When he sees twenty-somethings obsessing about foam or rushing around the kitchen in a competitive cooking challenge, it’s kind of like watching pornography. I think: I’d love to do that, but I’m afraid I’ll throw out my back.
—Rick Rodgers interviewed by Kathleen Flinn
I arrived at Key Zest at eight, damp from the fastest shower on record. The Key Zest office sits above Preferred Properties real estate on Southard, more attic really, than office. Danielle, our magazine’s receptionist, looked at the clock and then at my overheated face—still red like a tomato the last time I checked in the mirror. She touched a finger to her glossy pink lips.
“I wouldn’t go in there,” she whispered, pointing at Wally’s office. “Not unless he calls for you.”
Through the blinds on Wally’s windowed wall, I could see the silhouettes of two figures, one at the desk, one in the chair beside the desk. “Just Off Duval?” I asked in a hushed voice.
She nodded and made a quick face. “Livid,” she whispered again.
“Shoot.” I crept past Wally’s half-opened door and slipped down the hall to my nook, which is more like a hallway aneurysm than an office. Leaving my door cracked open so I could eavesdrop, I turned on my computer and pretended to work. Not easy with the raised voices that began to carom down the short hall.
Wally’s voice came first, low and controlled. “I’m sorry you didn’t like the review. A new restaurant takes its chances. But you’ve got enough experience to know that already. We have to act like serious journalists or we won’t be taken seriously. And that means we call them as we taste them. We’re not designing advertising—we publish reviews.”
Then came another male voice, loud and furious. “If she’d let them know that she was there, the chef could have done something about—”
“Either the kitchen can cook or it can’t,” Wally cut in. “A critic’s presence at one of the tables in the front of the house shouldn’t make any difference at all.”
“If you don’t care about advertising revenue, that’s a fine business practice,” the second man said.
“If you wish to take out an ad, we will include whatever copy you choose. But the wording in our review is not up to you. The piece stands.”
Wow. He was going way out on a limb for me.
I heard the noise of a chair scraping on the tile floor and then the second man said: “I could appreciate you standing behind an experienced reviewer. But bleeding to death over a newcomer who doesn’t know pâté from potatoes? Pure foolishness.” He stomped the short length of the hallway and slammed out of the office.
I waited a few minutes to be sure he wouldn’t come back with more last words, then edged down the hall and stuck my head into Wally’s office.
“That went well,” he said, adding a lopsided grin. “Come on in.” He waved me in, then ran fingers through his short blond hair until it stood straight up. He had on the same yellow shirt with palm trees on it that Danielle and I were wearing—one of his sort-of-endearing eccentricities was insistence on a company uniform.
“I’m sorry I was late,” I said, brushing past the enormous faux palm tree that guarded the door to his office. “I was over at the harbor when you messaged me. I should have been here to help you out.”
Danielle rolled her chair down the hall from the reception desk and stopped in the doorway. “No amount of reinforcement from extra troops was going to change that man’s mind. He’s a bully, pure and simple,” she added.
“I should have gone easier on the descriptions,” I said. “The olive oil wasn’t really that close to rancid, just a little off. And we didn’t actually get sick. And it wasn’t fair for me to predict the restaurant would fail.”
“Diners don’t want reviews that are whitewashed,” Wally said, sliding his tortoiseshell glasses down his nose and peering over the top of them. “They are spending good money on this place and they deserve the truth. You have to get over this urge to be nice, and go ahead and say what needs to be said.”
“But you’re always telling me to smile when people come in,” said Danielle.
“You’re a receptionist, she’s a critic,” said Wally firmly. “Different job descriptions.” He crooked a smile, ran his fingers through his hair again, and pushed his glasses up to the top of his head. “Can I talk to you alone for a minute, Hayley?”
“Of course. Let me get something to write on.” As Danielle rolled back to her station, I trotted down the hall to my tiny workspace and grabbed a tablet and a pen from the desk, hoping he didn’t have more bad news. Was my trial employment period up? Had I flunked a test I didn’t know I was taking? I returned to Wally’s office and took the seat catty-corner to his, still warm from the irate restaurateur who’d sat there only minutes earlier.
He smiled and patted his desk blotter. “Don’t look so worried. You’re doing fine. This is about a new assignment. A real plum. You know the Food and Wine Festival is upon us, right?”
“Of course. I have tickets for the Mallory Square Stroll tomorrow night, remember? And Duval Uncorked on Saturday.” One of the first events for the festival involved sampling morsels from restaurants from three districts around town. Diners would rotate among five businesses, tasting their food and drinking wine. It had seemed like a good way to try a few places I’d never visited, fast.
“And maybe you’ve heard about the Key West Topped Chef contest this weekend?”
I nodded again, searching my brain for the details of an article I’d skimmed in the Citizen. “I might have seen an announcement but I don’t know the details.”
Wally settled his glasses back on his nose and tucked a pencil behind the side bar. “It’s a reality TV cooking show slash contest and the winning chef scores an opportunity to do a pilot for a new network show. The producer called this morning asking Key Zest to provide a judge.”
“A judge?” I cleared my throat, feeling the tickle of an unpleasant assignment coming. “Isn’t it a little late to be naming judges?”
He peered over the top of his glasses, frowning. I wasn’t demonstrating the old rah-rah team spirit that he wanted in his one and three-quarters employees—me and Danielle. “I’d like it to be you.”
I sat back, the frayed nubs of the wicker chair poking my shoulder blades. “I wouldn’t have a clue how to choose a television personality. I know how to judge food, not people. And I’m a horrible actress—all you have to do is preview a few of my mom’s home movies to know that.”
He grinned. “Rain check on that. Do you watch any TV cooking shows?”
“Of course. It’s a blood sport in my family.”
“Which ones?”
“Rachael Ray, of course. She’s not much of a chef, but she’s utterly charming—and she makes her viewers feel like they can cook. She makes it all seem possible. That’s an art! On the other hand, Mom loves Emeril. Some of the other chefs think he acts too much like a clown, but we think he’s a fabulous entertainer. And I never miss…” My words trailed off as I realized I’d talked my way into the new gig.
“It will be fun!” Wally said, seizing the opening I’d given him. “The first session begins in half an hour at the Studios of Key West. Just imagine you’re at home on the couch with your mom.”
My first instinct was to whine and wheedle. I squelched that and tried to muster a smile. From the look on Wally’s face, I could tell the question was settled.
“If you have any questions, get in touch with Deena Smith. She’s helping to organize the weekend.” He slid a slip of paper across the desk with her phone number on it.
As if it wasn’t already etched in my mind for life. Deena was my ex-boyfriend Chad’s secretary and I’d called that number more times than was decent after our ugly breakup. In spite of those bad memories, I felt an immediate relief—Deena and I had managed to remain friends in spite of Chad. She was a levelheaded, evenhanded person—how bad could it be if she was involved?