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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 3

The shower cut off at 2:11 a.m.

I heard the towel rack rattle, then the soft slap of bare feet on tile. I'd already turned the iPad face-down. I'd already pulled the duvet to my collarbone. I'd already practiced the breathing.

He came in smelling like our soap, our shampoo, our everything. But underneath it, still—

Bergamot. White tea. A dry sweetness at the bottom that didn't belong in a kitchen.

I knew that bottom note the way I knew my sister's laugh.

Iris had worn it since she turned twenty-two. *Maison Lirelle, Numéro Six.* She bought it in pairs at the airport because she said she was scared they'd discontinue it.

Damon leaned over the bed.

"You awake?"

"Mm."

"Come here."

His hand slid under the duvet for my waist. I rolled the other way, toward the lamp, and brought my forearm up to my cheek.

"Mask," I mumbled. "Don't smudge me."

"You didn't have a mask on ten minutes ago."

"Sheet mask. The new one. Twenty minutes."

He laughed, low. "You and your routines."

"Birthday gift to my pores."

He kissed the back of my head instead, where the smell of him couldn't reach my mouth.

"How was the stream?" he said into my hair.

I kept my eyes on the lamp.

"Quick one. Walked the dining room, wrapped at the dessert pass. Didn't bother with the private rooms tonight."

His shoulders.

I was looking at the wall, but I felt them anyway, through the mattress, through three years of sleeping on his chest. The drop. Half an inch. The exhale he tried to disguise as a yawn.

"Smart," he said. "Saturday's the better night for room tours anyway."

"That's what I figured."

"Sleep, beautiful."

"Mm."

He turned out the lamp.

I waited until his breathing evened out. I waited longer than that. I counted to four hundred.

Then I slid out from under his arm.

---

His briefcase was on the kitchen island where he always dropped it, the leather flap unbuckled, one corner of paper sticking out like it wanted me to find it.

I didn't turn the kitchen light on. The under-cabinet strip was enough.

I lifted the flap.

Receipts. A wine list with edits. A folded sheet of unlined paper, his handwriting on it—the kind he only used for dish development, the loose pencil lines, the arrows.

Tonight's pass. Six courses.

Course four had a star next to it. A five-pointed one, drawn twice over, the way he doodled when he was nervous.

*Smoked duck, black fig, lantern oil.*

And in the right margin, smaller, in pencil he'd pressed too hard:

*I.V.*

I held the page flat against the marble. I pulled out my phone. I opened the cloud folder no one had the key to but me, the one labeled with a tax-form name and nothing else.

Photo. Flash off. Steady.

I checked the focus. I checked the corners. I shot it three times.

Then I folded the menu along its original creases, slid it back at the same angle, tucked the flap the way he'd tucked it.

I clicked the under-cabinet light off.

I went back to bed.

I didn't slam anything. I didn't cry. I lay on my side with my hand under my cheek and watched the line of his shoulder rise and fall, and I let the smell of bergamot tuck itself into a drawer in my head, labeled and dated.

---

By seven he was on the balcony with the pan.

I heard the click of the burner before the smell came in. Brown butter. A crack of pepper. The hiss of egg white meeting heat.

I came out in his shirt because that was the script.

"Morning, birthday girl."

"It was yesterday."

"I'm extending it." He flipped the pan with his wrist. "All weekend. Court order."

He slid two eggs onto a plate. Whites set. Yolks trembling, that exact give I'd shown him on the third date, the way I liked toast to break into them.

He set the plate in front of me. Fork. Folded napkin. A wedge of grapefruit because I didn't drink coffee before food.

"There," he said. "Service."

I picked up the fork.

I looked at the yolks.

For three years I'd eaten this breakfast and felt loved. Three years of soft yellow and butter and a man who remembered.

My stomach turned over once, the way it had at the back door of his restaurant, and this time it didn't settle.

"You're not eating."

"I'm looking."

"That's not the same thing."

"Give me a second."

He sat across from me with his own plate, ankles crossed under the table, watching me the way he watched a new dish go out for the first time.

"Cass."

"Hm."

"You okay? You're quiet."

"Tired. The stream went late on the back end."

"I thought you wrapped at dessert."

The fork paused above the yolk.

"I did. Mina kept me on for analytics review."

"Ah."

He took a bite. Chewed. Swallowed.

"Engagement good?"

"Best birthday numbers I've ever pulled."

"That's my girl."

I cut into the egg. Yellow ran across the white plate, slow, thick, the color of a lantern through a closing door.

I lifted the fork to my mouth.

My phone buzzed against the table.

We both looked.

The screen lit up with a contact photo I'd taken at Christmas—Iris in a red sweater, cheek pressed to mine, both of us laughing at something our mother had said.

*Iris 🤍 — incoming video call*

Damon's hand stopped.

The spatula was still in his right hand. He'd been about to set it down on the trivet. It hovered an inch above the metal, frozen, the muscle in his forearm locked.

I let it ring twice. I watched his hand.

I picked up.

"Morning, baby sis."

"Cass!"

Her face filled the screen, fresh, makeup-free, hair up in the silk scrunchie I'd bought her. Behind her—

Hand-leafed walls. Vintage lantern. A sliver of the corner banquette I'd narrated on camera not fourteen hours ago.

Room 3.

"Where are you?" I said, light, the camera-voice sliding on like a coat. "That wallpaper looks familiar."

"Don't be mad—" she laughed, "—I crashed brunch at Damon's place. I know, I know, I said I'd stop using my brother-in-law card."

"Use it. That's what it's for."

"Listen." Her smile dropped half a notch into something softer. "Are you free tonight? Dinner. Just us. I have something I want to tell you in person."

Across the table, the spatula came down on the trivet at last. Too gently. The metal didn't ring.

"Tonight," I said.

"Eight? Here? I'll book the room."

"Which room, Iris."

A small beat. Her eyes flicked off-camera. Came back.

"Three," she said. "It's my favorite."

I didn't look at Damon.

I smiled the way I'd been smiling for three years of livestreams.

"Eight o'clock. Room three. I'll be there."

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