Page 83 of Dough & Devotion


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“I know.”

“Goodnight, Leo.”

“Goodnight, Tess.”

The call ends.

I stay exactly where I am, phone still pressed to my ear like I might somehow hear her breathing through the dead line.

I don’t feel relieved.

I don’t feel hopeful.

I feel committed.

Not in the romantic sense. Not in the please let me back in way. Committed to consequences.

I move fast after that, not with panic, but with something colder and clearer.

I draft the termination notice myself. I don’t let legal soften the language. I don’t let PR touch it. I don’t let anyone reframe it into something palatable.

I write exactly what it is. A withdrawal. A refusal. An admission of fault.

I sign my name.

I send it.

Then I turn my phone back over.

Rex has called seventeen times. I answer the eighteenth.

“What the fuck is wrong with you?” he demands the second the line connects. “Do you have any idea what you just did?”

“Yes,” I say calmly. “I ended the deal.”

“You can’t just…”

“I already did.”

“You’re burning leverage,” he snaps. “You’re humiliating me.”

“You boxed her in,” I say. “You leaked it. You tried to force her hand.”

A pause.

“So, she turned you down,” Rex sneers. “Is that what this is? You’re emotional. You’ll regret this.”

“I regret trusting you,” I say.

He laughs. “You think walking away makes you noble? You think she’ll thank you?”

“No,” I say. “I think it’s the first time I’ve done the right thing without expecting a reward.”

I hang up.

I don’t sleep. I sit on the floor as the city turns from night to grey, replaying every moment I could have chosen differently.

Every time she told me who she was. Every time I decided, I knew better.