Diane tapped her champagne flute. “Everyone, a little announcement! Effective Monday, I’ll be rebranding this place as ‘Diane’s Patisserie.’ Maya will, of course, stay on — in the kitchen, where she’s comfortable.” Polite, confused applause. My husband, Eli, went pale. He didn’t know. I walked out from behind the counter, untied my apron, and folded it neatly on the marble. “Diane,” I said, “before you rebrand — there’s something you should know.” I pulled a slim folder from beneath the register. “This bakery is incorporated under Rosa Mendoza Holdings LLC. That’s me. The lease, the trademark on the ube-pandesan recipe, the supplier contracts — all under my name. Eli signed a prenup before we married because YOU insisted I was a gold digger. Remember?” Her smile cracked. I turned to the guests. “The recipe card Diane just waved around? I photographed and filed it with the U.S. Copyright Office two years ago. Anyone reproducing it commercially without my license owes me royalties. Including,” I looked at her, “the catering company you secretly hired last month to reverse-engineer it. I have the emails. Your assistant CC’d me by mistake.” Gasps. The food critic from the Times pulled out her phone. Diane stammered, “Maya, sweetheart, this is a misunderstanding —” “No,” I said softly. “The misunderstanding was thinking a woman who survived losing everything at twelve couldn’t protect the one thing she rebuilt.” Eli stepped beside me, took my hand, and faced his mother. “Mom. Leave. Now.” She left in heels that clicked like a countdown. The next morning, the Times ran a feature titled ‘The Granddaughter Who Baked a Legacy.’ Pre-orders crashed our website by noon. I framed Lola Rosa’s recipe card above the oven, where it belonged. And every loaf we pulled out that day rose perfectly — like she was finally, finally proud.
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