Sister Stole My Recipes Until One Folder Ended Her Investor Gala-thuyhien

The professional kitchen behind my parents’ building was supposed to be locked by eleven.

Instead, I was still there tying blue ribbons around thirty cookie bags for my son’s ninth birthday.

Zachary had asked for chocolate stars, blue frosting, and one whole day when my phone did not pull me away.

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I had promised him yes.

That promise sat on the stainless counter in neat rows, smelling like butter, cocoa, and the kind of childhood I kept trying to protect from my family.

Then my phone lit up beside my chef’s knife.

My mother’s name appeared first.

“I canceled the party. Michelle needs you to cater her networking brunch tomorrow. It’s good exposure. Don’t be selfish.”

I read it once and felt nothing.

Then another message came.

“Michelle loved that you canceled the party.”

The refrigerator hummed behind me.

My hands stayed still on the ribbon.

For years, my family had treated my skill like a light switch they could slap whenever a room got dark.

Cupcakes for Michelle’s friends became holiday dinners for twenty.

Holiday dinners became plated brunches for women who called themselves founders because they owned ring lights and linen napkins.

Every time I said I was tired, my mother said family helped family.

Every time Michelle needed something, my father asked why I was making it difficult.

I had called it love because that sounded better than unpaid labor.

That night, the lie finally stopped working.

I did not answer my mother.

I did not call Michelle.

I rolled my knives into their canvas case, unplugged my mixer, packed my pans, my scales, my pastry tips, and the chocolate I had bought with money I did not really have.

My parents owned the walls.

I owned the reason anything inside those walls worked.

By midnight, the kitchen was bare enough to echo.

At home, Zachary was asleep with one hand under his cheek and a Lego dragon beside his pillow.

I hated waking him, but I hated the thought of him waking up to an empty birthday table even more.

“Hey, buddy,” I whispered, “we’re going on a secret mission.”

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