The Chef Who Chose The Woman His Brother Tried To Throw Away-lequyen994 - Chainityai

The Chef Who Chose The Woman His Brother Tried To Throw Away-lequyen994

The first time I saw Emily Reese, a man had her pinned by the wrist outside the back door of my restaurant.

Rain ran down the brick wall behind her and made her hair cling to her cheeks.

She was trying not to look scared, which told me she had been scared too often to waste energy showing it.

Image

The man holding her wrist was dressed like he had never washed his own glass.

He said she had taken his wallet.

Emily said she had not touched him.

He called her trash.

That word landed in me harder than it should have.

My father had built Jones & Son with a secondhand stove, a borrowed knife roll, and a sign he painted in our garage.

He used to tell me a restaurant was a door people walked through when the world had been mean to them.

My brother Mark used to roll his eyes when Dad said that.

Mark saw a restaurant as a thing to flip, polish, and sell.

I saw it as the last room where my father still seemed close enough to scold me.

So when that man twisted Emily’s wrist and called her trash, I stepped between them.

I told him the police station was close and the security camera above our alley still worked.

He let go.

He cursed at both of us, then walked away fast enough to make his own story look weak.

Emily yanked her sleeve down and glared at me.

She did not say thank you.

She asked if I always ruined a woman’s business.

I should have let her go.

Instead, I brought her inside because she was shaking and because I had seen her eyes follow the bread basket through the window.

Ten minutes later, she was sitting at table six, holding her throat and claiming my kitchen had served her peanuts.

There were no peanuts in my kitchen.

Read More