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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