"That's why I hired you," Levi says. "Because you get it. You understand what Juniper's is supposed to be."
"Then why won't you let me be part of it?" The question comes out quieter than I intended, almost vulnerable. "Really be part of it, not just... execute your vision?"
His hands flex on the steering wheel, and for a moment, I think he's going to shut down again, deliver another line about focus and timing and how it's too soon.
Instead, he says, "Because if this fails, it's on me. Not you, not the team—me. This restaurant is everything I have, Maya. Fifteen years of working my ass off in other people's kitchens, saving every dollar I could, learning everything I could learn. I came back here to build something that matters, something my grandmother would be proud of. And if I screw it up because I moved too fast or trusted the wrong instincts or let myself get—" He cuts himself off abruptly. "It has to work. That's all."
The raw honesty in his voice makes my throat tight. This isn't the controlled, authoritative chef I see every day in the kitchen. This is someone scared, someone who's put everything on the line and is terrified of losing it.
"It's going to work," I tell him. "Juniper's is already a success. Everyone in town loves it."
"Two weeks isn't success. Two weeks is a honeymoon period." His voice is rough. "Check back in six months and see if we're still full every night."
"We will be. The food is incredible, the atmosphere is perfect, and people can actually afford to eat here. You've created exactly what this town needed."
"You really believe that?"
"Yes." No hesitation. "I wouldn't have taken this job if I didn't believe in what you're doing here."
We sit in silence, the engine rumbling, the porch light casting half his face in shadow.
"I should go," I say, but I don't move.
"Yeah." He doesn't move either.
Another beat. Two.
Then I grab my bag and open the door, letting the cool night air rush in and break whatever spell we were both caught in.
"Maya."
I pause, half out of the truck, and look back at him.
"Get your car looked at tomorrow," he says. "That's not a suggestion."
"I can't really afford—"
"I know a guy. He'll give you a fair price. I'll text you his number." Something softens slightly in his expression. "And... your ideas aren't bad. They're actually good. I just need more time before we start experimenting."
It's not a yes. But it's not a complete shutdown either.
"Okay," I say. "Thanks for the ride, Chef."
"Levi." The word comes out almost reluctantly. "When it's not at work, you can call me Levi."
"Okay. Thanks, Levi."
I close the truck door and walk up the path to the house. The truck doesn't move from the driveway until I'm inside with the door closed behind me.
I lean against it, my heart still racing, replaying every word of that conversation in my head. The way his voice changed when he talked about the restaurant, the fear underneath his control. The way he looked at me when I said I believed in what he was doing.
*When it's not at work, you can call me Levi.*
It's such a small thing. But it feels like something shifted tonight, some wall he keeps up showing the tiniest crack.
My phone buzzes one last time before dying completely. I pull it out and see a text from an unknown number: *Casey's Automative on Oak Street. Tell him I sent you. - Levi*
Despite my frustration from earlier, despite the confusion and the mixed signals and the way he makes me feel like I'm perpetually off-balance, I smile.