Between soft play, cinema trips and “I’m hungry” on repeat, the cost of feeding the kids during the school holidays can spiral. But the good news for parents in England, Scotland and Wales is that dozens of restaurants, pubs and supermarket cafés are running kids eat free or kids eat for £1 deals this February half term 2026.
From supermarket cafés to high street favourites, there are more kids eat free February half term 2026 deals than many parents realise.
With the break running from Monday 16 February to Friday 20 February 2026 in most areas, we have an updated list of where families can eat out for less.
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Asda Café
Kids eat for £1
No adult minimum spend
Hot meals and cold pick and mix options
One of the most reliable year-round deals, with pasta, nuggets and even a vegan hidden-veg option.
Morrisons Café
One free kids meal with an adult meal costing £5 or more
Available all day
For under 16s
Tesco Café
Kids eat free with any adult purchase
Hot meal or sandwich deal options
Ikea
Kids meals from 95p
No adult meal required
Available daily from 11am
Many stores also offer free workshops during holidays, making it a budget-friendly day out.
Dunelm Pausa Café
Kids eat free with every £4 spent
Bella Italia
Kids eat free Sunday to Thursday
Three courses and a drink with adult main
Frankie and Benny’s
Kids eat free during school holidays
Main, two sides, drink and dessert included
ASK Italian
Kids eat free 8 to 22 February
Available via ASK Perks app
Zizzi
Free Bambini meal with adult main
Requires Zillionaires’ Club app
Café Rouge
Kids eat free daily 12pm to 4pm
With adult main purchase
YO! Sushi
Kids eat free during school holidays
Minimum £10 adult spend
The Real Greek
Kids eat free on Sundays
With £15 adult spend
Sizzling Pubs
Kids eat for £1
From 12pm during school holidays
Angus Steakhouse
One child aged 8 or under eats free with adult main
Daily 12pm to 5pm
BrewDog
Kids eat free when booking with offer selected
Bill’s
Up to two kids eat free
Running from 16 to 20 February, Monday to Friday
Banana Tree
Kids eat free 16 to 20 February
Free main, drink and dessert with adult main
Subway
Kids eat free 14 to 20 February
One free kids meal with any Footlong Sub purchase
For the first time ever, Subway’s Kids Eat Free deal is running during February half term, giving families another budget-friendly option while out and about.
Parents can get one free Little Subs Kids Pack with the purchase of any Footlong Sub at participating restaurants nationwide.
Recommended reading:
If you want to start the day cheaply, these chains offer free kids breakfasts with a paying adult:
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Beefeater
Brewers Fayre
Premier Inn
Table Table
Whitbread Inns
Travelodge (kids eat for £1)
Selected Lounges venues
Many allow two children to eat free per paying adult, making it one of the biggest savings of the day.
With food prices still elevated, eating out as a family can feel like a luxury. Whether you need a cheap breakfast, a mid-shopping pit stop, or a full family dinner without the stress of cooking, choosing the right offers can make half term more manageable.
According to deal experts, planning around kids eat free offers can cut a typical £60 family meal bill almost in half.
Ben Smye from Hotukdeals says: “A family of four can easily save £15 to £25 per meal. Over a week of half term, that could mean over £100 staying in your pocket.”
Staff will be redeployed and the footprint will be taken up by more produce.
10:04, 12 Feb 2026Updated 10:28, 12 Feb 2026
Bosses at Marks and Spencer have this morning announced that the cafe offering within their foodhall store at Heathfield Retail Park in Ayr is to close.
Ayrshire Live can reveal that the cafe will close in early April with staff redeployed to other roles within the store.
The news has been met with dismay – with the retail giants admitting it’s “disappointing news” for customers.
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One source said: “Marks and Spencer at Heathfield intend to close their cafe at the beginning of April. And it is to the dismay of so many customers, especially elderly ones, who go there and enjoy a coffee while doing their shopping. This is the wrong move from Marks and Spencer.
“It’s a similar story in Dunblane. The people there are devastated because their cafe is to be closed. It looks as though Marks and Spencer are only considering profit over customers, it’s not a good look.”
Ayrshire Live can further reveal that the cafe space will be re-purposed from early April and the store team will share an exact date with customers closer to the time. And cafe colleagues will transfer across to other roles in the foodhall.
David Anderson, Regional Manager for Scotland Central at M&S, said: “We know many of our customers want to be able to shop a wider range of M&S Food. That’s why, after reviewing our Ayr Heathfield Road store, we are re‑purposing the café space to provide more products, including more produce from our Select Farm partners.”
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He added: “We understand this will be disappointing news for some of our customers; however, our team will continue working hard to serve them in store.”
Ukraine skeleton pilot Vladyslav Heraskevych reacts to being banned from competing at the Winter Olympics for continuing to wear a helmet which features images of athletes killed during Russia’s invasion of his home country.
The number of patients waiting more than 12 hours in A&E has soared to a record high.
The latest NHS England data shows the figure shot up from 50,775 in December to 71,517 in January. This is the highest number since monthly records began in August 2010.
The number waiting at least four hours from the decision to admit to admission stood at 161,141 last month, up from 137,763 in December and the second highest figure on record.
Some 72.5 per cent of patients in England were seen within four hours in A&Es last month, down from 73.8 per cent in December.
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One in four people (137,763) in December waited for more than four hours between admission and staff finding them a bed, while one in 10 (50,775) waited more than 12 hours. That’s almost 50,000 more patients than the NHS target.
The Government and NHS England have set a target of March 2026 for 78 per cent of patients attending A&E to be admitted, discharged or transferred within four hours.
The 44-year-old professional dancer was found dead in a hotel room
13:11, 11 Feb 2026Updated 13:17, 11 Feb 2026
Robin Windsor had lost his “glow” after being dropped from Strictly Come Dancing, actress Lisa Riley told an inquest on Wednesday, February 11.
The 44-year-old professional dancer was found dead in a hotel room in Shepherd’s Bush, west London, in February 2024. Giving evidence at West London Coroner’s Court, Riley reflected on the changes she saw in her former dance partner in the years after he left the BBC show.
Riley was paired with Windsor during the penultimate series he competed in, in 2012. She described how quickly they formed a close bond once they began working together.
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“To say we hit it off was an understatement,” a written witness statement from Riley read to West London Coroner’s Court on Wednesday.
“We were literally joined at the hip. I had only just lost my mum in the July. I, myself, was in a very difficult place. Robin was my rock,” it said.
Windsor joined Strictly Come Dancing in 2010 as a Latin and ballroom professional. Over four series, until 2013, he partnered actresses Patsy Kensit, Anita Dobson and Lisa Riley, as well as Dragon’s Den star Deborah Meaden.
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A back injury prevented him from performing in 2014. He was subsequently dropped from the main line-up in 2015, although he later returned for a Christmas special alongside TV presenter Alison Hammond.
“It was from this moment, on to the time of his death, he kept slipping deeper and deeper into depression,” Riley said. His glow had gone.”
Riley told the court that she and Windsor developed a deep friendship built on openness and honesty, and that they stayed in touch after their time on the programme.
“He literally told me everything,” she said.
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“I trusted him and he trusted me. There were many, many happy times to begin with and together we did have so much fun.”
She said Windsor had spoken to her about struggles with self-doubt, including feelings of “never feeling good enough” and experiencing “imposter syndrome”.
“Robin was and always has been very influenced by other men. It became a standing joke that he fell in love after three days.”
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According to Riley, Windsor had concerns about his body image, which led him to take steroids. She said this, alongside alcohol, negatively affected his wellbeing. She also described financial pressures, telling the court he had accumulated significant debts and would spend heavily on designer goods.
“Money problems also played a part of his darker days. He was drowning in debts which led to weekends I wouldn’t hear from him.”
Riley said the last time she contacted Windsor was around Christmas 2023 after noticing what she described as a troubling post on Facebook. She sent him a text message to check in.
Jurors heard Riley said: “I of course text him straight away and he replied saying he was ‘fine, just usual ups and downs of life’.”
Lloyds Banking Group is shutting another 95 branches, as banks continue to disappear from UK high streets.
The banking group said that 53 Lloyds, 31 Halifax and 11 Bank of Scotland sites would close between May this year and March 2027.
These closures are in addition to an ongoing closure programme that will see 49 sites shut by October.
Lloyds will have 610 branches left open after these closures have been enacted.
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A spokesperson for Lloyds said: “Customers want the freedom to bank in the way that works for them and we offer more choice and ways to manage money than ever before.”
Over 21 million customers use Lloyds’ apps as their predominant way to bank, the spokesperson added.
Under two weeks ago, Santander said it was shutting another 44 branches, which will put 291 jobs at risk.
Banking apps and other services that are accessible remotely have led to less footfall in branches. However, in late 2025, the UK’s biggest building society, the Nationwide, pledged to keep all 696 branches open, until at least 2030.
Manchester City’s £20million recruit gave another defensive masterclass in the win over Fulham and might well prove to be one of the best January signings in Premier League history.
Marc Guehi can play. He can see a pass, he can execute a pass. He is not big on the Cruyff turn but he can beat a man. He is confident on the ball. He can be an attacking presence, having eight Premier League goals and seven assists to his name. Guehi can do a lot.
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Over four-and-a-half seasons at Crystal Palace, his game developed to such an extent that every marquee club in Europe coveted his services. But there is one thing Guehi loves doing, one thing that identifies him as an elite footballer in the way that goalscoring defines Erling Haaland: defending.
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After the routine win over Fulham, Guehi had his usual moment of solitude and prayer before joining the team’s appreciation of the support. In return, Guehi was given acclaim that was noticeably vociferous.
That was because, in a way, Guehi’s performance – particularly in the second half – was every bit as watchable as, say, Nico O’Reilly’s dynamism, Bernardo Silva’s orchestration, Antoine Semenyo’s savviness.
Manchester City supporters are well accustomed to acknowledging the sort of thrilling move that ended with O’Reilly sublimely clipping in the second of the night. They are well accustomed to acknowledging Silva’s intelligence and indefatigability. They are well accustomed to acknowledging smooth attacking machinery.
But what was being acknowledged after the final whistle against Fulham was the nuts and bolts provided by Guehi. The clearances, five of them. The ground duels won, four of them. The tackles won, two of them. The recoveries, four of them. The game-leading 97 passes.
What was being acknowledged was the simple stuff. In a game that had been won by a three-goal margin, these are outstanding numbers.
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Talking of numbers, Guehi has actually accumulated eight yellow cards this season, high for him. But he has invaluable discipline in his game. Arne Slot was straw-clutching when suggesting Guehi should have been sent off at Anfield but had he seen a straight red card for his offence against Mohamed Salah, it would have been the first of his career.
And Guehi is a great reader of the game, his anticipation of an attacker’s movements exemplary and, equally importantly, he can second-guess a teammate’s intentions. It was not flawless – Fulham had one or two very presentable chances – but Guehi’s partnership with Ruben Dias had a look of reliability that has not always been familiar to City eyes.
He has made four appearances for City since his £20million move – a move that has instantly put him into the top ten of January transfer window signings – but it is already clear he will be that rarity under this manager: an automatic starter. The defensive Haaland.
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When Guehi signed, Guardiola said: “After two or three days, play good or bad, I don’t care. But he is a great signing for the next five, six, seven, eight years.” On the evidence so far, the City boss is spot-on.
The HER VOICE: Leadership for Life programme blends visibility of female role models from businesswomen and alumnae to current pupils with assemblies that applaud female achievement and lessons that build a sense of self. Inspiring and purposeful experiences are woven naturally through school life, with events such as the inaugural HER VOICE: Leadership for Girls event, a cornerstone of the school calendar. Bringing together over 50 girls from across the area, the one day event hosts five interactive, practical and reflective workshops to inspire a lifetime of leadership. In September 2025, the event successfully encouraged pupils to articulate their ideas and recognise the value of their perspectives as they explored communication, confidence, ethical decision-making and teamwork.
International Women’s Day is also a key moment within the programme. Celebrated through a full day of workshops led by accomplished women from a wide range of fields, the event invites girls to think broadly about ambition, resilience and the many paths leadership can take. It reinforces the message that there is no single definition of success, while encouraging curiosity and open dialogue. In the week leading up to the event, departments across the school come together to explore themes such as the women’s rights movement, female empowerment and finding one’s voice, ensuring learning is both meaningful and connected.
Leadership at Queen Mary’s is also modelled through connection. Built on the belief that girls must “see it to be it”, the school’s monthly Twilight Talks bring leading businesswomen into school to share their stories with pupils and parents alike. These evenings are warm and conversational, offering honest insights into careers, challenges and choices, followed by thoughtful Q&A sessions. Girls learn that leadership journeys are rarely linear, and that perseverance, adaptability and self-belief matter just as much as talent.
Beyond these events, leadership is nurtured daily through opportunities to take responsibility, support others and contribute meaningfully to a close-knit community. In a school where everyone is known, girls feel safe to try, to fail and to try again. This sense of belonging underpins Queen Mary’s motto, “her best day, every day,” and reflects the school’s belief that happy girls grow into confident leaders.
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The inaugural HER VOICE: Leadership for Girls event is a cornerstone of the school calendar (Image: QUEEN MARYS SCHOOL)
Queen Mary’s is proud of its small, family-feel environment, where ambition is encouraged without pressure and individuality is celebrated. Nestled within the 40-acre Baldersby Park estate between Ripon and Thirsk, academic excellence sits alongside emotional intelligence, creativity and wellbeing. Pupils benefit from small class sizes and improved academic outcomes of, on average, one grade per subject. The school’s rich co-curricular programme includes over 60 clubs, with debating, STEM, coding, horse riding, hockey, music, and dance among the most popular.
To discover how every girl at Queen Mary’s is supported to make each day her best day, families are warmly invited to attend Open Events on 6th March and 25th April, book a private visit, or speak with the friendly admissions team on 01845 575000 or admissions@queenmarys.org. To learn more, visit queenmarys.org/leadership.
The fire service was called to a main road in Cambridge with reports of a roof fire
08:30, 12 Feb 2026Updated 08:52, 12 Feb 2026
A fire broke out at a property in Cambridge on Wednesday night (February 11). Cambridgeshire Fire and Rescue Service were called to Elizabeth Way in Chesterton, Cambridge, at around 10:30pm with reports of a roof fire.
Firefighters from Cambridge and Cottenham attended and crews arrived to find a fire in the roof of a house. The fire ultimately affected three properties.
A spokesperson for Cambridgeshire Fire and Rescue Service said: “We were called just after 10:30pm to reports of a roof fire on Elizabeth Way in Chesterton, Cambridge. Crews from Cambridge and Cottenham attended along with the aerial appliance and command unit.
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“Firefighters arrived to find a fire in the roof of a house, which affected three properties. They used hose reels to extinguish the fire and a positive pressure ventilation fan to clear the smoke.
“A fire investigation will be carried out to determine the cause of the fire.”
A Cambridgeshire Police spokesperson said: “We were called at 10.41pm yesterday (11 February) with reports of a fire at a property in Elizabeth Way, Cambridge. Officers attended and the road was closed while fire crews tackled the blaze.
“An investigation into the cause of the fire is ongoing.”
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Canadian police have named an 18-year-old suspect in a school shooting in which nine people died and dozens more were injured.
Jesse Van Rootselaar was found with a self-inflicted gunshot wound at the scene of Tumbler Ridge Secondary School, following the devastating attack on Tuesday that has shaken the North American country.
It is understood that Van Rootselaar, who had a history of mental health issues, killed her mother and young brother at home before opening fire at the local secondary school.
Police continue to search for a motive for the attack at this time.
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Authorities said that Van Rootselaar, who was also known to police, was born biologically male and transitioned to female in recent years.
“I can say that Jesse was born as a biological male who approximately six years ago began to transition to female,” said Dwayne McDonald, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) deputy commissioner.
The shooting is one of the deadliest mass shooting events in recent Canadian history.
The shooting at Tumbler Ridge Secondary School is one of the worst in recent Canadian history
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AFP via Getty Images
Here’s what you need to know about the suspect.
Who is Jesse Van Rootselaar
Van Rootselaar was an 18-year-old Canadian from Tumbler Ridge who had dropped out of Tumbler Ridge Secondary School four years earlier.
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Police have confirmed that Van Rootselaar was born male but had transitioned to female around six years ago, and “identified as female, both socially and publicly”.
The teenager was also known to the police and had a troubled past with mental health issues.
“Police had attended that (family) residence on multiple occasions over the past several years, dealing with concerns of mental health with respect to our suspect,” the deputy commissioner said.
Addressing the press, McDonald said that police had previously interacted with the suspect. There are reports that officers previously seized firearms from the property under the Criminal Code.
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According to reports, police said Van Rootselaar did have gun license that had expired two years ago, and the shooter did not have any weapons registered to her.
“I believe she had a license which had expired in 2024; she did not have any firearms registered to her,” McDonald said.
At the time of writing, no motive has been released, and investigators believe she acted alone.
In the early afternoon of February 10, police received reports of an active shooter at Tumbler Ridge Secondary School and issued an alert for the community to seek shelter.
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It is now believed that Van Rootselaar first shot and killed her 39-year-old mother and 11-year-old brother at the family home before travelling to the school and shooting indiscriminately.
Police arrived on the scene in minutes, and by 4:16pm police said they had found the shooter with a self-inflicted gunshot wound. Two weapons, a long gun and a modified handgun, were also found on location.
Police escorted terrified students out of the school following the deadly incident, some of whom told reporters they were barricaded in the building for hours.
A total of nine people died, including the shooter; several more were airlifted to the hospital with serious injuries, and dozens were also treated on scene.
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Prime Minister Mark Carney has cancelled a scheduled trip to Munich this week to stay in the country and support impacted communities at this time. An investigation into the shooting continues.
The LGBT community has faced a barrage of false allegations and increased hostility following such incidents in recent years.
According to CBC, anti-trans social media posts have circulated since the Tumbler Ridge, with one politician saying “There is an epidemic of transgender violence spreading across the West.”
Contrary to this inflammatory rhetoric, Reuters confirmed that the large majority of mass shootings are carried out by cisgender men.
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An expert speaking to CBC says this “false perception” happens because a trans shooter’s gender is usually more of a focus within coverage, while with cisgender shooters, it’s “unremarkable.”
Compared to the neighbouring United States, school shootings in Canada are relatively rare.
However, mass casualty events still can, and have happened.
Two of the biggest mass shootings to take place in Canada happened in 2020 in Nova Scotia when a gunman killed 22 people, and in 1989 in Montreal when a shooter killed 13 women in a classroom, shouting “you are all feminists” before turning the gun on himself.
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Firearm laws in Canada require people to obtain a Possession and Acquisition Licence (PAL), undergo rigorous background checks, and be over 18 years old. It is possible to obtain a minor’s license, but there are also specific rules related to that.
Gun owners must keep weapons unloaded and locked away under Canada’s Firearms Act.
There has been a national freeze on the sale, purchase or transfer of handguns in Canada since 2022, amid efforts to reduce gun crime in the country.
More recently, the Canadian government has launched a buy-back programme to encourage people to turn over their firearms.
The 38-year-old accused social workers of giving her ‘ultimatums’ before she went on the run with convicted rapist boyfriend Mark Gordon, leading to their newborn baby’s tragic death
09:26, 12 Feb 2026Updated 09:30, 12 Feb 2026
An heiress whose baby died in the freezing cold while she was on the run from police has blamed social workers for the tragedy in a bizarre rant.
In new comments to a safeguarding panel, Constance Marten, 38, accused social workers of “using the powers of the state coercively” to take her four children into care and forcing her to go on the run with her fifth baby, Victoria.
Victoria died in January 2023 after Marten and her convicted rapist boyfriend, 51-year-old Mark Gordon, took her to live in a tent in the South Downs to evade social services when she was just a few days old. The child’s body was found in a disused allotment shed in Brighton two months later.
Both of baby Victoria’s parents were jailed for 14 years in September of gross negligence manslaughter, child cruelty, perverting the course of justice, and concealing the birth of a child.
In his sentencing remarks at the Old Bailey, Judge Mark Lucraft told the pair: “Neither of you gave much if any thought to the care or welfare of your baby: your focus was on yourselves.”
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A national review of child safeguarding measures was launched in the wake of Victoria’s death – and Marten told the panel that social services offered her “ultimatums, rather than true assistance” in the run-up to her and Gordon’s disappearance.
She added that she believed “people can be supported and can change, which should result in children being returned and supported”.
In its report, the Child Safeguarding Practice Review Panel called for “urgent action” to protect vulnerable unborn babies and infants from dangers at home from similar tragedies.
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Their report, published today, calls on government to act urgently to strengthen national guidance, improve information‑sharing between agencies, and ensure that professionals have the time, skills and support needed to protect unborn babies and infants from harm.
One of the recommendations includes tightening registration requirements in the Sexual Offences Act 2003, meaning registered sex offenders could face prison time if they do not inform the authorities of new relationships or pregnancies.
The Home Office is said to be carefully considering the review’s findings.
Panel chair Sir David Holmes said: “Few tragedies are greater than the death of a baby, and baby Victoria’s is all the more devastating because her parents caused it.
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“Baby Victoria lived in a family where there had been several concealed pregnancies, repeated child removals, domestic abuse, lack of engagement with services, serious offending and frequent moves. These are risks we see time and again in serious safeguarding incidents, and they are examined in depth in our review.
“While baby Victoria’s death was rare, her status as a vulnerable unborn baby and then a vulnerable infant is not. Last year, more than 5,000 unborn babies and infants under one were on child protection plans. Their parents are struggling, often disengaged from services, and many receive little support.
“A key lesson from baby Victoria’s story is clear: to protect vulnerable babies better, we must support their parents too. That may be hard to hear and hard to understand, but it is essential if we are to stop cycles of harm from repeating. Safeguarding professionals need the time, skills and resources to understand why families disengage and to address the underlying issues – whatever they may be – domestic abuse, substance use, mental health, trauma after previous child removals or anything else.
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“That is why we are calling for improved national guidance for safeguarding vulnerable unborn babies and infants, and better support for parents whose children are removed. These changes will help reduce future harm.
“We cannot prevent every act of extreme parental harm – but we can reduce the risks in families and help people to move forward. That must be baby Victoria’s legacy.”