Chapter 6

Chapter

Six

“Holy crap,” Hope mumbled under her breath.

She really should have checked out the restaurant last night when she’d arrived, but it’d been so late and she’d wanted to make sure that Eva had gotten to sleep on time. There was so much that was new, that she hadn’t wanted to upset the routine they’d planned out for her.

But this… this might just take the cake.

The smell emanating from the kitchen reached the dining room.

In fact, it reached the hallway that attached the hotel to the restaurant in the most unplanned way.

These were clearly two buildings that had been smooshed together by time and space.

Hope clenched her jaw and tried to hold her breath, but she wouldn’t be able to get any work done if she passed out.

“What’s that stench?” Cadence asked, pressing the back of her hand to her nose.

“Rotten food,” Hope answered, not looking at Cadence.

“Rotten—what?” Cadence waved to Justin to keep up with them as Hope stepped deeper into the kitchen.

There was no doubt in Hope’s mind that it was rotten food, and that it had been sitting around for a very long time.

That, or there was an overwhelming abundance of it.

The kitchen was empty, thankfully, because Hope didn’t want anyone to see just how sick she felt.

Except maybe the viewers of their show. She started with the prep tables, checking the food there, but it all seemed okay.

Though nothing was dated, so it’d have to go anyway.

When she opened the fridge, Hope had to immediately shut it.

Her stomach churned so hard that she nearly puked.

She doubled over and put her hands on her knees, closing her eyes and taking deep breaths.

It took all of twenty more seconds for the blast of scent to reach Cadence and Justin, who also started gagging.

“What is that?” Cadence asked again.

“Rotten food,” Hope repeated. “I suggest you either hold your breath or step back, but I need to go in there.”

She took a deep breath, opened the door and stepped into the fridge.

Which was definitely too warm. And the seal on the edge of it was broken.

Hope held her hand over her nose as if that was going to help her any.

Justin followed her inside with the camera in front of him. He was braver than Cadence.

Hope still wasn’t sure what to make of Cadence. She was all bravado one minute and then chickening out the next. And the way she talked to Angelica, the way she hovered over her, set Hope off.

Facing the camera directly, Hope talked into it like she was speaking to the audience on the other side.

“I’m not sure how long this food has been rotting in here, but it’s definitely rotten.

” She ripped the lid off of a plastic container and nearly puked just from the sight.

“You can see the slimy film on the chicken here.” She held the container up to the light so that the camera could pan down. “That takes a while to form.”

Putting the lid back on, Hope tossed it on the shelf. She went through shelf after shelf in the fridge, finding more and more items that were just absolutely rotten.

“I hope they haven’t served any of this recently,” she said, glancing around the refrigerator. “There’s nothing in here that’s good to eat.”

Hope went through the rest of the kitchen before she sighed heavily and stared around at it. “We need to shut this place down for forty-eight hours at least.”

“What are you doing?” A woman with short hair stepped into the kitchen, a loose t-shirt that was clearly two or three sizes too big for her hanging from her body.

“I’m going through the kitchen.” Hope furrowed her brow and stared at her. “You must be the chef?”

“I am.” She put her hands on her hips and glowered.

“This is uh… Dawn.” Ali raced into the kitchen as if she’d finally caught up with something.

Hope flicked her gaze to Ali and then focused back on Dawn. “When’s the last time you served a meal out of this kitchen?”

“Last night.”

“Seriously?” Hope couldn’t believe it. “Do you know the proper way to store chicken?”

“Yes.”

“Do you know what date this went out?” She pointed to the fresh greens on the prep station.

“Yes.”

“What date?”

“Today.”

Hope narrowed her gaze, looking between Dawn and Ali. “And how does anyone else know that? Since nothing is recorded?”

“I’m here to tell them.”

“You’re not here every day.”

“I run this kitchen.” Dawn put her hands on her hips and glared. “I am this kitchen.”

Well, here was the problem that Hope hadn’t wanted to deal with. She needed fresh air too, because the scent of rotten food was overwhelming her head. “How many staff do you have?”

“One.”

“You have two people working in this kitchen?” Shock rocked through Hope. That would explain a good chunk. She moved her gaze from Dawn to Ali. “You let her have only one other person? How many hours a week is she working?”

Dawn seemed at least pleased to have that question pointed out.

“Uh…” Ali’s cheeks reddened. “Eighty?”

“Closer to a hundred,” Dawn mumbled.

“All right, you and I are going to sit down about that.” She pointed to Ali.

“But you and I are going to sit down about proper food storage and inspection requirements.” Hope clenched her fists hard.

“In the meantime, I want you two to clean out every single morsel of food in this kitchen, rotten or not. We’re starting fresh. ”

“What?” Ali’s jaw dropped.

“Now,” Hope confirmed with a sharp nod. “I need to talk to Ange.”

Hope pushed her way out of the kitchen, into the dining room, and back through the small hallway, where she stopped.

Her stomach was done. She walked down the back of the hallway and stepped out into the fresh air.

She barely got a breath in before she doubled over and lost her breakfast all over the brick walkway.

She pressed her hand against the wall to hold herself up as she retched again.

Her eyes watered from the force of it, a cold sweat settling along the small of her back and goosebumps pricking up on her arms and chest.

“Justin, stop filming,” Cadence’s voice was gentle.

Of course they’d gotten that all on camera. And knowing Rex and Josef, they’d keep it in the final cut because it would add to the drama. Hope closed her eyes and tried to catch her bearings. Cadence’s hand against her shoulder was soothing.

“Take your time,” Cadence said. “That was disgusting.”

The last thing Hope wanted was to think about that kitchen.

She could typically handle things like that better, but she’d been feeling off all morning, and she was fairly sure it was because of filming with Angelica again.

The stress and pressure had only added up until it’d finally taken its toll on her.

“I’ll be fine in a minute,” Hope muttered.

“Let me get you some water.” Cadence disappeared.

Finally alone, Hope breathed out heavily.

She raised her hands to her face and wiped away the tears in her eyes.

She hated puking. Though, to be fair, she was certain no one liked the experience.

She slowly straightened her back, letting the breeze reach her cheeks and cool the burning in her skin.

She would take as much time as she needed.

Screw filming. This wasn’t about just not throwing up again, it was about making sure that she was actually ready to film season three.

She thought she’d been ready, but seeing Angelica that morning with Cadence—she hadn’t been prepared at all.

“Here.” Cadence handed over a bottle of water.

Hope twisted the cap, filled her mouth, swished it around, and then spit it out. She still said nothing. She had nothing to say because if she let her tongue run wild, she’d make accusations that would get all of them in more trouble than was necessary.

“Thanks,” Hope mumbled as she took a long sip and drank. It was exactly what she needed. “What’s Ange doing?”

“Uh, I think she’s waiting on you to film introductions.”

Hope nodded. “I need to talk to her.”

Spitting out another mouthful of water, Hope headed inside to find Angelica.

When she rounded the corner and made her way into the main lobby and reception area, she was glad to find Angelica standing right in front of the desk that looked like it was straight out of the seventies.

She had her iPad up and was reading something on it, but no one else was talking to her.

“Ange!” Hope called, getting her attention. “We have a problem.”

“We have a lot of problems,” Angelica said, still not looking up from her iPad.

“No, this one’s bad.” Hope set the water bottle down heavily on the counter. Angelica jumped from the sound. Hope looked at her curiously, but didn’t comment on the move. The only time Angelica had been jumpy like that had been when they were in Las Vegas, which had been reasonable. “I need help.”

“You’re fully capable of handling a kitchen on your own.”

“Ange!” Hope’s voice rose sharply.

Angelica finally looked up and met Hope’s eyes.

“Listen to me.” Hope leaned in closer, clasping her hand around Angelica’s wrist and pushing the iPad away from her so she couldn’t look at it.

She needed Angelica to understand her, to hear her.

“We weren’t prepared to come in here. Melissa and Ali kept a whole lot from us, and we’re not prepared. ”

“You’ve handled worse, Hope. I’ve seen you do it. So handle this.”

“I. Can’t.” Hope clenched her jaw tightly. “There’s no staff. There’s no standards. They have their chef working nonstop. The poor woman probably sleeps here. I can get the kitchen running in a week, but I can’t train staff at the same time.”

Angelica pursed her lips, looking directly at Hope. “Grow the hell up, Hope. Figure it out. You’re a boss. You’re a restaurant owner. Stop looking to other people to solve your problems.”

Hope tightened her grasp on Angelica’s wrist, wanting to fire back at her.

But she couldn’t tell if that last comment had been about the hotel they were trying to fix up, or if it was about Hope’s personal life.

Either way, it was a brutal insult. Hope breathed slowly, leaning in even more so that she was nearly nose-to-nose with Angelica.

“We have to work together to fix Harbour Inn” —she made sure to emphasize the name so that Angelica would know what she was talking about— “otherwise we’re never going to manage to set them straight. ”

Angelica snorted lightly. “I have my own problems to solve, Hope. I don’t have time to deal with yours.”

Angelica stepped back, putting space between them, but Hope followed her. She wasn’t going to let this go. “No. We need to do this together.”

“No, we don’t. We need to divide and conquer.” Angelica crossed her arms and glared fully at Hope. “I trust your abilities. I trust you know what you’re doing. Trust yourself.”

Hope paused, canting her head to the side. She flicked her gaze over Angelica’s shoulder, cursing under her breath when she saw Sy standing there with a camera pointing in her direction, then to Justin who also had his camera pointed at them. Was this all for show? Was this all for the ratings?

Josef wove his way through, and Hope locked her gaze on him.

He moved his hands in front of him, moving them in a circle as if he was trying to get her to continue the argument.

This was exactly what he’d wanted, wasn’t it?

Up the tension? Up the conflict? Fuck, Hope had just played right into his hands when she hadn’t wanted to.

“It’s not that I can’t do it by myself. It’s that we’re doing this as a team.

We’ve always been a team.” Hope bit the inside of her cheek, wanting Angelica to understand the subtext.

But Angelica was so dense sometimes, that she wasn’t sure she was making a dent in her thick skull. “We do these things together.”

“Not this time,” Angelica fired back, her voice far calmer than it had been before. “This time, we divide and we conquer.”

Why did she keep saying that?

“I need to talk to you.” Hope took Angelica by the arm and walked directly toward the small staging area that they had. She shut the door, out of the view of crew and cameras, and turned on Angelica. “What the hell is wrong with you?”

“With me?” Angelica’s lips pressed into a thin line.

“Yes! Do you want this show to continue or not? Because we need to make sure that we get renewed. We’re the ones all of this is relying on. And you’re just shutting me out!” Hope fisted her hands and put them on her hips.

Angelica set her iPad heavily on the table and leaned against it, crossing her arms. “You want to be renewed again?”

“Yes! This crew relies on us.” Hope frowned, not sure where Angelica was going with this.

Cocking her head to the side, Angelica stood up slowly and took her iPad again. “I can’t do this again.”

And she walked out of the room.

“Can’t do what again?” Hope stood there, frozen on the spot.

Had Angelica meant the show? A fourth season? Had she meant the relationship? The arguments? The tension? The conflict? What the hell had she been talking about? Hope’s heart raced. But she didn’t leave the room. The silence was so loud, and it rushed through her ears like a roaring wind.

The knock on the door startled her. Cadence popped her head in and seemed relieved to find Hope still there. “You doing okay?”

“No.” Hope sighed heavily and pinched the bridge of her nose. This was all too much. Between Rex and Eva and Angelica, Hope didn’t stand a damn chance of surviving this season if this was how it was going to go. A hell of her own making for sure.

“Is it always like this?”

“Like what?” Hope bit her lip and tried to center herself, focusing on Cadence and her questions.

“Intense.”

Laughing, Hope nodded. “Oh yeah. You’ll learn pretty quickly that anything involving Angelica Shields is intense.”

“Right.” Cadence glanced over her shoulder. “They want to film the introductions.”

“Now?” Hope asked, disbelief seeping into her voice.

“Yeah.”

“Fine.” Hope shook out her hands and took one more steadying breath. “Let’s get this over with.”

If ads affect your reading experience, click here to remove ads on this page.