I folded the apron once, set it on the pass, and walked out to table 4. The man in the charcoal suit stood up before I reached him. “Chef Delaney,” he said, loud enough for Brittany to hear. “I was hoping to catch you before service ended.” Brittany’s heels clicked behind me, fast. “Excuse me, sir, I’m the owner’s wife, I can help you with whatever — ” He didn’t even look at her. He handed me a leather folder. “The Beard Foundation finalist letter. We tried to email but your address bounced.” My hands didn’t shake. They’d stopped shaking around year seven. I opened it. Semifinalist. Best Chef, Northeast. Brittany made a small sound like a teakettle starting. “That’s — that has to be a mistake. She’s just the kitchen manager. My husband owns this place.” The man finally turned to her. “Ma’am, the restaurant was nominated, but the nomination is for the executive chef and majority partner. That’s Maren Delaney. We verified the LLC filings this morning.” Mark came out of the back then, pale. Because Mark knew. Mark had always known. Our grandmother left the building to me when I was nineteen. I’d let Mark put his name on the liquor license because he begged. I’d let him bring Brittany in because he was my brother. But the deed, the LLC, the recipes, the staff contracts — all mine. Brittany turned to him. “Tell him. Tell him you own this.” Mark looked at the floor. “Britt. I tried to tell you.” I tied my apron back on. “Brittany, you’ve got about ninety seconds to get your blazer out of my dining room before I have you trespassed. Mark, we’ll talk Sunday. Right now I have a service to finish.” She stood there blinking until our hostess, sweet quiet Jenna who Brittany had made cry twice last week, walked over with her purse already in hand. “This way, ma’am.” The line cooks didn’t clap. They just picked their tickets back up. The man in the suit sat down and ordered the tasting menu. I cooked the best seven courses of my life.
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