The kitchen of Étoile de Feu was a cathedral of steel and flame. Copper pans glowed beneath hanging lights, knives flashed in expert hands, and the hiss of butter hitting searing pans rose like a hymn. The orchestra of heat and motion had one conductorAdrian Veyron.
He stood at the heart of it, tall, severe, every movement a command. His dark hair, flecked at the temples with early silver, was slicked neatly back, his chef’s whites immaculate despite the storm of cooking around him. His voice cut sharper than any knife, low and precise as he barked corrections across the line.
“Too much salt. Redo the jus.”
“Plate cleaner. This is not a bistro.”
“Service waits for no one. Move.”
Every word sent ripples of fear and urgency through the brigade. No one argued with Adrian Veyron. To be in his kitchen was to serve perfection, or burn out trying.
The air itself seemed to hold its breath when he passed, his presence commanding both reverence and terror. Young chefs whispered his name like a legend. Critics hailed him as a god of cuisine. Investors called him an empire. But those who worked under him knew better. To them, he was fire incarnate, brilliant, consuming, and merciless
Adrian glanced at the clock. Midnight soon. Another flawless service completed, another set of dignitaries dazzled into silence by dishes plated with artistry that bordered on cruelty. His lips curved in the faintest smirk. The restaurant remained untouchable.
And so did he.
When the announcement came a reminder from the manager that the new apprentices would arrive tomorrow, Adrian gave a curt nod. He didn’t care to meet them. Apprentices were green wood thrown into the fire, most snapping under the heat before they ever hardened.
But tonight, as he loosened the collar of his jacket and stepped into his office, he lingered over the file placed neatly on his desk. The list of names.
One in particular made his gaze still.
Luca Moretti.
He knew that name. Faintly. A whisper of the past. His jaw tightened as he read the origin: Naples. Culinary school, small scholarships, an inconsistent record but high praise from instructors who spoke of raw, instinctive talent.
And something else. His grandmother. Gianna Moretti.
Adrian exhaled through his nose, the memory sharp and unbidden. A cramped kitchen years ago, before the empire, before the Michelin stars. A woman with gentle hands stirring tomato sauce that sang of love rather than ambition. A kitchen that smelled of warmth, not pressure.
He snapped the file shut. Sentiment had no place here. If the boy was anything like his grandmother, he’d be too soft, too rustic, too unsuited for the iron discipline of haute cuisine.
Tomorrow, he would test him. And burn the softness out.
The next evening, the kitchen was already roaring when the apprentices were led in. Five of them, wide-eyed, stiff in their new whites.
Adrian barely turned his head as the head chef introduced them. His attention was fixed on the pass, on the rhythm of dishes leaving for service. He had no patience for trembling hands and false bravado.
Then a voice broke the din.
“Chef Veyron?”
He looked up.
The boy no, not a boy, a young man stood at the end of the line. Olive-toned skin, dark curls that refused to be tamed beneath his cap, eyes that were at once uncertain and burning with quiet determination. His jaw was tight, his shoulders squared, though he clutched his knives like a lifeline.
“Moretti,” Adrian said, the name clipped, tasting like something he’d rather spit out.
“Yes, Chef,” Luca answered, voice steady despite the tremor in his hand.
Adrian let his gaze drag over him, cold and assessing. There was a fragility to him, a softness that set him apart from the hardened, sharp-edged crew. A softness Adrian despised.
“You’ll work garde manger (keeper of food) tonight,” Adrian ordered. “If you crumble under pressure, pack your knives and leave. My kitchen does not babysit.”
“Yes, Chef.”
Adrian turned away, dismissing him. But out of the corner of his eye, he saw Luca exhale, set his knives down, and begin.
The hours that followed were baptism by fire. Orders came in relentless waves. Luca chopped, plated, and garnished, his motions stumbling at first, then growing sharper under the weight of scrutiny. He burned his wrist on a pan, sliced his finger on a knife too quickly, but pressed on without complaint.
Adrian’s eyes found him more than once, though he told himself it was only vigilance. Yet when Luca saved a collapsing plate at the last second with a garnish placed just right, something in Adrian’s chest flickered. A small, unwelcome heat.
By the end of service, the other apprentices sagged with exhaustion. Luca, though pale with sweat, stood tall, his chin lifted as though daring the world to tell him he didn’t belong.
Adrian approached him then, silent until the young man turned, startled by the sudden shadow at his side.
“You’ll either burn,” Adrian said softly, “or rise in my kitchen.”
His eyes locked with Luca’s. For a heartbeat too long, the world stilled the clang of pans, the hiss of flame fading into nothing.
Luca swallowed, voice low but firm. “Then let me rise, Chef.”
Something sharp and dangerous flared between them. Adrian broke the gaze first, stepping back into the firestorm of his kitchen, his expression unreadable.
But even as he shouted orders, even as he restored order to the storm, he felt it. That flicker. That dangerous, forbidden spark.
And Adrian Veyron, untouchable king of fire, knew with a certainty that this apprentice would change everything.