I slid a thin blue folder across the polished table. Vanessa’s lawyer opened it, and I watched his jaw tighten one millimeter at a time. “What is this?” Vanessa snapped, snatching the pages. “This,” I said quietly, “is the deed to the Birch Street property. Transferred into my name four years ago, the same week you told Nana her bakery was ‘a sad little hobby’ at Thanksgiving. Remember? You laughed when she cried in the kitchen.” Vanessa’s face went the color of raw dough. “That’s not legal, she was clearly manipulated—” “She was clearly recorded,” I said, sliding a second folder forward. “Notarized statement of sound mind. Three witnesses. Her physician. And a letter, in her handwriting, explaining exactly why she chose me.” I opened it for the lawyers to see. Nana’s careful cursive read: ‘Hazel showed up. Vanessa showed up only when she smelled money.’ The room went silent except for the rain. Then I pulled out the third folder — the one I’d been saving. “Also, the loan you took out last spring? Using the bakery as collateral on paperwork you forged with Uncle Ray? The bank flagged it this morning. Their fraud department would love a word.” Vanessa’s lawyer slowly closed his briefcase and stood up. “I’m withdrawing representation,” he said, and walked out without looking back. Vanessa lunged across the table — not at me, at Nana, hissing something about ungrateful old women. I stepped between them. “You will never set foot in her shop again. You will never call her again. And tomorrow morning, when the bakery opens, there will be a new sign in the window.” Vanessa’s voice cracked. “What sign?” Nana finally spoke, her voice soft as risen dough. “Hazel’s Bakery. Est. 1962. Still family-owned. Just not yours.” We left her sitting alone in that big leather chair, surrounded by folders she couldn’t lift. Outside, Nana squeezed my hand and whispered, “Let’s go bake, sweetheart.” And we did.
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