or with the blonde I saw you with the night we met?”
Carter leans back in his seat and gives me a calculating look. “You’ve been paying attention.”
“Of course I have. I don’t know many venture capitalist billionaire CEOs.”
“I know too many,” he replies.
“Wouldn’t you agree, though? That you wear a mask?”
He’s quiet for another beat. “Maybe I do,” he says, reaching for his beer.
“I get that it’s probably safer for you in some cases,” I admit. “With all the people trying to con you. If only they could see you now, eating twelve-dollar pizza in a worn-down restaurant in Queens.”
“They’d never stop calling,” he says.
“So, we’ve psychoanalyzed me. I want to know the same things about you. What do your parents do?”
His lips quirk in a half-smile. “My mother’s a teacher. She works at an elementary school right around here.”
“So that’s why you grew up in Queens?”
“Yes. We lived just a few blocks over.”
“Normal childhood?”
“Normal enough,” he says. “No mini quiches, if that’s what you mean.”
“No one really needs mini quiches,” I say. “So, do you also have a sibling who answers your texts sporadically?”
“Not really,” he says.
“Not really? Isn’t that a yes or no question?”
His mouth twists into another one of his smiles, but this one feels more rehearsed. “Not really,” he repeats, voice smooth.
I laugh. “Mysterious. I respect that.”
“It was mostly my mother and me,” he says. “She still lives in the area, actually.”
I put two and two together. “You’ve been to this restaurant a lot, haven’t you?”
“Every other Friday, like clockwork,” he says with a grin.
“That’s why the hostess recognized you!”
He looks over at the woman, busy with showing a new party to their table. “Fiona. She recognizes me, but isn’t quite sure who I am, I think.”
“Wow.”
He gives me a level look. “I’m a normal person, you know. Even if I am your boss’s boss’s boss.”
“I’m starting to realize that, yeah.”
“I have a question for you,” he says. “Did you always know you wanted to be a journalist? All that work, college, the paper… what put you on this path?”
I chew slowly, drawing out the pause. The real answer is complicated, but I don’t have to give the long one. “I’ve always loved to write,” I say. “But I’ve always been interested in the world around me too. My father, he reads the Globe every day. On Sundays he stretches it out into a half-day event. I’d sit next to him and ask about articles. It seemed like a magical thing. Stories, information, hot takes. It felt like the whole world was contained inside those thin pages.”