What Marcus didn’t know — what he never bothered to ask in six months of taking credit for my tasting menus — was whose name was actually on the lease. Lumen wasn’t his restaurant. It wasn’t even the investors’. Two years ago, when the original owner got sick, he sold the building, the liquor license, and the LLC to a silent partner for pennies, on the condition that the staff never find out. That silent partner was me. My grandmother left me exactly enough, and I’d spent every quiet morning since rebuilding the place from the walk-in up. Marcus was hired by my management company while I was in Lyon doing stages. I came back as ‘sauté’ because I wanted to see who he really was before I introduced myself. Now I knew. I walked past him, past the line cooks frozen mid-plate, and into the dining room. I picked up the reservation tablet, tapped the manager’s headset, and said, ‘Eighty-six every table. We’re closing for a staff meeting.’ Marcus laughed — actually laughed — and told me to get my things before security walked me out. That’s when Diane from the management company stepped through the front door with a folder. She handed it to him without a word. Inside: the ownership documents. The termination clause he’d signed. The security footage of him screaming at my pastry chef last Tuesday until she cried in the dry storage. He read the first page twice. His jacket suddenly looked too big on him. ‘Elena,’ he started, the smirk gone, the voice soft now, ‘I didn’t — I didn’t know.’ I picked my apron back up off the resignation letter and tied it slowly around my waist. ‘That,’ I said, ‘was the whole point.’ I turned to my line — my line — still standing at attention, and smiled for the first time all month. ‘Fire the grill back up. We have a service to run.’ Marcus left through the alley door he used to make the dishwashers carry his trash out of. Nobody looked up.
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