Although Liv told Jasmyn she should rest and not help with the Thanksgiving dinner, Jasmyn jumped in with both feet and both hands.
True, she was exhausted, and yet she was home, in Seaside Village, at the Casa, surrounded by people who cared for her. She even had her first piece of furniture, a desk. How could she rest? She wanted to dance and serve dinner and clean up and hug everyone.
Except maybe for Burt. He stood across from her at the serving table in the courtyard, a small, weathered man who could have been anywhere between thirty and fifty years old. He wore a black stocking cap, grimy blue jeans, and a stained gray sweatshirt several sizes too large, and he loved to tell jokes.
“What time is it when you have to go to the dentist?” He leaned over until she was forced to meet his wide, clear blue eyes. “Think about it. What time is it when you have to go to the dentist?”
She pressed a plate, laden with turkey and all the traditional fixings, into his hand, but he didn’t budge. Apparently he’d rather tell her jokes than eat because this was his fourth one. “I don’t know,” she said and turned her attention to the table.
Large foil pans and four slow-cookers covered the pretty white lace tablecloth. The food was dwindling, but Liv was out on the sidewalk, eager to pull in anyone, homeless or not, who had nowhere else to eat Thanksgiving dinner. Despite overcast skies and a thick mist, Liv’s courtyard dining room remained open with plenty of hot cider, coffee, and pie.
Some of the street people lived regularly in the area, sometimes on park benches, sometimes in a shabby motel. Liv knew them by name because she talked to them often. She knew they would rather stay close than trek out to the centers serving Thanksgiving dinner.
Ignoring Burt didn’t work.
He chuckled. “You’re sure you don’t know? You don’t know what time it is when you have to go to the dentist?”
She gave him her best fake waitress smile, the one she had to pull out now and then for the offbeat customer who got the better of her. Not that she’d ever run across one quite as offbeat as Burt.
Keagan appeared beside the man and put an arm around his shoulders, looking at her. “Really, Jasmyn? You don’t have a clue?”
“No.”
He exchanged a glance with Burt, their jaws dropped in disbelief. Keagan said, “We’d better tell her, Burt.”
They looked at her and in unison said, “Tooth hurty. Get it? Two thirty.”
They laughed and laughed as Keagan steered the man away from the table. “Burt, what do you call it when a martial arts guy gets sick?”
“That’s an easy one, dude. Kung flu!”
They laughed some more and walked across the courtyard to one of the long tables where others sat, obviously enjoying the meal and the company.
Jasmyn organized the remaining food, still amazed at Liv’s ability to put on such an event. She used several of the ovens in the complex to cook dinner for up to forty. Jasmyn had counted thirty-one, not including herself and the few Casa folks.
Many of the residents had helped set up, but, like Sam, had gone to eat dinner elsewhere, except for Piper, who went to work because the mall was open. After seeing Chad in an elegant suit and silver tie—the holiday was a formal affair at his parents’—Jasmyn wondered how Piper could have turned down his invitation to join him.
Beau, Riley, and little Tasha were serving pie now. Coco was eating it along with the other guests.
“Knock, knock.”
Jasmyn jumped at Keagan’s voice from across the table.
“Sorry.” He took a piece of foil out of her hand and wrapped it neatly around the pan of yams. “Work with me here. Knock, knock.”
She rolled her eyes. “Who’s there?”
“Apple who?”
“Knock, knock.”
She stopped tucking foil around the sliced turkey. “Keagan.”
“Just say, who’s there.”
“No.”
He said, “Okay, I’ll fill in for you. Who’s there? Now I say, apple.”
She ignored him.
“Trust me. It’s a good one. Now you say, apple who?”
“Apple who?”
“Knock, knock.”
“Seriously?”
“Come on. What’s next? You can do it.”
“Will you go away if I answer?”
He winked. “You don’t really want me to, do you?”
“I thought you were the strong, silent type.”
“I have my chatty moments.”
She dipped her head to hide a smile. Flirting with Sean Keagan was going to add to the Casa’s attraction. As if she needed anything more.
“I repeat,” he said. “Knock, knock.”
“Who’s there?”
“Orange.”
“Not apple?”
“No, orange. And you’re changing the script.”
“Okay, okay. Orange who?”
He smiled. “Orange you glad I didn’t say apple?” He took a clean plate from the stack. “Have you eaten yet?”
“No.”
He handed her the plate and took another. “Me neither.” He lifted the foil off the yams.
“We just covered everything.”
“Life is difficult.”
They filled their plates, recovering the food as they went, and sat at an unoccupied patio table nearest the serving table.
“Since the day I met Liv, I thought she was amazing. But this is something else.”
“Reaching out to the needy is her passion, for sure. She grew up wealthy and married a rich man. Somehow, though, she connects to everyone who crosses her path. Burt doesn’t stress her out.” He smiled. “He was pulling your leg, you know.”
“Was he? I’ve waited tables for twenty years, and thought I knew how to handle anyone’s leg-pulling.”
“You probably never served a crowd like this. Did you even have people living on the streets?”
“No. There is poverty and mental illness in Valley Oaks, but nothing like this. The local chapter of the Veterans of Foreign Wars serves holiday meals for people who live alone or can’t afford a turkey.” She picked apart a roll. “It’s a little unnerving to think about this group sleeping outdoors tonight.”
“A few of the men I know actually prefer that.”
“How can they?”
“Unimaginable baggage.” He glanced around. “But our group here…see those two women?” He tilted his head toward a far table. “Liv will ask me to drive them to a shelter. The other two with them are living at the motel until probably next week when their money runs out. They have jobs but don’t make enough to make ends meet. Most of the men, like Burt, sleep at the gym.”
“Your gym?”
“We don’t make a big deal of it. There’s only space for ten and only during inclement weather. It costs us. Upkeep, third-shift employees. Enforcing rules like sobriety is a hassle sometimes. Overall, though, it’s working.”
“That’s wonderful.”
“We do what we can with what we have. Jasmyn, you don’t need to worry about our group here. They’ll be looked after.”
“All right. I guess.”
“Trust me?”
“Probably too much.” The words popped out and she saw his brows go up. “Oops.”
He grinned. “You’re running on fumes and Central Time.”
“I’m discombobulated too.”
He leaned across the table and spoke softly. “And fragile and vulnerable. But you’re in a safe place. You can stop serving everyone else for a while.”
Said the angel-slash-knight.
Despite the unanswerable questions of what was next, despite her exhaustion and discombobulated state, Jasmyn sank into the safety net known as Sean Keagan. He wouldn’t press. Their friendship would grow. She would get through her first post-tornado year before taking on any more major changes.
Falling in love would be easy, but she would take the scenic route this time.