Felix Park bakes with his heart on his sleeve. For fifteen years, *The Golden Whisk* has been more than a bakery; it's a community hub, a legacy left by his aunt, and the only place Felix feels at home. But the neighborhood is changing. When a property developer threatens to cancel his lease unless he "modernizes" his outdated aesthetic, Felix tries to fix it himself-and fails spectacularly. He needs a professional. He needs someone who speaks the cold, sleek language of the corporate world.Ronan Blake needs a paycheck. Freshly fired from a high-end agency due to creative burnout and a refusal to compromise, he's broke, cynical, and done with emotional attachments to his work. When Felix begs him to rebrand the bakery, Ronan agrees on three conditions: cash payments, total creative control, and absolutely no personal bonding. He views the job as a quick fix for his bank account, not a passion project.But the bakery has a way of breaking down defenses.As they clash over mood boards and fonts, Ronan's icy minimalism meets Felix's chaotic warmth. Forced together for late-night brainstorming sessions and dawn market trips, the professional boundaries begin to blur. Ronan starts to see the artistry in Felix's dough, and Felix begins to understand the protective power of Ronan's design. A shared meal in a dark kitchen, a sketch drawn in charcoal, and the scent of burnt caramel spark a connection neither of them expected.Yet, survival isn't simple. Just as their partnership deepens into something tender, the corporate world comes calling for Ronan with a job offer that could solve all his problems-if he's willing to leave Felix behind. With the evaluation committee looming and equipment failing, Ronan must decide if he's ready to choose the messy, risky life of a baker's partner, or retreat to the safety of the glass office he thought he wanted.Flour and Ink is a warm, sensory MM romance that explores the intersection of creativity and love. Featuring a grumpy/sunshine dynamic, a "strictly business" contract that fails immediately, the "only one couch" trope, a supportive found family, and a grand romantic gesture involving guerrilla street art. A story about finding your place in a changing world, and the person who makes that place feel like home.