Hand over the master keys, sweetie — Daddy’s giving the bakery to someone who

I reached into my apron pocket — not for keys, but for a folded envelope I’d been carrying for three weeks. ‘Before I hand anything over,’ I said softly, sliding it across the counter, ‘you should probably read this, Dad.’ Brielle snatched it first, of course. Her smug grin cracked as her eyes moved down the page. ‘What… what is this?’ My father took it from her shaking hands. The color drained from his face. It was the deed. The real deed. My mother, before she passed, had quietly transferred full ownership of the bakery into a trust under MY name the day I turned eighteen. Dad had been running it on a handshake — and a lie he told himself for a decade. ‘Mom knew,’ I said. ‘She knew exactly who you’d choose the moment she was gone. So she chose me first.’ Brielle let out a strangled laugh. ‘You can’t be serious. Daddy, tell her —’ But my father couldn’t speak. The regulars at table four had stopped pretending not to listen. Mrs. Alvarez, who’d been buying conchas from us since I was in pigtails, actually stood up and clapped once, sharp and proud. I untied my apron — slowly, the way Mom used to — and folded it neatly on the counter. ‘I’m keeping the bakery,’ I said. ‘But effective today, there’s a new policy: anyone who calls my mother’s recipes ‘cheap small-town garbage’ isn’t welcome inside.’ Brielle’s mouth opened. I slid her untouched latte toward her. ‘To go, sweetie.’ My father finally found his voice. ‘Lena, please — we’re family.’ I looked at him for a long moment, at the man who’d let a stranger try to take what Mom built. ‘You had twelve years to remember that,’ I said. Then I turned the little wooden sign on the door from OPEN to CLOSED — just for them — and walked back to the ovens where I belonged.

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