Page 80 of Dough & Devotion


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There is nothing in my fridge that does not come in a package or require exactly zero skill. The irony hits me sideways, and I have to grip the counter until it passes.

I stop at the window and rest my forehead against the glass. The city sprawls below me, alive and indifferent. Lights blinking. Cars flowing. People moving with purpose, which I suddenly envy.

Somewhere in that mess is Sunrise & Salt. Tess. The life I torched because I could not stand the idea of not being essential.

“I’m sorry,” I whisper to the glass.

The city does not answer.

My phone buzzes on the counter behind me.

I do not need to look.

Rex.

Of course, he is calling. Of course, he is energized. Of course, he thinks tonight was a win.

I let it ring.

Again.

Again.

On the fifth call, the buzzing stops, and a text replaces it.

REX: You handled her yet? The media’s warming up. We’re moving fast.

Handled her.

The phrase turns my stomach.

Like she is a liability.

Like she is a variable.

Like she is something to be managed rather than a person who trusted me with her heart, her history, and the most fragile parts of her dream.

I flip the phone face down.

I cannot deal with him yet.

There is something else I have to do first. Something I owe her, whether she wants it or not.

I scroll through my contacts until I find her name.

Tess Bennett.

It feels heavier now, like it knows what I did. My thumb hovers.

She told me to get out. She told me I was done. I deserve the silence. But I also deserve to say the words, even if they land in a void, even if she hangs up on me, even if it changes nothing.

I hit call.

The ring feels like a blade sliding along my nerves.

Once.

Twice.