The following morning, Caio left the estate before sunrise.
The bread that emerged from the Sartori kitchen that day was, once again, a tragedy in loaf form.
By now, however, the staff had developed a remarkable degree of resilience. The bread itself no longer frightened them nearly as much as the inevitable aftermath.
Specifically, the moment Aren began distributing samples throughout the estate.
"Good morning, sirs and madams," she greeted politely as she approached a group of gardeners tending the estate grounds. "My bread is finished. Would you like a slice?"
The gardeners visibly froze. Their eyes dropped to the dense, suspiciously angular pieces resting on the tray in Aren’s hands before lifting cautiously back to her face.
She was not smiling.
She was not threatening them.
If anything, she looked perfectly calm.
Unfortunately, her clear silver eyes carried such sincere hope and expectation that refusing her suddenly felt comparable to kicking a puppy.
"Of course, my lady," one gardener replied immediately.
Another hurriedly reached for a slice before anyone else could.
"I’ve been dying to try it," he declared with heroic determination. "I could smell it all the way from the kitchen."
A soft blush climbed up Aren’s face.
"Thank you very much," she said gratefully as she began distributing slices one after another. "Please tell me what you think of the taste as well."
The gardeners stared at the bread in their hands. Then, with the solemn courage of men marching into battle, they each took a bite.
The resulting crunch echoed across the garden with alarming volume.
Several birds took flight from nearby trees.
Everyone’s jaws immediately began working far harder than nature had ever intended for a product theoretically composed of flour, water, yeast, and Aren’s unwavering determination.
Aren watched them chew with her usual calm expression.
What none of the gardeners realized was that, behind that tranquil face, she was conducting an entirely different assessment.
Her gaze moved subtly from one gardener to the next.
’No combat calluses.’
’No trained posture.’
’No clear indications of involvement in the poisoning.’
Her brow furrowed.
’Conclusion: not suspects.’
Having completed her evaluation, she returned her attention to the bread.
"Well?" she asked at last. "How is it?"
One gardener swallowed with visible effort. "It is... very memorable, my lady."
Another nodded rapidly. "The texture is extremely... interesting."
A third forced a smile that looked physically painful. "I’m not entirely sure I’ve ever had anything quite like this before. Very unique, haha..."
Aren considered their responses carefully.
"So... it’s still horrible," she concluded.
The entire gardening staff nearly choked.
Several exchanged panicked looks.
One looked ready to protest immediately.
Before anyone could speak, Aren offered everyone a grateful bow.
"My sincere apology," she said formally. "It seems I accidentally made it too dense again. Thank you very much for trying it and for your feedback. I will do better tomorrow."
The gardeners stared at her in stunned silence. Before anyone could formulate a response, Aren had already continued onward toward her next victims in the laundry room.
Fortunately, Aren did not dwell for long on her latest baking failure, nor on the fact that she had discovered no promising suspects during her bread campaign.
Something far more important arrived shortly after breakfast:
The ice cream machine.
The very one Caio had ordered from overseas.
"Come, Biscuit," Aren called to the little dog as she hurried toward the delivery entrance. "It’s finally here!"
Biscuit immediately gave chase, racing after her at full speed until he caught up and bounded excitedly around her legs.
Before long, the pair arrived beside the enormous shipping crate, where delivery workers were already busy unboxing its contents.
Mrs. Pecora entered the kitchen moments later, only to stop dead at the doorway.
"My lady..." she began weakly. "This is..."
A massive machine now occupied an entire corner of the kitchen she had spent years arranging into a state of immaculate perfection.
Before Mrs. Pecora could voice her concerns regarding aesthetics, space, or the preservation of her remaining sanity, Aren turned toward her with bright, hopeful eyes.
"Mrs. Pecora, do you happen to know how to make ice cream too?"
Mrs. Pecora stared at her.
Then at the machine.
Then back at Aren.
A long, weary sigh escaped her.
It was in that exact moment that Mrs. Pecora discovered she had somehow acquired a third profession. In addition to serving as Head of Staff and Aren’s bread instructor, she had apparently become Aren’s official ice cream instructor as well.
The kitchen transformed into a laboratory almost immediately.
Milk appeared.

’It’s because the Don specifically ordered everything for you, my lady.’
’The Don is so completely gone for her.’

’Don Caio would love these.’
’God protect the Don.’
VERIFYCAPTCHA_LABEL
Comments
The readers' comments on the novel: Every Mafia's Favorite Girl