I signed. Slowly. Neatly. Then I slid the papers back and pulled a second folder from under my apron — the one I’d been carrying for six months. ‘Before Daniel says anything,’ I said, ‘he should know I already filed.’ Vivienne’s smile cracked. Daniel finally looked up. ‘Filed what?’ I opened the folder. Divorce petition, dated three weeks ago. Forensic accounting report on Vivienne’s ‘charity’ foundation — the one Daniel had been quietly funneling company money into to dodge taxes. And a letter from the IRS, addressed to me, thanking me for my cooperation as a whistleblower. ‘The bakery isn’t in our marital assets,’ I said. ‘I transferred it to a trust last spring. The lake house was never in Daniel’s name — your accountant put it in mine for the property tax break, remember? And those company shares?’ I turned to Daniel. ‘They’re voting shares. Enough, combined with your sister’s, to remove you as CEO. She and I had brunch yesterday.’ Vivienne stood up so fast her chair scraped. ‘You ungrateful little—’ ‘Infertile,’ I finished for her. ‘You said infertile. Funny word, considering the fertility clinic confirmed last month that the problem was never me.’ Daniel went gray. I picked up the lemon tart, walked to the trash can, and dropped it in. ‘I baked that with the lemons from the tree you said I’d never be classy enough to own. Enjoy the house while you still can — the trust takes possession Friday.’ I untied my apron, folded it on the counter, and walked out past the family photos that had never quite included me. My phone buzzed before I reached the car. Daniel’s sister: ‘Board voted. It’s done. Coffee tomorrow?’ I laughed for the first time in three years. Vivienne had taught me one true thing: a lady never lets them see her sweat. She just lets them watch her leave.
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