I didn’t argue. I just nodded once, tightened my mother’s apron, and went back to my station. Marcus laughed and went back to his judge’s podium, certain the moment was over. It wasn’t. Round two was a blind tasting — judges scored dishes without knowing the cook. I plated a peach-and-brown-butter cornbread with smoked honey, the same recipe my mother had served at her little church potlucks before the cancer took her. Marcus took one bite on the livestream and actually closed his eyes. “This,” he announced, tapping the plate, “is what real cooking looks like. Whoever made this belongs on television.” He gave it a perfect score. Then the head judge, Anita Brooks, walked to the center of the floor and asked the chef to step forward. I untied my apron strings slowly, walked past Marcus’s station, and stood under the lights. His face dropped like a soufflé in a slammed door. “Her,” Anita said into the mic. “The woman you told to step aside.” The ballroom went so quiet I could hear the convection ovens humming. Then Anita turned to the cameras. “For the record, Chef Marcus, we reviewed the footage from earlier. The Invitational has a zero-tolerance policy for contestant harassment by judges. You’re disqualified from the panel, effective immediately.” Security was already at his elbow. He tried to speak — “Nora, wait, I didn’t mean—” but I was already looking past him at a woman in a navy blazer holding a business card. Food Network. She wanted a meeting Monday. I thought of my mother’s hands guiding mine over a cast-iron skillet in a single-wide kitchen, and I smiled for the first time all day. “Tell him,” I said softly to Anita, loud enough for the mic, “the real chef is cooking. He can watch from home.”
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