6:30 dinner, and somehow we opened the place.
There’s a special hush that only exists when you arrive before everyone else. The room feels borrowed from another hour—tables set but untouched, water glasses lined up like small promises, candlelight pooling in amber circles. A lamp glows in the corner, making the whole place look like it’s remembering something.
We slid into our seats with that quiet satisfaction of being early, of being unhurried. Bread showed up first, warm and plain in the best way, the kind you tear without thinking. A tulip stood in a bottle on the table, casual and bright, like an afterthought that somehow makes everything feel intentional.
Then pasta—comfort without ceremony. The sort of dinner that doesn’t need a story to justify it, because it is the story: steam rising, forks turning, the steady rhythm of eating while the day finally lets go of you. The restaurant stayed mostly still for a while, as if it was letting us have those first minutes.
Eventually the place woke up. Chairs scraped back, voices gathered, little constellations of conversation forming at nearby tables. But I kept noticing the early light, the way the candle kept working, the sense that for a brief stretch we were inside the quiet before the night became a night.
Some evenings don’t ask for more than that—warmth, food, and a room that holds you gently until you’re ready to go back out.