As I closed my bakery and tossed away unsold bread, a small girl stepped out of the darkness. “Do you have any old bread?” she asked quietly. She couldn’t have been more than eight—thin, dirty, starving. I handed her two pieces. After that, she came every night. “One for me,” she’d say, “one for my brother.” One night, I followed her home. And what I discovered broke something inside me.

As I closed my bakery and tossed away unsold bread, a small girl stepped out of the darkness. “Do you have any old bread?” she asked quietly. She couldn’t have been more than eight—thin, dirty, starving. I handed her two pieces. After that, she came every night. “One for me,” she’d say, “one for my brother.” One night, I followed her home. And what I discovered broke something inside me.

PART 1 

Every night, I closed my bakery the same way. I swept the floor, wiped the counters, and tossed unsold bread into a large trash bag behind the shop. It hurt every time, watching food go to waste, but health regulations were unforgiving.

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