She Baked Her Dreams—Then Took Them Back
Opening Sweet Haven should have been Alice’s happiest chapter. Years of sacrifice and late nights had finally risen into reality: her own bakery, built from scratch. But her joy quickly curdled when her husband’s family treated it like an open buffet. Muffins vanished, cupcakes disappeared, and sourdough was taken without paying—always with a casual “we’ll pay eventually.” Spoiler: they didn’t.
Things boiled over when Aunt Linda used spare keys to help herself before opening hours. So Alice fought back—with a biting “family-only tasting event” that served crumbs and cold coffee. The message? Love is free. Food isn’t.
The locks were changed. The freeloaders gone. And Sweet Haven thrived.
But the deeper wound came from Grandpa’s legacy: the family bakery, Golden Wheat. Alice and her brother Adam were supposed to inherit it together. The will said otherwise. Adam got the shop; Alice got cookbooks.
When Adam and his wife Melissa turned Golden Wheat into a soulless luxury brand, Alice opened Rise & Bloom—with tradition and love. Customers followed her, not the name. When Adam’s shop faltered, he came asking for help.
Alice made a bold trade. She got Golden Wheat back.
In Grandpa’s drawer, she found his words:
“She is the heart of this place.”
And she always had been.