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The Soufflé of Sweet Revenge Novel Cover

The Soufflé of Sweet Revenge

I spent seven years sacrificing my own culinary dreams for my boyfriend, Collin. For our fifth anniversary, I baked his favorite soufflé and waited for him to come home to the romantic dinner I' d prepared. He never showed. Instead, a video surfaced online of him at a party with his rival chef, Frankie. He was laughing as he mocked me to a crowd. "Emma's probably at home crying into her pathetic little soufflé," he slurred. The next morning, he tried to apologize with a "make-up gift." It was a cheap silver necklace, an exact copy of one Frankie always wears. He' d forgotten I'm allergic to silver. In seven years, he never even learned that about me. I wasn't his partner; I was just a dress rehearsal for the woman he really wanted. I packed my bags and flew home to Chicago. When Collin texted, demanding to know what "stupid designer bag" I wanted to make things right, I sent my final reply. "I'm engaged. And trust me, he's everything you're not."
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Chapter 1

I spent seven years sacrificing my own culinary dreams for my boyfriend, Collin. For our fifth anniversary, I baked his favorite soufflé and waited for him to come home to the romantic dinner I' d prepared.

He never showed. Instead, a video surfaced online of him at a party with his rival chef, Frankie. He was laughing as he mocked me to a crowd. "Emma's probably at home crying into her pathetic little soufflé," he slurred.

The next morning, he tried to apologize with a "make-up gift." It was a cheap silver necklace, an exact copy of one Frankie always wears.

He' d forgotten I'm allergic to silver.

In seven years, he never even learned that about me. I wasn't his partner; I was just a dress rehearsal for the woman he really wanted.

I packed my bags and flew home to Chicago. When Collin texted, demanding to know what "stupid designer bag" I wanted to make things right, I sent my final reply.

"I'm engaged. And trust me, he's everything you're not."

Chapter 1

Emma Lang POV:

Collin never cared about me, not really. This painful truth slammed into me, hard enough to knock the wind out of my lungs, as I stared at my phone screen on what was supposed to be our five-year anniversary. It was a betrayal that tasted like ash and burned like fire, destroying everything I thought we had built.

The soft glow of the anniversary dinner I had prepared flickered around me, a cruel joke. The table was set with our best china, the candles casting dancing shadows, and the scent of my carefully baked raspberry soufflé filled the air. It was a scene straight out of a romantic movie, except the leading man was missing.

I had spent hours on the soufflé, Collin's favorite. It was light, airy, and perfect, just like I used to imagine our life together. I had even bought a new dress, something special, hoping to rekindle the spark that had dimmed so long ago. My heart drummed with a nervous anticipation, a mix of hope and a familiar dread.

The clock on the wall mocked me with its steady tick-tock. Seven o'clock. Eight. Nine. Each minute felt like a heavy stone dropping into a bottomless well. My phone, usually a constant companion, lay silent on the counter. No calls, no texts, not even a lame excuse.

I picked it up for the tenth time, unlocking the screen, then locking it again. My thumb hovered over Collin's contact, but I didn't dial. What was the point? This wasn't new. His disappearances had become as predictable as the sunrise, always with a flimsy story about a "culinary emergency" or a "last-minute catering crisis."

But tonight felt different. It was our anniversary. Even Collin, with his endless self-absorption, usually remembered that. A cold knot tightened in my stomach.

Then, a notification popped up. A social media post. Not from Collin, but from Frankie Patton. My heart sank even before I saw the image. Frankie, the flashier, trendier chef Collin was obsessed with, the one he constantly measured himself against.

The picture was a selfie. Frankie, beaming, her arm slung casually around Collin's waist. He was laughing, a genuine, unburdened laugh I hadn't seen directed at me in years. They were standing in front of a sprawling catering display, surrounded by glittering lights and champagne flutes. The caption read: "Another flawless event with my favorite culinary partner! Couldn't have pulled off this surprise party without you, my sweet Collin! #DreamTeam #CulinaryMagic #BestPartnerEver"

My sweet Collin. The words were a punch to the gut. They weren't even trying to hide it anymore.

My eyes scrolled down the comments. A stream of heart emojis and compliments for their "chemistry." Then, a video autoplayed. It was a short clip of Collin, his face flushed with wine, telling a story to a group of people. I couldn't hear every word, but the disdain in his voice was clear as he mimicked someone.

"Emma, darling," he sneered, his voice high-pitched and mocking, "can you believe I actually have to work tonight? So sad, our anniversary. But don't worry, I'll bring you home some scraps!" The crowd around him roared with laughter. Frankie, standing beside him, clinked their champagne glasses together.

The sound of his mockery, coupled with the image of his adoring gaze at Frankie, ripped through me. It wasn't just a betrayal. It was an annihilation of every sacrifice I had made, every quiet compromise, every dream I had put on hold for him. He saw me as a joke, a burden, a doormat.

A strange calm settled over me. The kind of calm that comes after the storm has passed, leaving only devastation in its wake. All the little lies, the forgotten dates, the late-night texts he'd hide-they all clicked into place, forming a horrifyingly clear picture. I wasn't his partner. I was his glorified sous chef, his therapist, his emotional punching bag. And sometimes, his backup plan.

I looked at the perfectly set table, the cooling soufflé, the uneaten dinner for two. Every bit of it felt like a monument to my own foolishness. I had made myself small, invisible, so as not to "intimidate" him with my own talent, my own ambition. And for what? To be mocked and discarded?

No. Not anymore.

I pulled out my phone, my fingers steady. I typed out a message to Collin. "It's over. Don't bother coming home. I'll be gone by morning." I hit send.

Then I called my dad. "Dad," I said, my voice surprisingly flat. "I'm coming home. To Chicago."

The next morning, Collin' s text arrived. "Emma, what is this nonsense? Are you seriously doing this over a little catering gig? Don't be dramatic. I'll be home later, we'll talk. This isn't how we do things." He still thought it was about him, about his "gig." He couldn't even see past his own ego to understand the depth of the chasm he' d dug.

He still thought he could "talk me down," as he always did. He thought I was just throwing a tantrum. But this time, there was no tantrum. Only a quiet, resolute finality.

My phone buzzed again, this time with a video message. It was from Frankie Patton. A short clip, clearly recorded after Collin's mockery. Collin, draped over Frankie, his hand resting intimately on her thigh, was still making jokes. "Honestly, Emma's probably at home crying into her pathetic little soufflé," he slurred to the camera, and his friends laughed. "She's so easy to handle. Just buy her a cheap necklace and tell her she's pretty, and she'll forget all about it."

Frankie, her eyes gleaming with malice, leaned into the camera. "Poor Emma," she purred, "always so predictable. Some women just don't know how to keep a man interested, do they?"

The video ended with a close-up of Collin kissing Frankie, a lingering, possessive kiss. Not the fleeting peck he'd give me when he was distracted. This was full of a dark, hungry passion.

I felt nothing. No pain, no anger. Just a profound, chilling emptiness. My mind flashed back to our first date, his charming smile, the way he' d talked about his dreams. It had all felt so real, so promising. But now, that memory was tainted, corrupted.

He' d called me Ava once, early on. Ava, his culinary school rival, the one he talked about constantly. I' d brushed it off then, a slip of the tongue. He' d apologized profusely, bought me flowers, cooked me dinner. Now I saw it for what it was: a glimpse into his true obsession. He wasn't in love with me. He was in love with the idea of winning against Frankie, and I was just a convenient stand-in.

I thought of all the times I' d canceled my own culinary aspirations, all the times I' d poured my energy into his struggling restaurant, all the quiet nights I spent alone while he was "working late." I' d even ignored my own father' s quiet warnings, his disappointment that I was dimming my own light for a man who didn't deserve it.

He hadn't been loving me. He' d been practicing. Rehearsing all the grand gestures, the tender words, the passionate kisses for Frankie. I was merely a dress rehearsal for the main event. Every "I love you," every promise of a future, every romantic dinner he' d cooked for me – all of it was a lie. A performance.

My phone vibrated again. A memory. My father, years ago, when I first moved to Austin. "Emma," he'd said, his voice gentle but firm. "There are some men who see you, truly see your talent and your soul. And there are others who only see what you can give them. Be careful which one you choose." I had laughed it off then, young and naive, convinced Collin was the former.

Now, his words echoed like a prophecy.

My phone rang. It was my father again. How about you come home and we revisit that business proposal from Dawson Herrera? he' d suggested, his voice carefully casual. He's been asking about you for years.

Dawson Herrera. The name sparked a flicker of something in the cold emptiness. The formidable food critic, the heir to the Herrera Hospitality Group. He had admired my father's work for decades. And once, years ago, he'd tasted one of my early pastries at a charity event. He hadn't just admired it; he'd remembered it. My father had often joked that a business alliance with Herrera would be the best thing for my career.

A purely business engagement, of course. A strategic alliance. But the thought of it, of putting my life back on a serious, ambitious track, suddenly felt like a lifeline.

Collin's final text message popped up. "So, still playing hard to get? You know you'll come crawling back. You always do. Just tell me what you want, Emma. Another stupid designer bag? A weekend getaway? I'll even pretend to like your dad for a day."

My blood ran cold. He still thought I was for sale.

I typed out my reply, my fingers flying across the screen. "You want to know what I want, Collin? I want a man who respects me, who cherishes me, and who doesn't use me as a stepping stone. And I'm getting one. I'm engaged. And trust me, he's everything you're not." I didn't wait for his reply. I blocked his number, then Frankie's. I deleted every photo, every message, every trace of him from my life.

I closed my eyes. It was over. Truly, irrevocably over.

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