Pierre smirked, certain he had won. What he didn’t know was that for the last eleven months, I had been quietly documenting every recipe he claimed as his own. Because none of them were his. The bouillabaisse he was accusing me of stealing? My grandmother Colette taught it to me in Marseille when I was nine. Pierre had tasted it at my trail-shift six years ago, written it down on a napkin, and printed it in his cookbook three months later under his own name. I reached into my locker and pulled out a worn leather notebook, the pages yellowed, my grandmother’s looping handwriting dated 1974. Then I pulled out a second folder: signed affidavits from two former sous chefs, screenshots of Pierre’s drafts emailed to a ghostwriter, and a cease-and-desist my lawyer had been holding for exactly this moment. I laid them on the pass in front of Mr. Caron. “The blog post,” I said quietly, “is mine. I wrote it last night, under my own name, because tomorrow morning my grandmother’s cookbook goes on presale. Every recipe Pierre has built his career on is in it. With dates. With witnesses.” Mr. Caron’s face went the color of cold veal stock as he flipped through the pages. Pierre lunged for the notebook; I stepped aside and let him stumble into the dish pit. Mr. Caron raised one finger without looking up. “Pierre. Office. Now.” Then he turned to me, exhaled, and said the words I had waited six years to hear: “Chef Sofia. The kitchen is yours tonight. And, if you’ll have it, every night after.” I tied my apron back on, picked up my spoon, and tasted the reduction. Perfect. Just like Grandma taught me.
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