Sunday came. Tyler arrived in a blazer with his fiancée Madison and a buyer from a chain bistro group — a man named Preston who already had a tape measure out, muttering about ‘gutting the kitchen.’ Tyler spread the transfer papers on table six, the same table where I used to do his homework with him after school. ‘Just sign, Mom. I’ve negotiated 1.2 million. You retire. Everybody wins.’ I poured him a glass of the house Chianti. ‘Before I sign anything,’ I said, ‘I want you to meet someone.’ The back door opened, and in walked Elena — my sous chef of nineteen years — followed by my attorney, Mr. Park. Tyler’s smile flickered. Mr. Park opened a folder. ‘Mrs. Delgado transferred 60% ownership of Rosa’s Kitchen into an employee trust last March. Elena is majority partner. The building itself is owned by the Delgado Family Foundation, which Mrs. Delgado chairs alone.’ Preston set down his tape measure. Tyler’s face went the color of the tablecloth. ‘You — you can’t sell what you don’t own, sweetheart,’ I said gently. ‘And nobody is gutting my kitchen.’ Madison started whispering furiously into Tyler’s ear about the down payment they’d already promised on a condo. I slid a second envelope across the table to him. Inside was a job application. ‘Dishwasher. Six mornings a week. Same position I started your father in when we were twenty-two. You said the place was an embarrassment. Come learn why it isn’t.’ Tyler stared at the apron Elena was holding out to him. The lunch crowd had gone quiet. Preston was already packing his briefcase. ‘Mom, please —’ Tyler started. ‘I raised you to build things, Tyler,’ I said. ‘Not to sell your mother for a condo view.’ I picked up the unsigned papers, walked them to the wood-fired oven, and dropped them in. The flame caught instantly. Elena flipped the sign on the door from Closed to Open. ‘Table four needs bread,’ I told my son. ‘Apron’s on the hook.’
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