Service ended at eleven. Vincent was already pouring himself a Bordeaux at the chef’s table, holding court with two investors, when the silver-haired woman from the corner booth walked into the kitchen. She moved slowly, deliberately, the way people move when they’ve never been told no. Vincent shot up so fast he spilled his wine. “Madame Lacroix — what an honor, I didn’t realize you were dining with us tonight.” She didn’t look at him. She looked at me. “Maya. The lamb was yours, wasn’t it? The reduction. The plating.” I nodded, because my throat wouldn’t work. She smiled, just a little. “I’d recognize your grandmother’s sauce anywhere. I trained beside her in Lyon, nineteen seventy-four.” Vincent laughed nervously. “Madame, with respect, Maya only assists — I designed tonight’s tasting menu personally.” Madame Lacroix finally turned to him. “Did you. Because I own this building, Vincent. I own the lease, the liquor license, and forty-nine percent of the parent group that signs your checks. I came tonight to decide whether to renew you or replace you.” The kitchen went silent. Even the dishwashers stopped. She slid a cream-colored envelope across the steel counter toward me. “Maison Lumière needs a new executive chef. The contract is yours, if you want it. Double his salary. Full creative control.” Vincent’s face drained so fast I thought he might fall. “You can’t — I have a contract —” “You had a contract,” she said gently. “You also had a server record every word you said to this young woman tonight, because I asked her to. Threatening staff on the floor voids the morals clause. Pack your knives by morning.” She turned back to me. “Well, Chef? What do you say?” I looked at the scallop, still sitting on the cutting board where I’d placed it hours ago. I looked at Vincent, finally small. And I picked up my tongs. “I say service is at five tomorrow. And I’ll need a new sous-chef.”
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