You’re forty-two, single, and still answering phones, Claire. Of course Dad left the bakery

The lawyer, Mr. Halvorsen, adjusted his glasses and finally spoke. “Before we proceed with Mr. Whitaker’s will, Claire has asked me to introduce a second document.” Tessa’s smile flickered. “What document?” I opened the folder myself. Inside were the original deed to the building on Magnolia Street, a notarized partnership agreement dated nine years ago, and a stack of bank statements. “Dad didn’t own the bakery alone,” I said quietly. “When he almost lost it in 2016, I refinanced my condo and bought in as a fifty-one percent partner. He insisted. He said he wanted it protected from… certain people.” I didn’t look at Tessa, but I felt her stop breathing. “Every renovation, every new oven, every Christmas bonus you got from him — that was my signature on the check, Tess. I just never made it about me.” Mr. Halvorsen slid the partnership papers across the table. Mom finally lifted her head, tears already cutting through her foundation. “Claire, honey, I didn’t know—” “You didn’t ask,” I said gently. Tessa lunged for the document. “This is fake. Dad would’ve told me.” “He tried,” I said. “You were in Cabo.” Mr. Halvorsen continued reading the will. Dad had left his forty-nine percent to Tessa — exactly as she’d been promised. But forty-nine percent of a bakery whose majority owner, lease holder, and brand trademark belonged to me meant she’d inherited a paycheck I controlled. “You can keep your share,” I told her, standing up and smoothing my blazer. “But the lifestyle brand stays Sweet Magnolia. The recipes stay Dad’s. And the cashier we’re hiring next month — that position’s still open, if you’re humble about it.” I walked out into the hallway where the late sun was warming the floorboards. Behind me, I heard Tessa start to cry. For the first time in three weeks, I let myself smile. Dad had known. Dad had always known. And he’d trusted the daughter who answered phones to protect the thing he loved most.

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