She stopped in front of Rachel.
Rachel looked up. Her makeup destroyed. Her $12,000 dress wrinkled from clutching it.
“Anna, I’m so—”
Anna pulled her into an embrace.
“I forgive you.”
The microphone picked up the whisper. It echoed through the ballroom.
Rachel collapsed against her younger sister, sobbing.
“I don’t deserve it. I don’t deserve any of this.”
Anna held her tighter.
“That’s why it’s called Grace.”
Three months later, I stood in Anna’s new kitchen — not the 320 ft studio where she’d given up her bed and worked herself to exhaustion, but a two-story townhouse in South Aro purchased with her inheritance, with marble counters, a six-burner stove, and windows overlooking a small garden where magnolia bloomed.
September.
The air carried the salt smell of Charleston Harbor mixed with the scent of simmering stock. Anna stirred a pot of shrimp and grits, adjusting J’s recipe with the confidence of someone who’d finally found her calling. Beside her sat the leather notebook, pages marked with additions in her own handwriting.
The three months since the gala had transformed everything.
In July, Anna had walked into Jerry’s diner for the last time as an employee. Jerry had hugged her so tight she couldn’t breathe, tears streaming down his weathered face.
“You deserve this, baby girl. Your daddy would be so proud.”
The $2 million employee fund had changed Jerry’s life, too. He’d renovated the diner, extended hours to 24/7, and raised every worker’s wage by $3 an hour. Last week, he’d told me he was hiring four new servers.
By August, Anna had enrolled in Lordon Blue’s online program and started classes at Charleston Culinary Institute. She’d tested 47 recipes from J’s Notebook, tweaking spices and techniques until each dish told a story.
September brought J’s Table — 75 seats on King Street, exposed brick walls lined with framed pages from J’s notebook, southern comfort food priced from $12 to $28. Opening night had drawn a three-hour wait and sold every plate. I’d watched Anna move through that dining room like she was born to it.
Rachel’s transformation had been harder, more painful.
The video reached 8.3 million views within a week. Headlines screamed: “Plastic surgeon gave desperate mother $100. Her Beverly Hills practice hemorrhage client 70% gone in 10 days.”
The California Medical Board launched an ethics investigation. They found no grounds for license revocation. She hadn’t violated medical protocols, but her reputation was ashes.
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