Hand over the keys, sweetheart. Dad left the bakery to someone who actually knows

Trevor’s smirk twitched. “We don’t need a scene, Mira.” “Oh, I think we do,” I said, and nodded to Mrs. Alvarez in the corner booth — Dad’s oldest friend, and, as Trevor was about to learn, the executor of his estate. She stood up, pulled a sealed envelope from her purse, and slid her reading glasses on like she’d been waiting years for this moment. The lawyers behind Trevor exchanged a look. They hadn’t been told about her. Mrs. Alvarez cleared her throat. “To my son Trevor, who told me on my deathbed that the bakery was, and I quote, ‘a sad little hobby’: I leave the sum of one dollar, and the hope that you learn what love costs.” Trevor’s face went the color of raw dough. “To my daughter Mira, who never left my side, I leave Rosa’s Bakery in full — the building, the recipes, the name, and the savings account she didn’t know I’d been filling for her since she was sixteen.” She paused, then looked up over her glasses. “Three hundred and forty-two thousand dollars.” The bakery went so quiet I could hear the proofing dough breathing. Trevor lunged forward. “That’s not — he wasn’t in his right mind —” “He recorded it,” Mrs. Alvarez said gently, pulling out a small flash drive. “Video. Notarized. He said you’d try this.” One of Trevor’s lawyers actually took a step back from him, like distancing himself from a bad investment. I walked around the counter, untied my apron, and held it out to my brother. “Tell you what, Trev. You want the bakery so bad? You can have a job. Dishes start at five a.m. Dad always said you needed to learn what love costs.” He didn’t take the apron. He didn’t say a word. He just walked out, lawyers trailing behind him like ducklings who’d picked the wrong pond. Mrs. Alvarez squeezed my hand. I turned back to my ovens, slid in a fresh tray, and for the first time in eleven years, I cried while the cardamom buns rose.

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