The Boy She Fed Through A Fence Returned With The Subpoena Her Uncle Feared Most-thuyhien

The oven timer kept screaming.

No one moved to turn it off.

Preston Whitmore stood with one hand pressed into the flour on Isabella’s counter, his gold watch dusted white, his face losing color in slow, visible layers. The rain outside the bakery windows came down in sheets, blurring the black SUVs at the curb into dark shapes with flashing hazard lights.

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Matthew Reyes did not raise his voice.

That made it worse.

He stood between Isabella and her uncle with the same stillness he had carried as a hungry child outside the iron fence of St. Catherine’s. Only now, his shoes cost more than the bakery’s rent. His charcoal suit was dry at the shoulders despite the storm, and the silver bracelet on his wrist caught the yellow bakery light every time he moved his hand.

Preston stared at the subpoena.

“This is theatrical,” he said.

His voice cracked on the second word.

Matthew’s assistant, a woman in a navy coat with a leather folder tucked beneath one arm, stepped forward and placed a second stack of papers on the counter.

“No,” she said. “This is service.”

One of Preston’s attorneys took half a step back.

The bell over the bakery door gave a tiny metallic shiver as the wind pushed against it. Cinnamon clung to the air. Burnt sugar thickened at the edge of the oven. Rainwater dripped from Matthew’s coat hem onto the old tile floor, darkening the grout in small circles.

Isabella’s hands stayed flat on the counter.

Flour covered her knuckles. A small burn near her thumb pulsed from the morning batch of rolls. Her body wanted to shake, but she pressed her fingers harder into the wood until the tremor had nowhere to go.

“Matthew,” she whispered.

He turned toward her then.

For one second, the room was not a bakery. It was a school fence again. Hot sidewalk. Black bars. A smashed sandwich. An 8-year-old boy holding a silver bracelet like it was a promise.

His eyes dropped to her flour-covered hands.

“You kept making bread,” he said quietly.

She swallowed.

“You kept the bracelet.”

His thumb moved once over the thin silver links.

“Every year.”

Preston’s laugh came out too loud.

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