I Took Prison For My Brother, Then His Wife Sprayed Me Like Dirt-heuh

I spent two years in prison to save my golden-child brother’s medical career after he caused a horrific crash.

When I finally came home, my sister-in-law sprayed me with commercial sanitiser.

“An ex-convict isn’t working in this shop. You’re just tracking in prison dirt,” she smirked.

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They stole my business and my recipes.

They thought I was broken.

They forgot I knew the worst secret that could ruin their perfect life forever.

I heard Chloe before I saw her.

Her voice cut through the heavy glass door of the bakery as cleanly as a knife through warm bread.

“An ex-convict is not working in this shop.”

I stopped with my hand on the handle.

The morning was grey and damp, the sort of morning that made coats smell faintly of rain and the pavement shine like old slate.

Behind the glass, the bakery glowed with warm light.

There were trays on the counter, the pastry display polished, the chalkboard freshly written, and the little brass bell above the door waiting to announce me like I was a customer.

Not the woman who had built the place.

Not the woman who had slept upstairs when there was no money for staff.

Not the woman who had sold loaves at closing time for half price because wasting food felt like a sin.

Just a problem at the door.

For two years, that bakery had lived in my head with cruel clarity.

When prison lights snapped on before dawn, I imagined the ovens clicking awake.

When I stood in a queue to be counted, I thought about customers queueing for coffee.

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