
A Taste of Her Revenge
Chapter 1
Chapter 1
The rhythmic, rapid-fire chopping of a dozen stainless-steel knives against wooden cutting boards was usually Clara Vance’s favorite symphony. Today, however, it was drowned out by the dull, throbbing ache radiating from her right wrist all the way up to her elbow.
She stood at the edge of the prep station in the basement kitchen of *Aura*, Julian’s Michelin-starred restaurant, absentmindedly massaging the thick, ropy burn scars that spiderwebbed across the back of her hand. The skin there was tight, pulling uncomfortably whenever she flexed her fingers. It had been three years since the grease fire—three years since she had shoved Julian out of the way of a collapsing, flaming fry-station, taking the boiling oil across her dominant hand so he wouldn't take it to the face.
"Chef Clara?" a hesitant voice pulled her from her thoughts.
Clara blinked, dropping her left hand from her scarred right. A young prep cook, barely out of culinary school, held out a tasting spoon filled with a pale, shimmering sauce.
"I tried to adjust the emulsion for the beurre blanc like you asked," the boy stammered, his eyes darting nervously around the bustling kitchen. "But it feels... heavy."
Clara took the spoon with her left hand, bringing it to her lips. She closed her eyes, letting the flavors hit her palate. It was the one thing the fire hadn't been able to burn away—her brilliant, unparalleled sense of taste.
"Too much butter, not enough acid," Clara said gently, her voice calm and steady amidst the kitchen's chaos. "You’re relying on the fat to carry the flavor, but the dish it’s pairing with is the Chilean sea bass. The fish is already rich. You need a sharper contrast. Add a splash of yuzu, not lemon, and whisk it in slowly."
"Yuzu. Right. Thank you, Chef." The boy practically beamed, hurrying back to his station.
Clara smiled faintly, though a familiar pang of sorrow tightened her chest. *Chef.* They called her that out of respect, but it wasn't official. On paper, she was a 'consultant.' On paper, Julian Thorne was the lone genius behind *Aura*, the prodigy who had secured the Michelin star. But every recipe, every plating design, every innovative flavor profile that had won them that star had been drafted by Clara in the quiet hours of the night, long after her hand had stopped trembling from the pain.
She picked up the leather-bound folio resting on the stainless-steel counter. Inside was the finalized tasting menu for *L’Étoile*, the new flagship restaurant she and Julian were opening next month. This was supposed to be her comeback. Julian had promised her that once *L’Étoile* opened, she would officially be named Executive Chef. He had told her that the investors were finally ready to look past her injury.
With a deep breath, Clara made her way out of the kitchen and up the narrow staircase toward Julian’s private office.
The hallway was quiet, heavily carpeted to absorb the noise of the restaurant below. As Clara approached the heavy oak door of Julian’s office, she noticed it was cracked open just an inch. A sliver of warm, golden light spilled out onto the dark carpet.
She raised her left hand to knock, but the sound of a soft, feminine whimper made her freeze.
"I just don't know if I can do this, Julian," a delicate, trembling voice said.
Clara’s hand hovered in the air. It was Mia Sterling. Mia was *Aura*’s twenty-four-year-old sous-chef. She was stunning, with wide doe eyes and an aura of perpetual fragility that made everyone in the kitchen want to help her carry heavy stockpots. Clara had personally spent the last six months mentoring her, trying to build the younger woman’s confidence.
"Hey, hey, look at me," came Julian’s voice. It was that rich, velvety baritone that had charmed food critics and swept Clara off her feet four years ago. "What’s wrong, darling? You’ve been crying all morning."
*Darling?*
Clara’s breath hitched in her throat. She stepped closer to the crack in the door, her heart suddenly pounding against her ribs like a trapped bird.
"It’s the brigade," Mia sniffled, her voice thick with unshed tears. "I don’t think they respect me, Julian. They all look at me like I’m just a pretty face. Like I’m just your... your accessory."
"That’s ridiculous," Julian murmured. There was the unmistakable sound of shifting fabric, the creak of Julian's leather desk chair, and a soft sigh. "They respect you because you are going to be the face of this empire."
"But they know Clara writes the menus," Mia cried, her tone pitching up into a petulant whine. "Whenever I try to correct a line cook, they just go behind my back and ask Clara. How am I supposed to be the Executive Chef at *L’Étoile* if everyone knows she’s the one pulling the strings?"
Clara felt the floor drop out from beneath her. Her vision swam, the edges of the hallway blurring. *Executive Chef at L’Étoile?*
"Mia, baby, you need to calm down," Julian said, his tone dripping with practiced patience. "Clara isn't going to be a problem. We’ve talked about this."
"But she thinks she’s getting the title!" Mia argued. "She’s been walking around all week talking about the grand opening. I can't stand it, Julian. It makes me feel so guilty, and my anxiety is just through the roof. You promised me that position. You promised me I would get the credit this time."
Clara pressed her back against the wall beside the door, her scarred hand flying up to cover her mouth to stifle the gasp clawing at her throat. She squeezed her eyes shut. *This is a nightmare. It has to be a nightmare.*
"And you will," Julian said firmly. "The investors want a star, Mia. They want someone beautiful, vibrant, and marketable. They want you."
"And what about Clara?" Mia asked, her voice suddenly losing a fraction of its tearful tremble, replaced by something colder.
Julian let out a harsh, derisive laugh. It was a sound Clara had never heard directed at her in all their years together. It was utterly devoid of the warmth he usually weaponized.
"What about her?" Julian asked dismissively. "Mia, be realistic. Have you looked at her hand lately? It looks like melted plastic. She drops half the things she picks up. Can you imagine the investors watching her try to plate a delicate crudo? Or the press? A chef who can’t even hold a paring knife without a visible tremor? They’d laugh me out of the boardroom."
The words struck Clara like physical blows. She looked down at her right hand, the hand that had blistered and boiled to save his flawless face. She had spent two years in agonizing physical therapy just to be able to hold a pen, all while Julian stood in front of the cameras, accepting awards for recipes she had dictated to him from a hospital bed.
"But she’s going to be so angry when she finds out," Mia fretted. "What if she leaves? What if she takes her recipes and goes to Damian Cross or one of your rivals? We need her new tasting menu, Julian. I don't know how to balance the acidity in that sea bass dish."
"She’s not going anywhere," Julian said, his voice oozing with a sickening confidence. "Clara is loyal to a fault. And more importantly, she’s completely dependent on me. Who else is going to hire a crippled chef? She thinks she’s broken, Mia. As long as I keep telling her that I’m the only one who can protect her, she’ll keep churning out brilliance from the basement."
A single tear slipped down Clara’s cheek, hot and stinging. It wasn't a tear of sadness. It was a tear of pure, crystalline rage.
"I just want to be sure," Mia whispered, her voice entirely devoid of tears now. "I want the security you promised me, Julian. I gave you everything."
"And I’m giving you everything in return," Julian replied. The sound of a heavy drawer sliding open echoed through the crack in the door. "I told you to trust me. I had the lawyers draft this up yesterday."
Clara shifted her weight, ignoring the trembling in her knees, and leaned just enough to peer through the gap between the door and the frame.
Julian was sitting on the edge of his mahogany desk, looking incredibly handsome in his tailored chef’s whites. Mia was standing between his legs, her arms wrapped around his neck. Julian reached over to the desk and picked up a thick stack of legal paper, holding it up between them.
"What is this?" Mia asked, her eyes widening as she took the papers.
"It’s a trademark transfer and a non-disclosure agreement, mixed into one iron-clad corporate restructuring," Julian said, a smug grin spreading across his face. "It officially transfers the intellectual property rights of the entire *L’Étoile* menu to you, listing you as the sole creator and developer."
Clara’s heart stopped.
"Wait," Mia said, flipping to the second page. "Even the Saffron-Infused Scallop Crudo with Sea Asparagus? But Julian, that’s Clara’s signature dish. She spent six months perfecting the curing process. She told everyone she was going to patent the technique."
"She can’t patent anything if the holding company owns it first," Julian said smoothly. "And as of this morning, the holding company—which I control—is transferring those rights to you. It’s my opening gift to the true Executive Chef of *L’Étoile*."
Mia let out a squeal of delight, completely dropping the fragile, anxious act. She threw her arms around Julian’s neck and kissed him deeply, a possessive, hungry kiss that made Clara’s stomach violently revolt.
"You really mean it?" Mia murmured against his lips. "It’s all mine?"
"Every last garnish," Julian promised, kissing her back. He pulled away slightly, tapping the pen against the paper. "All I need is your signature right here on the dotted line, and it’s legally binding. If Clara ever tries to claim she wrote the menu, our lawyers will bury her in defamation suits until she’s homeless."
Clara stood frozen in the hallway, the leather folio containing the final tasting menu slipping from her numb fingers. It hit the carpeted floor with a muted *thud*.
Inside the office, the movement stopped.
"Did you hear that?" Julian asked, his voice instantly dropping to a cautious whisper.
Clara didn't wait to find out if he was coming to the door. She didn't burst in to scream or cry or demand answers. The shock had bypassed her tear ducts entirely, settling instead into the marrow of her bones as a freezing, absolute certainty.
Julian had never loved her. He had loved what her uncredited genius could do for his ego, and he had used her trauma to keep her chained to the basement. He was stealing her life’s work to gift to his mistress.
As Clara backed away from the door, her eyes fixed on the sliver of light, she saw Mia pick up the expensive gold pen from Julian’s desk. She saw the younger woman bend over the document, a victorious, malicious smile playing on her lips, and sign away Clara’s soul.
Clara turned and walked silently down the hallway. She didn't look at her scarred hand with pity anymore. As she descended the stairs back into the heat of the kitchen, her mind was already moving past the betrayal, operating with the cold, precise efficiency of a master chef planning a menu.
Julian wanted to steal her recipes? He wanted to build an empire on her broken back?
Fine. She would let him build it. She would let him open *L’Étoile*. She would let Mia wear the white coat and take the stage.
And then, when the spotlight was at its brightest, Clara was going to burn Julian Thorne’s empire to the absolute ground.
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