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Chapter 1

After His Mistress Ruined My Hands, I Walked Out

The scent of browned butter and toasted sage filled the penthouse kitchen, a warm, golden aroma that usually brought Sienna Rossi a sense of profound peace. Tonight, however, her stomach was tied in tight, anxious knots.

She stood before the professional-grade Viking range, her slender fingers deftly flipping a pair of perfectly seared scallops. They sizzled against the cast-iron pan, achieving that elusive, caramelized crust that only a true master could coax from seafood. Beside the stove sat a bottle of vintage Barolo, already breathing, and two crystal glasses.

It was their third anniversary. Three years since she had married Declan Vance, the ambitious, silver-tongued man who had promised her the world. Three years of staying in the shadows, crafting the exquisite, Michelin-caliber menus that had transformed his fledgling hospitality group into a billion-dollar empire.

*He’ll be home soon,* Sienna told herself, wiping her hands on her apron. *He promised he’d be home by eight.*

The digital clock on the microwave glared back at her: *9:45 PM.*

"Just a little longer," she whispered to the empty, cavernous room. She adjusted the heat under the truffle risotto, a recipe passed down from her grandmother. The earthy, intoxicating scent of the rare white truffles she had shaved into the arborio rice was a testament to her devotion. She didn't just cook for Declan; she poured her soul onto the plate, hoping that each perfect bite would remind him of her worth.

The heavy oak front door clicked open.

Sienna’s heart leaped. She quickly smoothed her hair, plastered on a bright smile, and stepped out from behind the marble island. "Declan, I was beginning to think you got caught in—"

The words died in her throat.

Declan Vance stepped into the foyer. He was impeccably dressed in a tailored charcoal suit that emphasized his broad shoulders and commanding presence. His jaw was clenched, his dark eyes sweeping over the romantic candlelit setup with an expression of mild irritation rather than guilt.

And he wasn't alone.

Clinging to his arm, teetering on a pair of red-soled stilettos, was Chloe Sterling.

Sienna felt the floor tilt beneath her feet. Chloe was the newly crowned "face" of the Vance Hospitality Group—a vibrant, blonde twenty-five-year-old with a massive social media following, a dazzling smile, and absolutely zero culinary talent.

"Declan?" Sienna managed to say, her voice trembling slightly. "What is… what is she doing here?"

Declan shrugged off his suit jacket, tossing it carelessly over a velvet armchair. "Don't start, Sienna. It’s been a brutal day at the board meeting."

"It's our anniversary," Sienna said, her hands curling into fists at her sides. She gestured to the dining table, set with their finest china. "I made the scallops. And the truffle risotto. I thought we were celebrating."

Chloe let out a soft, breathy laugh. She stepped further into the room, her eyes darting over the meticulously prepared meal with undisguised amusement. "Oh, Declan, you didn't tell me your wife was playing playing house tonight. How quaint. It smells like… well, a lot of garlic."

"It's shallots and sage," Sienna corrected sharply, her protective instincts flaring. She looked at her husband, pleading with her eyes. "Declan, please. Why is she here?"

Declan sighed, pinching the bridge of his nose. He walked past Sienna, ignoring the romantic setup entirely, and poured himself a glass of the Barolo she had opened for them. He took a sip, his face an unreadable mask of cold calculation.

"The network executives pushed the timeline up," Declan said, his tone entirely businesslike. "Chloe’s television show, *Sterling Tastes*, begins filming its pilot in forty-eight hours. The investors are breathing down my neck. They want a finalized, six-course tasting menu by tomorrow morning."

"And?" Sienna asked, a cold dread washing over her.

"And Chloe's current menu drafts are… uninspired," Declan said smoothly.

"They were too complicated!" Chloe whined, pouting her glossed lips as she leaned against the marble island, dangerously close to Sienna’s prep station. "The network wants accessible luxury. Not that pretentious, molecular gastronomy garbage. I need something that looks gorgeous on camera but doesn't take a genius to make."

Sienna stared at Declan, her chest tightening with the familiar, suffocating weight of his expectations. "You brought her here on our anniversary so I could ghost-write her television menu."

"I brought her here because you are the executive chef of this company in all but name," Declan commanded, his voice hardening into the ruthless tone he used in boardrooms. "Your job is to ensure Vance Hospitality succeeds. Chloe is the face of our new television network deal. Ergo, you are going to write her a menu that will secure the fifty-million-dollar contract."

"I am your wife!" Sienna’s voice finally broke, the raw pain bleeding through. "I have stayed in the background for three years. I let you put other chefs' names on my menus. I let you build your empire on my recipes. But tonight was supposed to be for us."

Declan set his wine glass down with a sharp *clink*. He closed the distance between them, his towering frame casting a dark shadow over her. When he spoke, his voice was dangerously low.

"Do not mistake your utility for leverage, Sienna," he said, his eyes devoid of the warmth he had shown her when they first met. "You cook. That is what you do. You don't have the face, the charisma, or the marketability to be the star. Chloe does. We are on the verge of a global monopoly. Do you think I care about a calendar date when there is fifty million dollars on the table?"

Sienna flinched as if he had struck her. Her internal wound—the deep-seated, agonizing fear that she was only ever loved for what she could produce—throbbed violently. She looked at her scarred, calloused hands. Hands that had chopped, burned, and bled to build Declan’s dream.

"You want me to scrap our anniversary dinner to prep her TV menu," Sienna whispered, the fight draining out of her, replaced by a hollow, sickening resignation.

"I don't want you to. I expect you to," Declan replied coldly. He turned back to Chloe, his demeanor instantly softening. "Go wait in the living room, Chloe. Pour yourself some wine. Sienna will have the first draft ready for you to review in an hour."

"Review?" Sienna choked out. "She doesn't even know how to properly hold a chef's knife!"

Chloe’s eyes narrowed. The sweet, ditzy facade dropped for a fraction of a second, revealing the vain, manipulative core beneath. She stepped into Sienna’s space, her heavy, floral perfume overpowering the delicate aroma of the risotto.

"I know how to hold an audience, Sienna," Chloe sneered quietly, ensuring Declan, who was walking away, couldn't hear. "And I know how to hold your husband's attention. That’s more than you can say."

Sienna’s breath hitched. "Get out of my kitchen."

"Gladly," Chloe smirked. She turned, her elbow jutting out in a seemingly careless, jerky motion.

*Smash.*

Sienna gasped as the small, ornate glass bottle shattered against the terracotta floor tiles. The golden liquid inside spilled out, pooling into the grout.

It was her grandmother’s artisanal white truffle oil. It had been imported from Alba, pressed from a family estate that had since burned down. It was entirely, utterly irreplaceable. The pungent, earthy scent bloomed violently in the air, a beautiful aroma now ruined by the sharp tang of destruction.

"Oops," Chloe said, her voice dripping with mock sympathy. "I guess I'm just so clumsy."

Sienna dropped to her knees, her hands hovering over the shattered glass and the spreading oil, her heart breaking into a thousand jagged pieces. "You did that on purpose."

Chloe crouched down beside her, her perfectly manicured nails resting on the edge of the marble counter. She leaned in close, her lips brushing the shell of Sienna’s ear.

"Get used to the mess, sweetie," Chloe whispered, her voice a venomous hiss. "He doesn't want your boring, domestic home cooking anymore. He prefers my taste now."

Chloe stood up, smoothing her designer dress, and trotted off toward the living room, leaving Sienna kneeling in the ruins of her anniversary, the shattered glass biting into the knees of her jeans.

Sienna looked up at the empty kitchen, the scallops cold and rubbery in the pan, the risotto turning to glue. She had given Declan everything. Her recipes, her youth, her pride.

And as she slowly picked up a shard of glass, feeling the sharp edge press against her skin, she realized it still wasn't enough.

Chapter 2

The Vance Hospitality test kitchen was a gleaming, sterile cathedral of stainless steel and industrial-grade appliances. It was completely devoid of the warmth Sienna usually craved, but today, she didn't care. She was functioning on three hours of sleep, fueled only by black espresso and the bitter, lingering humiliation of the previous night.

"No, that’s completely wrong," Chloe’s nasal voice pierced the hum of the ventilation hood. "I told you, the network wants a rustic Tuscan vibe, but with a modern, low-calorie twist. This looks like peasant food."

Sienna gritted her teeth, her hands expertly segmenting a blood orange with a razor-sharp paring knife. "It’s a traditional duck confit, Chloe. You can't make it low-calorie without ruining the integrity of the dish. And if you're going to present this on television tomorrow, you need to know how to render the fat."

Chloe, lounging on a steel stool across the prep island, rolled her eyes. She was wearing a pristine, tailored white chef’s coat that had clearly never seen a drop of grease. In her right hand, she held a crystal flute of mimosa.

"That's why you're here, Sienna," Chloe said, taking a slow sip. "You do the boring, messy stuff. I do the smiling and the plating. Declan said you’d have this entirely prepped for me to memorize by noon."

"I am prepping it," Sienna said, keeping her voice incredibly level, though her pulse pounded in her ears. "But you have to actually watch what I'm doing. If a judge or a host asks you about the Maillard reaction on the duck skin, you need to know what to say."

"I'll just dazzle them with my smile," Chloe dismissed, hopping off the stool. She swayed slightly, the champagne clearly going to her head. She wandered over to the massive six-burner commercial stove where a deep, heavy-bottomed pan of duck fat was slowly rendering over a low, controlled flame.

"It's taking forever," Chloe complained, peering over the edge of the pan.

"It takes time to render fat properly," Sienna warned, wiping her knife and turning to grab a bundle of thyme. "Step back. It spits."

"You're just stalling because you're jealous," Chloe snapped, her vanity flaring. "You want me to fail tomorrow. I know you do."

"I want to get this over with so I can go home," Sienna replied, her exhaustion making her blunt. "Now please, do not touch the dials. The oil is exactly where it needs to be."

Sienna turned her back for exactly ten seconds to reach into the walk-in refrigerator for the micro-greens.

In that brief, fatal window, Chloe let out a frustrated huff. "I don't have all day for 'traditional' cooking."

Sienna heard the distinct, heavy *click-click-whoosh* of the commercial gas dial being cranked to maximum.

"Chloe, no!" Sienna shouted, spinning around just as a thick, acrid plume of gray smoke erupted from the pan.

The heat had surged too fast. The liquid fat, already hot, hit its flash point in a matter of seconds. The smoke alarm on the ceiling let out an ear-piercing shriek.

Chloe gasped, stumbling backward, dropping her mimosa glass. It shattered on the floor. "Oh my god! It’s smoking! Turn it off!"

"Don't touch it!" Sienna yelled, sprinting across the kitchen.

But Chloe was already panicking. Driven by pure, thoughtless terror, she grabbed the nearest thing she could find—a large plastic pitcher of ice water sitting next to the sink.

"I'll put it out!" Chloe cried.

Sienna’s heart stopped. Time seemed to slow to a crawl. The physics of a grease fire flashed through her brilliant mind in a terrifying, unavoidable sequence. Water hits boiling oil. Water turns to steam instantly. Steam expands rapidly, atomizing the burning oil into a massive fireball.

"CHLOE, NO! IT'S GREASE!" Sienna screamed, throwing herself forward.

Chloe hurled the water into the smoking pan.

The reaction was instantaneous and apocalyptic.

A monstrous pillar of orange and yellow fire exploded outward, sounding like a jet engine roaring to life. The concussive force of the expanding steam blew the heavy pan off the burner. Boiling, flaming oil rained down.

Chloe stood frozen, completely exposed to the incoming wave of liquid fire.

Sienna didn't think. Driven by a lifetime of self-sacrificing instinct, she lunged, tackling Chloe out of the way.

The fireball roared over them, singing the ends of Sienna’s hair. But as they crashed to the floor, the heavy iron pan hit the edge of the stove and tipped.

A torrential splash of boiling, 400-degree duck fat cascaded down.

Sienna threw her hands up to shield her face and Chloe’s head.

The oil hit her bare hands and forearms.

The scream that tore from Sienna’s throat didn't even sound human. It was a raw, primal shriek of absolute agony. The pain was instantaneous and blinding—a white-hot, tearing sensation as the boiling fat seared through her skin, cooking the flesh of her hands in seconds.

She collapsed onto the floor, writhing, unable to even touch her own arms because the nerve endings were screaming in a chorus of sheer torment. The smell of burnt meat and scorched hair filled the kitchen, overpowering the smoke.

"My hands! Oh god, my hands!" Sienna sobbed, her vision tunneling into blackness.

Chloe scrambled backward on her hands and knees, completely unharmed, her eyes wide with horror as she looked at Sienna’s blistering, blackened skin. She didn't offer help. She didn't grab the fire extinguisher.

She just covered her mouth and screamed for the security guards.

Sienna lay on the cold tiles, the world fading in and out. The last thing she felt before the shock dragged her into unconsciousness was the agonizing realization that her hands—the only tools she had ever used to prove her worth—were melting away.

***

*Beep. Beep. Beep.*

The rhythmic, sterile sound pulled Sienna from the dark.

She tried to move, but her arms felt like they were encased in lead. A dull, throbbing ache radiated from her fingertips up to her elbows, muffled only slightly by the heavy dose of intravenous painkillers pumping into her system.

Slowly, she blinked her eyes open. The harsh fluorescent lights of the emergency room stung her corneas. She looked down. Both of her hands and lower arms were heavily wrapped in thick, white gauze. They looked alien. Useless.

"She’s lucky to be alive," a low, clinical voice floated from the hallway outside her curtained cubicle. "Third-degree burns on the palmar surfaces. Severe tissue damage. We'll need to discuss skin grafts when the swelling goes down."

"Will she be able to cook again?"

The second voice belonged to Declan. It wasn't laced with husbandly concern or fear for her life. It was sharp, demanding, and entirely focused on utility.

"Mr. Vance, your wife's motor functions will be severely impaired," the doctor replied gently. "Right now, we are focused on preventing infection. Fine motor skills, like handling a knife? It’s highly unlikely she will ever regain full dexterity."

Sienna squeezed her eyes shut, a single tear escaping and tracking down her cheek. *Never regain full dexterity.* The words echoed in her mind like a death sentence. Cooking wasn't just her job; it was her voice. It was her identity.

Footsteps approached. But before Declan could enter, a third voice interjected. Heavy boots squeaked on the linoleum.

"Mr. Vance? I'm Officer Miller. We need a statement regarding the fire at your facility."

Sienna held her breath, her heart pounding against her ribs.

"Of course, Officer," Declan’s smooth, calculating voice replied. "It’s a tragedy, really."

"We understand Ms. Sterling was in the room," the officer said. "Can you confirm what happened?"

Sienna waited for Declan to tell the truth. To say that Chloe had been careless. That Chloe had thrown water on a grease fire. That Sienna had sacrificed herself to save Chloe’s vain, empty life.

"My wife, Sienna, has been under a lot of stress," Declan said, his tone dripping with manufactured sorrow. "She’s been careless in the kitchen lately. She left a pan of oil unattended and panicked when it ignited. Chloe tried to stop her, but Sienna knocked a pitcher of water onto the stove in her hysteria."

Sienna’s eyes snapped open. The heart monitor beside her bed spiked, beeping erratically.

"So your wife caused the explosion?" the officer clarified.

"Yes," Declan lied, without a single tremor of hesitation. "Chloe is completely innocent. In fact, she’s traumatized. I’ve already sent her home to rest. Sienna is entirely to blame."

Lying in the sterile bed, the agonizing pain in her ruined hands was suddenly eclipsed by a freezing, hollow betrayal that hollowed out her chest. He wasn't just replacing her. He was framing her.

And as the officer thanked Declan and walked away, Sienna knew her nightmare was only just beginning.

Chapter 3

Sienna stared at the ceiling tiles, counting the tiny perforations to keep herself from screaming. The painkillers had dulled the physical fire eating at her flesh, but they did nothing for the cold, venomous rage taking root in her chest.

*He blamed me.*

The curtain rings scraped harshly along the metal track. Sienna didn’t turn her head. She already knew who it was.

Declan walked into the small ER bay, accompanied by a man Sienna recognized instantly—Marcus, the Vance Hospitality Group’s lead PR fixer. Marcus was carrying a sleek leather briefcase and wearing a smile that didn't reach his dead eyes.

"Sienna," Declan said. He didn't rush to her side. He didn't reach out to touch her arm or kiss her forehead. He stood at the foot of her bed, immaculate in a navy suit, looking at her heavily bandaged hands as if they were a piece of broken machinery that was costing him money. "How are the pain meds?"

"You lied to the police," Sienna whispered, her voice raspy from smoke inhalation. She finally turned her head, fixing her dark, tear-rimmed eyes on him. "I heard you, Declan. You told them I caused the fire."

Declan’s expression didn't shift. He merely glanced at Marcus, who stepped forward and clicked open his briefcase on the rolling tray table.

"We are managing a crisis, Sienna," Declan said calmly, leaning against the bedrail. "The news of the fire has already leaked to the press. Chloe’s television pilot is supposed to shoot tomorrow. If the network finds out their new star was drunk, ignored safety protocols, and blew up a kitchen, they will pull the fifty-million-dollar deal."

"So you serve me up on a platter to save her?" Sienna demanded, struggling to sit up. The movement sent a fresh wave of agony up her arms, making her gasp.

"Easy, Mrs. Vance," Marcus said, pulling out a stack of crisp, legal documents and a Montblanc pen. "This is actually the best solution for everyone."

"Best for who?" Sienna spat, her breathing shallow. "She threw water on a grease fire! I pushed her out of the way! My hands are destroyed, Declan! The doctor said I might never hold a knife again!"

For a fraction of a second, a flicker of annoyance crossed Declan’s face. Not pity. Annoyance.

"Which is exactly why you need to be pragmatic," Declan said, his voice dropping into that chilling, reasonable tone he used to dismantle competitors. "Your career in the kitchen is over, Sienna. That’s a tragedy, yes. But the company's future is not over. Chloe’s future is not over. She still has the face, the audience, and the contract."

Sienna stared at him, feeling the last remaining threads of her love for this man wither and turn to ash. "You want me to take the fall publicly."

"Marcus has drafted a non-disclosure agreement," Declan explained, gesturing to the papers. "And a script. We’re going to record a short video of you right here in the hospital bed. You will take full responsibility for the accident. You will apologize to Chloe for putting her in danger. In exchange, the company will cover your medical bills and offer you a generous severance package."

"Severance?" Sienna choked out a bitter, disbelieving laugh. "I am your wife! I am a partner in your company!"

"You are an employee, Sienna," Declan corrected ruthlessly. "You were a ghost. A shadow. Nobody outside of our inner circle even knows you wrote those menus. Legally, Vance Hospitality owns every recipe in your head. And now that your hands are useless, what exactly do you bring to this marriage?"

The cruelty of his words struck her like a physical blow. Her internal wound—the deep, rotting insecurity that she was only lovable as long as she was useful—was ripped wide open. He was validating every dark thought she had ever had about herself.

"I built you," Sienna said, her voice shaking with a terrifying, quiet intensity. "When I met you, you were running a failing bistro in Brooklyn. I gave you my grandmother’s recipes. I worked eighteen-hour days to earn you those Michelin stars. You are nothing without my palate."

Declan laughed. It was a short, breathy sound of genuine amusement. "Oh, Sienna. Grow up. Talent is cheap. Marketing is everything. Chloe is a star. You were just the hired help I happened to marry for convenience."

He walked around the side of the bed, his tall frame looming over her. He reached out and tapped the thick white bandages wrapping her right hand. Sienna flinched in pain.

"Sign the paperwork, Sienna."

"I can't even hold a pen," she sneered through her teeth.

"Marcus brought an ink pad. A thumbprint will do," Declan said smoothly. "You do this, and you get to walk away quietly. You can go back to being a nobody. But if you try to fight me on this? If you try to ruin Chloe's launch by telling the truth?"

Declan leaned in close, his face inches from hers. She could smell his expensive cologne, the same scent he had worn on their wedding day. Now, it made her nauseous.

"If you fight me," Declan whispered, his voice dripping with malice, "I will tie you up in court until you are bankrupt. I will smear your name so thoroughly that you won't even be able to get a job flipping burgers. Your hands are useless now anyway. Sign this, or I cut off your health insurance today."

Sienna looked into the eyes of the man she had loved, the man she had sacrificed her body and soul to elevate. She saw no soul there. Only a bottomless, greedy void.

She looked at Marcus, who was holding out a blue ink pad, waiting patiently like a vulture.

Then she looked at her bandaged hands. They were ruined. Mutilated. But inside her chest, beneath the crushing weight of his betrayal, a tiny, brilliant spark of defiance ignited.

"No," Sienna whispered.

Declan frowned, pulling back slightly. "Excuse me?"

"I said no," Sienna repeated, her voice gaining strength, echoing in the small hospital bay. "I will not sign your NDA. I will not record your video. And I will not let that talentless hack steal my life's work."

Declan’s face darkened with fury. "You stupid, arrogant bitch. You think anyone is going to believe you? You have nothing! You *are* nothing!"

"Get out," Sienna commanded.

"I am cutting off your insurance, Sienna," Declan threatened, pointing a finger at her. "I am freezing our joint accounts. By tomorrow morning, you will be on the street with crippled hands and not a dime to your name."

"Get out of my room!" Sienna screamed, sitting up fully, ignoring the blinding pain in her arms. "Get out!"

Marcus quickly packed up his briefcase, looking nervously at the door. Declan straightened his suit jacket, his jaw locked in a rigid line of pure hatred.

"You'll come crawling back," Declan sneered. "When the pain gets too bad and you realize you have nowhere to go. You'll beg me to sign this."

He turned and marched out of the room, Marcus hurrying behind him like an obedient dog.

The silence that followed was deafening. Sienna fell back against the pillows, her breath coming in ragged, painful gasps. The bravado faded, leaving her alone with the terrifying reality of her situation.

She was penniless. She was severely injured. She was alone.

But as she stared at the ceiling, the tears finally stopped. Declan thought he had broken her spirit. He thought her worth was tied only to her physical ability to cook for him.

He had forgotten one crucial detail.

The recipes weren't just in her hands. They were in her head. They were in her blood. And she was going to burn his empire to the ground.