
Serving My Legacy to Her? Watch Me Pack My Knives.
Chapter 2
Chapter 2
The plush carpet of Julian’s executive office swallowed the sound of Sloane’s clogs as she stepped through the door. It was 8:00 AM, precisely seven days before the grand opening, and the contrast between her world and his had never been more glaring.
Her world was stainless steel, open flames, and the scent of raw ambition. His world was mahogany desks, panoramic views of the city, and the smell of expensive espresso.
Julian was leaning over his desk, studying a massive spread of glossy, high-resolution mockups.
"Sloane!" he greeted, not looking up. "Perfect timing. Come look at these. The PR team just sent over the finalized menu designs. The gold foil embossing looks incredible against the matte black, don't you think?"
Sloane walked slowly to the edge of the desk. She looked down at the heavy cardstock.
At the very top, in sweeping, elegant typography, it read: **L’Etoile.**
Directly beneath it, in a font just as large: **Aria Sterling’s Tasting Menu.**
Sloane’s eyes scanned the text below.
*Course One: Parisian Dream Consommé by Chef Aria.*
*Course Four: Smoked Parsnip & Venison, an Aria Sterling Signature.*
"My name isn't anywhere on this," Sloane said. Her voice was utterly devoid of emotion, a flatline that should have warned him.
Julian finally looked up, letting out a heavy, exaggerated sigh. He leaned back in his leather chair, steepling his fingers. "Sloane, we talked about this yesterday in the kitchen. It’s an overarching brand strategy. You're getting bogged down in the minutiae."
"The minutiae?" Sloane picked up one of the menus, the heavy cardstock feeling like sandpaper against her fingertips. "This is my grandmother’s heirloom consommé, Julian. I spent four weeks clarifying the broth until it was like glass. I balanced the aromatics. I taught your prep cooks how to skim the raft so it doesn't cloud."
"And you did a beautiful job," Julian said smoothly, flashing his camera-ready smile. "Which is why you’re the highest-paid Executive Sous-Chef in the city."
"You’re crediting my grandmother's recipe to a woman who thinks a reduction is a discount at a department store," Sloane said, dropping the menu back onto the desk.
Julian’s smile vanished, his features hardening. "Watch your tone, Sloane. Aria brings five million sets of eyes to this restaurant. Do you know what her engagement metrics look like? Do you know what kind of investors she pulled in for this flagship?"
"She isn't a chef," Sloane stated, refusing to back down. "She can't run a service. If a ticket prints with an allergy modification, she’s going to freeze. You and I both know she doesn't belong on a line."
"She doesn't *have* to run the line!" Julian snapped, standing up and placing his hands flat on the desk. "That’s what you’re for! You are the engine, Sloane. You stay in the back, you keep the wheels turning, and you make the food taste perfect. Aria is the hood ornament. She’s what makes people want to buy the car."
Sloane stared at him, absorbing the sheer, unadulterated narcissism of his logic. He truly believed what he was saying. He believed he was the mastermind, orchestrating the perfect business model.
"I’ve spent four years building your menus, Julian," Sloane said, her voice dropping to a dangerous whisper. "When you won your first Michelin star at *The Foundry*, I was the one who pulled a double shift to fix the ruined squab before the inspector arrived. You were out doing a photoshoot."
"And I compensated you for it," Julian retorted, stepping around the desk to approach her. He tried to project an aura of calm authority, lowering his voice to a placating register. "Sloane, look at me. You are brilliant. But you lack front-of-house presence. You’re quiet, you’re intense, and you scowl when people ask for substitutions. You aren't a performer. The Michelin inspectors, the critics—they don't just want good food anymore. They want a story. They want a star."
"And Aria is the star."
"Aria is the bait," Julian corrected gently, reaching out to grasp Sloane’s upper arms. His thumbs rubbed small circles against her chef’s coat. "I’m doing this to secure our future. This flagship is going to make me a global name. And once we’re established, you and I... we can start looking at the bigger picture. Together."
Sloane looked down at his hands on her arms. Just yesterday, those hands had been wrapped around Aria’s waist.
*He really thinks I’m this stupid,* Sloane realized. *He thinks my lack of charisma means I lack self-respect.*
Her internal wound—the deep-seated fear that her lack of sparkling, extroverted charm made her unlovable and invisible—throbbed for a fleeting second. Julian had always exploited that wound. He had convinced her that without his face and his charm, her food would never leave the shadows.
But as she looked at the printed menus, claiming her grandmother's legacy as a cheap influencer's "Parisian Dream," the wound cauterized.
The stoic, observant woman who ruled the kitchen with military precision took over. There was no room for heartbreak on the line. And there was no room for it here.
"I understand," Sloane said softly.
Julian exhaled a massive breath, his shoulders dropping in relief. He pulled her into a quick, obligatory hug, kissing the top of her head. "I knew you would. You’re the only one who really gets me, Sloane. We’re a team."
"Right. A team," she murmured, stepping back out of his embrace.
"Now," Julian said, clapping his hands together as he moved back to his desk. "We have a massive day ahead. Aria is coming in at ten to do a full photoshoot in the main dining room with the truffles. I need you to prep a flawless display plate for her. Make it look rustic but elegant."
"Of course," Sloane said, her face perfectly blank.
Julian’s phone suddenly buzzed on the mahogany desk. The screen lit up with a photo of Aria, her lips puckered in a kissy face.
Julian smiled at the screen, a genuine, boyish grin that he rarely directed at Sloane anymore. He tapped a quick message back, then glanced up at Sloane as if he had just remembered she was still in the room.
"Hey, on your way down to the kitchen, could you be a sweetheart and fetch Aria a cappuccino?" Julian asked casually, already scrolling through his emails. "Oat milk, half-caf, extra foam. She likes it right at a hundred and twenty degrees so it doesn't burn her tongue."
Sloane looked at the man who had built an empire on her recipes. He was asking his Executive Sous-Chef to play barista for his mistress.
Sloane’s lips curved into a slow, deadpan smile. It didn't reach her eyes.
"Of course, Chef," Sloane said smoothly. "Oat milk, half-caf, extra foam. I’ll make sure it’s perfect."
"You're a lifesaver, Sloane," Julian muttered, not looking up from his screen.
Sloane turned and walked out of the plush office, the heavy door clicking shut behind her.
As she walked down the hallway toward the kitchen, she didn't feel the urge to cry. She didn't feel the urge to scream. She felt a cold, hyper-focused clarity settling over her bones, the same clarity she felt right before the chaotic dinner rush began.
She had accepted Kenji Sato’s offer. The flight to Hokkaido was a one-way ticket, and she was leaving exactly two hours before opening night.
*Seven days,* Sloane thought, mentally crossing the first day off her countdown. *Enjoy your coffee, Aria. It’s the last good thing you’ll ever get out of my kitchen.*
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