Sign the cafe over to me, Mom, or I swear I’ll have you declared

Trevor slid a stack of papers across the counter. “Transfer of ownership. Mom signs, you step aside, and I’ll let you keep your little barista job. Generous, right?” He laughed. A few regulars looked up from their tables. I dried my hands slowly. “Trevor,” I said, “before Mom signs anything, you should probably meet someone.” I nodded toward the booth by the window, where a woman in a charcoal blazer had been quietly sipping a cortado for the last twenty minutes. She stood up. “Trevor Hayes? I’m Diane Mercer. I’m your mother’s attorney.” Trevor’s smile cracked. Diane opened a leather folder. “Eighteen months ago, your mother transferred full ownership of Rosewater Cafe into an irrevocable family trust. Your sister is the sole trustee and operator. Your mother retains lifetime residence in the upstairs apartment.” Trevor’s face went the color of skim milk. “That’s — she can’t — Mom, tell her!” Mom finally looked up from her tea. Her voice was small but steady. “I signed it the week after you tried to take my credit cards, sweetheart.” Diane wasn’t finished. “Additionally, the $4,000 loan from 2021 was documented. With interest and the legal fees from today’s threatened guardianship filing, you currently owe the trust $7,840. We’ll be filing in small claims Monday morning unless we reach an arrangement.” Trevor grabbed his papers. “This is insane. You’re my family —” “We were,” I said. “Then you walked in here and tried to declare our mother incompetent in front of her own customers.” Mrs. Alvarez at table three started clapping. Then table seven. Then the whole cafe. Trevor stumbled out, the bell above the door jingling behind him like a punchline. Mom reached across the booth and squeezed my hand. “Thank you, baby.” I poured her a fresh cup of tea and went back to wiping the counter. The morning rush was over, but the day was just beginning.

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