Chef’s Family Tried to Ruin Her Opening Night, Until Ezra’s Fiancée Leaked Project Reset-QuynhTranJP

Dad walked into my restaurant like he was entering a room he had already paid for.

Ezra stayed two steps behind him. Mom came in with her purse clutched to her chest, her eyes moving over the empty tables, the candles, the gold-edged place cards still stacked near the host stand. Aunt Linda stood by the door as if she expected someone to offer her water.

Nobody said sorry.

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That was the first thing I noticed.

The second thing I noticed was the manila envelope in Dad’s hand.

He placed it on table seven, the same table where the journalist had eaten opening week, and tapped it twice with his index finger.

“Juliet,” he said, calm and polished, “we’re here to fix this before you damage the family permanently.”

The restaurant still smelled like rain, roasted garlic, lemon peel, and cold coffee from the pot I had forgotten to empty. Natalie sat in the last booth with her phone faceup on the table. Her shoulders were tight. Her thumb hovered near the screen.

Ezra looked at her first.

“What are you doing here?”

Natalie did not answer.

Dad’s jaw moved once.

“Everyone sit down.”

I stayed standing.

“No.”

Mom blinked like the word had struck the glass behind her.

Aunt Linda let out a small laugh.

“She thinks she’s on television now.”

I reached behind me and turned the lock on the front door. The click sounded cleaner than it should have.

Dad opened the envelope and slid out three pages.

“This is a prepared statement,” he said. “You’ll post it tonight. You’ll say the review issue was a misunderstanding. You’ll say your family loves you. You’ll remove that offensive sign. And tomorrow, we’ll meet with a business advisor.”

Ezra shifted.

“Dad.”

Dad did not look at him.

“We are done letting this girl embarrass us.”

Girl.

I was 34 years old. I owned the ovens behind me, the chairs around him, the lease under his elbow, the copper pans hanging over the pass, and the name on the front window.

Still, he said girl.

I looked at the statement.

The top line read: My family has always supported my dream.

A laugh pushed against my ribs, but I swallowed it. My fingers stayed flat against the table. Flour was still caught beneath one thumbnail. The refrigerator hummed behind the kitchen door. Rain ticked against the windows in uneven little taps.

“How much?” I asked.

Dad frowned.

“What?”

“How much of my restaurant were you planning to take in this business advisor meeting?”

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