and colleagues. He was going to ruin everything, and there was nothing she could do to stop it; not if Ty was just going to roll over and let Knox walk all over him.
She pulled the dossier in front of her. Ty and Knox sat, stunned, watching her flip open the contract. Neither had yet to say a word about her brazen intrusion. How the hell was she getting away with this?
Her anger was too blinding for her to focus on the words or make heads-or-tails of the legal jargon. But sheâd heard all she needed to know. Knox and his investors were going to turn the resort into yet another cookie cutter chain hotel. âTy, this is a bad deal. Heâs going to sell out. Heâs a business flipper. Thatâs what he does. He doesnât care about the Briscoes at all.â
âI am a Briscoe,â Knox said in a dull, even tone.
Emily was too pissed off to look him in the eye. She took another bite of soup to keep herself from telling him that he wasnât a Briscoe in any way but his name. Instead, to Ty, she said, âIf you do this, youâre going to lose everything your parents built, everything youâve worked your whole life for.â
âThatâs enough, Emily,â Ty said, but there was no mistaking the tinge of regret in his eyes.
Knox rose slowly, buttoning his suit jacket as he loomed over Emily. âAre you asking to be fired, Ms. Ford? Because I was hoping the chef I hire for the new restaurant would see the value in keeping on some of the resortâs restaurant workers as line cooks.â
Oh, this man. Emily visualized the way his perfect suit would look covered in mushroom reduction, sweet potato puree, and bits of roasted pheasant. In the end, she decided against the childish act, more out of respect for Ty than any sense of dignity or self-preservation.
Ty jabbed his spoon in the air at Knox. âYou watch your tone with her. Emilyâs too valuable an asset at this resort to work as a line cook.â
Spoken like the father figure he was to her. Emilyâs heart warmed for the man whoâd taken a huge risk in hiring her right out of chef school, homeless and without a penny to her name. Of course, she didnât reveal any of that. She carefully schooled her features, refusing to splay open her chest and give Knox Briscoe one single glimpse of her heart. His careless response to her peaches was proof enough of his lack of a soul.
The gleam in Knoxâs eyes turned cool and calculating as he turned his focus to Ty. âI wouldnât have expected that from you, Ty. Sleeping with the special event chef. Interesting. And against my business policy.â
Emilyâs self-control snapped. She pushed up from her chair, ready to get in Knox Briscoeâs face and give him a piece of her mind. She slammed her hands onto the table for emphasis, but instead of hitting the table, her right hand caught the rim of the soup bowl. As though in slow motion, the bowl launched itself at Knox. Emily lunged for it, but she was too late. Bright orange soup splashed all over the front of his suit.
Mortified, she stood over him and watched glops of peach and brûlée topping ooze like lava into the creases of his waistband and belt.
For his part, Knox didnât rise or curse at herâas Ty was doing, she noticed out of the corner of her eyeânor did he attempt to clean himself off. He kept his cucumber-cool gaze locked on hers, a slight smirk curved on his lips. âDid I hit too close to home on that observation, Ms. Ford?â
Holy shit. Sheâd spilled soup all over her new boss. There was no way she was getting the restaurant now. Sheâd be lucky to keep her job. What she refused to give up was the last shreds of her dignity. Nobody insulted her by insinuating that sheâd slept her way to the top and got away with it, not even the intimidating Knox Briscoe.
She rose to her full height. âI may not know what your father did to get disowned