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The Plate He Cooked For My Sister Novel Cover

The Plate He Cooked For My Sister

Food blogger Cassidy Vale built her career reviewing her husband Damon Castell's restaurants — until a livestream cracks open Private Room 3 and shows him plating a proposal dish for her own sister. Three thousand viewers see it before she does. She finishes the broadcast smiling. She files for divorce twenty pages at a time. She rebuilds an empire he can't eat at. And when Damon finally understands what he traded a marriage for, the woman who once tasted everything he made will not even look at his plate.
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Chapter 1

I tilted the gimbal up, caught my own reflection in the brass trim, and smiled the way I'd been smiling for three years of livestreams.

"Hey, loves. Cassidy Vale, coming to you live from Maison Castell."

The chat exploded before I finished the sentence.

*Queen!! Birthday girl!*

*Sis flexing again 😂*

*That husband of yours better be cooking tonight*

"For anyone new—" I walked the lens along the marble entry, "—this place belongs to my husband. Damon Castell. One restaurant, twelve tables, and a waitlist that laughs at you if you call same-day. A private room? Book a week out. Minimum."

*Sister-in-law privilege activated*

*Damon spoils her sooo bad*

I let the comments scroll. "And yes, before you ask—it is my birthday. Twenty-eight today. Don't do the math on how long Damon and I have been married, you'll embarrass me."

A heart rain bloomed across the screen. In my earpiece, Mina Roe's voice came clean and bright.

"Cass, we're at four hundred K viewers. Push to the hallway, do the room tour, then back for dessert plating."

"Copy."

I turned the corner toward the private rooms, gimbal steady at chest height, narrating the way I always did—soft, warm, that camera-voice that paid my rent before Damon ever did.

"This corridor is my favorite part. Hand-leafed walls. The lanterns are vintage, Damon found them in Kyoto—"

Room 1. Room 2.

A waiter brushed past me with a tray, shouldered the door of Room 3, and the door swung the wrong way.

Inward. Wide. Long enough.

The lens caught it before I did.

A man in a charcoal apron, bent at the waist over a white plate, arranging something with tweezers. The line of his shoulders. The back of his neck I'd kissed a thousand times. Across from him, a woman with my mother's cheekbones and my father's laugh.

Iris.

My little sister, in a cream silk dress I hadn't seen before, with her hand stretched across the table, palm down.

Between them, an open velvet box.

The door drifted shut.

Three seconds. Maybe four.

*WAIT*

*sis turn around*

*ROOM 3 ROOM 3 ROOM 3*

*was that a ring*

*CASSIDY LOOK BACK*

"Cass." Mina's voice cracked in my ear. "Cass, end the corridor bit. Pivot. Pivot now—"

I kept walking.

One. Two. Three.

"Up next," I said, and my voice came out exactly the way it always did, "is the dish I've been begging Damon to put back on the menu—the smoked duck with black fig. He took it off because he said it was too sweet for fall. I disagree. Loudly. In writing. On Instagram."

A nervous laugh from the chat. Then more.

*sis are you okay*

*she didn't see it??*

*scroll back the clip ROOM 3*

I didn't look back. I didn't have to. My peripheral vision had already filed it: the door easing closed, the seam of light narrowing, and the strip of fabric at his waist.

Dark navy. Hand-stitched edge. The apron tie I'd given him our second Christmas, the one he only wore when he cooked himself. Not for events. Not for press. Not for staff training.

For me.

"Smoked duck," I said again, and pointed the lens at the kitchen pass window, "is plated with a fig reduction Damon makes from scratch—"

I kept talking. I named every herb. I told a story about the first time he'd burned the reduction and blamed the stove. The chat tried to drag me back to Room 3 and I let it scroll, let it churn, let it become noise behind a glass wall.

Eight more minutes. I could give them eight more minutes.

When I hit the dessert station, I dropped the closing line on cue.

"Tonight, when I get home, I'll show you the birthday dinner Damon's making me. Be good till then." Two fingers. A heart at the lens. "Love you."

End stream.

The light on the gimbal blinked red, then black.

Mina was already next to me, headset pulled down around her neck, eyes too wide for her face.

I held the rig out.

"Take it."

"Cass—"

"The clip. The corridor pass. Room 3. Pull the raw file. Don't trim it. Don't color it. Don't touch a frame."

"Cass, listen—"

"Raw, Mina."

She took the gimbal. Her fingers were shaking. Mine weren't.

"Send it to the iPad. Now."

"Okay. Okay." She turned, then turned back. "Are you—"

"Don't."

She left.

I walked through the service corridor toward the back exit, past two line cooks who didn't look up, past the dish station, past the door that said STAFF ONLY in three languages. The hallway smelled like brown butter and citrus peel, and my stomach turned once, then settled, the way it does on a plane.

My phone buzzed in my coat pocket.

I knew before I looked.

**Damon 💍**

*Babe—stuck at the office. Inventory blew up, won't make it home tonight. Let's do your birthday tomorrow. I'll cook. Promise. ❤️*

I read it twice.

Then a third time, slower, the way you read a contract.

*Stuck at the office.*

The iPad in my bag chimed. Mina's transfer.

I found a bench by the back door, sat, and opened the file.

The clip ran nine seconds. I scrubbed to the frame I needed.

There.

Damon, leaned across the table. His left hand on Iris's wrist. His right hand sliding a ring—small, round, a band I'd seen in a sketchbook on his desk three years ago—onto her fourth finger.

I zoomed in until the pixels broke.

The ring had a single stone, raised, off-center. He'd told me about it once, in bed, with his mouth against my shoulder.

*"The next one I make will be one of a kind. No twin. No copy. Only ever for one person."*

I'd laughed. I'd said, *"That's a lot of pressure on a future ring."*

He'd said, *"That's the point."*

I closed the iPad.

I sat with my hands flat on my knees and counted the breaths in and the breaths out, and I thought about the apron tie, the dark navy one, and how he'd kissed the back of my neck the first time he'd worn it, and said the knot was a promise.

My phone buzzed again.

**Damon 💍**

*Miss you. Happy birthday, beautiful. Save the wish for tomorrow.*

I typed back without looking.

*Of course. Don't work too hard.*

Send.

I stood up. I smoothed the front of my coat. I walked out the back door of my husband's restaurant, into a Friday evening that smelled like rain and somebody else's cigarette, and I made one decision before I reached the curb.

The raw file stays.

Everything else burns.

Behind me, somewhere on the second floor, a velvet box was clicking shut on a finger that wasn't mine.

In my bag, the iPad chimed one more time.

A second clip from Mina. Three words in the message field.

*There's another angle.*

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