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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 5

I made it to the parking garage before I let my hands shake.

The car door shut. The dome light died. I sat with the card flat on the steering wheel and my thumb pressed against the fold like I could keep it from opening on its own.

It opened anyway.

Three drafts. His handwriting. The first two scratched through with a single hard line, the way he crossed out a dish that didn't work on a tasting menu.

*Iris, from the first night you walked into my kitchen—*

Crossed out.

*Iris, I knew before I knew. I knew the second you—*

Crossed out.

The third one was clean. No edits. Just one line at the bottom, smaller than the rest, in pencil he'd pressed too hard:

*Once your sister's side is settled.*

I read it twice.

I didn't cry. I'd already done my crying in a closet at 2 a.m. with a yellow Post-it on the nightstand. There wasn't any left for a parking garage.

I lifted my phone. Flash off. Card flat against the passenger seat leather. Three shots. Corners crisp. Ink legible. I dropped the original into the glove box and turned the little brass key.

Then I scrolled to the audio file Mina had pulled off my collar mic, the ambient bed from Room 3, and dragged the slider to 00:14:22.

*"—chef's plating it himself, off-book—"*

*"Take two?"*

*"First one didn't go. Don't ask."*

I played it twice.

I started the car.

---

The safe in the study was already open when I came in. I'd left it that way on purpose. I wasn't hiding from myself anymore.

I laid them out on the desk in the order they'd happened.

The screenshot of his apron belt — the dark one. Tuesday.

A printout of last month's photo, Iris's wrist, the gold charm — *I.* Two weeks back.

The phone shot of his menu draft — *Smoked duck, black fig, lantern oil. I.V.* Last night.

The close-up of her stacked rings at dinner. Tonight, 8:14.

The audio file, exported and labeled. Tonight, 8:42.

The card. Tonight, 9:51.

Six lines. Six things I could put in a lawyer's hand and not have to explain.

Every one of them in his own writing or his own habit. Not a friend's word. Not a tabloid's photo. His belt. His perfume on my pillow. His pencil. His ring sketch. His sous-chef's voice. His draft.

I sat back.

"Huh," I said, out loud, to no one, again.

I opened my messages.

> *Harper. Monday morning, first slot. In person. Bring the prenup file and the Castell Group cross-collateral schedule. Two items on the agenda — marital asset insulation, and termination assessment for all brand partnerships currently routed through CG.*

I read it back.

I deleted *currently routed* and typed *touching*.

I didn't type the word *divorce*. Harper would understand. Harper always understood the word I didn't say better than the ones I did.

Send.

The three dots came up immediately. It was 11:47 on a Saturday.

> *Got it. 9 a.m. my office. Don't talk to him about anything financial before then. Don't sign anything. Don't post anything.*

> *Understood.*

I set the phone face-down.

---

The streaming dashboard loaded slow. The Wi-Fi in the study had always been weak; Damon kept saying he'd run a cable.

He hadn't.

I clicked into the planning tab. New folder. The cursor blinked.

I typed.

*Independent Kitchen Project.*

I made it private. I made it password-protected. I made the password something he'd never guess, because he'd never asked what my mother's middle name was.

Then I opened the archive.

Three years of content. Maison Castell soft launch. Castell & Co. opening week. Bar Mireille tasting. Pomme staff dinner. Behind-the-scenes with the chef. A whole *Sunday with Damon* series, twelve episodes, six million views combined.

I started selecting.

Not deleting. Not yet. Just queueing for unlist. A column on the right where they'd sit, ready, waiting for a button I hadn't pressed.

Forty-seven videos.

I queued every one.

Then I opened a fresh document and started typing a list of restaurants I'd wanted to feature for two years and hadn't, because they weren't his, because covering them would've been *awkward*, because Damon had a way of asking, *babe, why that place when we have four of our own*—

I had eighteen names down when I heard the front door.

Keys in the dish.

His shoes on the runner.

I didn't close the laptop. I didn't sweep the desk. I left the safe door cracked the way I'd found it in my chest tonight — open, and not apologizing.

Footsteps down the hall. They slowed at the study door.

They stopped.

I didn't turn around.

I heard him take in the desk. The safe. The printout of the card photo I'd left face-up under the lamp, blown up to letter size so the *Once your sister's side is settled* sat right at eye level for a man standing in a doorway.

The silence stretched.

Then, quiet:

"When did you start looking."

Not *what is this*. Not *let me explain*. Not *Cass, baby, it's not what you think*.

*When did you start looking.*

I closed the photo. I turned the printout face-down on the desk. I rotated the chair.

I looked at him.

First time, head-on, since the runner had pushed open the door of Room 3 last night.

Navy shirt. Sleeves still rolled. The faint pink mark at his wrist had faded to nothing. His hair was wet at the temples — he'd showered at the restaurant before coming home. He'd showered before coming home.

My eyes were dry.

"Damon."

"Cass—"

"One question."

He waited.

"What day."

"What."

"What day." My voice was level. Camera-level. The voice three million people fell asleep to. "Tell me the day. I'll know which one you mean by how fast you answer."

His mouth opened.

It stayed open a beat too long.

His hand came up to the doorframe. The knuckles went white where he gripped it.

"Cass, which—" His throat moved. "Which day are you asking about."

I didn't blink.

"You tell me," I said. "You pick."

Behind him, down the hall, my phone buzzed once on the desk — Harper, confirming the calendar invite, the small mechanical sound of a Monday morning sliding into place.

He didn't look at it.

He looked at me, and for the first time in three years, I watched my husband try to do math in his head about which betrayal I had counted first.

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