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chapter 5

Author: yu-xiuan
last update Last Updated: 2025-10-03 17:29:05

Jamie pov

The cheap digital clock on the bedside table read 5:45 PM. The light outside my window in the cramped, airless apartment was already turning blue. I paused my routine—clipping the annoying but necessary bunny ears of the purple wig into place—and knelt beside the crib.

My daughter, Chloe, was stirring but still mostly asleep, her chest rising and falling in the shallow, peaceful breaths of a two-year-old. She was the reason I wore the purple wig and the pink dress, and she was the reason I had to leave her alone every evening.

I gently smoothed her fine, dark hair. “Mama has to go, sweetie,” I murmured, my voice low and thick with anxiety. “You’re a big girl now, and you have to remember our rules. Be brave for Mama.” My routine was rigid, necessitated by desperation. I had no childcare, no savings, and no choice.

Before I left, I checked the small, used baby monitor, making sure the batteries were fresh.

Then, the most crucial part: I walked to the front door and tested
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  • Is it Second Chance?    chapter 6

    The past few weeks at Izakaya Mori had fundamentally changed me. The relentless, detailed focus required by omotenashi didn't crush me; it sharpened me. I still felt the familiar knot of guilt and anxiety whenever I left two-year-old Chloe alone, but the work now provided a genuine counterweight to that fear. I wasn't just surviving; I was excelling. The purple wig and the pink uniform—once badges of desperation—now felt like the costume of a professional role I had mastered. I knew the menu by heart, the wine list by vintage, and the specific angle required for the deepest, most respectful bow. Larry’s intense critique had been a gift, forcing me to build a foundation of competence so sturdy that no amount of past shame could shake it. More than that, I had finally found a community. The back-of-house staff, initially wary of the new waitress, had warmed up. Kaito, the sous chef who often worked under Larry, was a relentless perfectionist but had started sharing tips on maximizing

  • Is it Second Chance?    chapter 5

    Jamie povThe cheap digital clock on the bedside table read 5:45 PM. The light outside my window in the cramped, airless apartment was already turning blue. I paused my routine—clipping the annoying but necessary bunny ears of the purple wig into place—and knelt beside the crib. My daughter, Chloe, was stirring but still mostly asleep, her chest rising and falling in the shallow, peaceful breaths of a two-year-old. She was the reason I wore the purple wig and the pink dress, and she was the reason I had to leave her alone every evening. I gently smoothed her fine, dark hair. “Mama has to go, sweetie,” I murmured, my voice low and thick with anxiety. “You’re a big girl now, and you have to remember our rules. Be brave for Mama.” My routine was rigid, necessitated by desperation. I had no childcare, no savings, and no choice. Before I left, I checked the small, used baby monitor, making sure the batteries were fresh. Then, the most crucial part: I walked to the front door and tested

  • Is it Second Chance?    chapter 4

    Jamie pov the air in Izakaya Mori felt different. The tension wasn't gone; it had just settled like dust over everything. The pink and white uniform was back in the locker, thankfully, but the image of Larry’s professional, unyielding face remained. He hadn't broken me, but he hadn't forgiven me either. He had simply measured my service and found it merely "acceptable." I spent my entire shift waiting for the other shoe to drop—for Mark to pull me into the back office and explain that a high-profile chef had complained about the waitress with the fake purple hair. But Mark didn't mention Larry once. He was silent, observing, which was often worse. It wasn't until the following evening, after the dinner rush, that Mark called me over. He wasn't smiling. He was leaning against the service counter, wiping it down with a meticulousness that matched Larry's own precision. "Jamie," he said, not looking up. "I received the post-service critique from Chef Lawrence." My stomach tightened i

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  • Is it Second Chance?    chapter 2

    Jamie's povfor the last six weeks, my identity hasn't been defined by my past mistakes, but by the work of my hands and the bow of my head. I was a waitress at Izakaya Mori, and I was good at it.Izakaya Mori wasn’t just a job; it was a sanctuary carved out of cherry wood and silence. Here, every movement was intentional, every service an art. I had spent countless hours practicing my posture, my gait, and the exact angle of my ojigi—the slight, respectful bow I offered every guest. Mark, who now treated me with a gruff but genuine respect, had drilled us mercilessly on omotenashi, the Japanese concept of wholeheartedly looking after guests. It required anticipating needs, not just reacting to them. I needed this job to feed my baby, and I needed it to prove to myself—and to the ghost of my former self—that I was capable of hard, honest work.I knew the difference between nigiri and sashimi, could differentiate seven kinds of sake, and even managed to offer small courtesies in haltin

  • Is it Second Chance?    chapter 1

    ​My name is Jamie, and I’m a single mother. That’s my title now, but it doesn't tell the whole truth. The whole truth is messy, and it starts with me, blinded by a selfish passion. I was with Larry, a man who was good, steady, and kind. He was my rock, but I was restless. When the baby’s father came along—he was fire, he was chaos—I burned my whole life down just to be near him.​I cheated on Larry and became pregnant. I left him—the good man—for the baby’s father, convinced our reckless love was worth the wreckage. It wasn't. The moment the baby arrived, the father vanished, leaving me alone with the consequences and the crushing reality of what I’d done.​I tell you this because I want you to know: I’m not a bad person, but I was once a deeply selfish one. I made a monumental mistake, trading genuine love for a cheap thrill, and now my daughter and I are paying for it.​The bills piled up, and my lack of a degree was a brick wall at every job interview. Swallowing my pride was the

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