I pulled the envelope out and slid it across the table, right next to Diane’s untouched coffee. “Before Ethan signs anything,” I said sweetly, “maybe he should read this.” Diane’s smile tightened. Ethan finally looked up. Inside was a certified letter from the county recorder confirming that the house — the one Diane had been telling everyone was “her late husband’s legacy” — had been quietly foreclosed on eleven years ago. My grandmother bought it at auction for cash. She left it to me, and me alone, six months before our wedding. Diane’s face went the color of old paper. “That’s… that’s not possible,” she stammered. “It’s very possible,” I said. “I also have the last two years of bank statements. Every mortgage payment, every property tax bill, every repair after that pipe burst in the guest room Diane loves so much — all paid from my account. Not Ethan’s. Not yours.” I turned to Ethan. “I asked you six times this year if we could go to counseling. You told me your mother said therapy was for weak people. So here’s my counteroffer.” I placed a second envelope on the table. Divorce papers. Already filed. “You can keep your mother’s opinions, Ethan. I’m keeping my house, my name, and the bakery lease I signed last Tuesday on Fifth Street.” Diane shot up. “You ungrateful little—” “Careful,” I said. “The cinnamon rolls are for my new employees. Not for guests who threaten me before breakfast.” Ethan finally spoke. “Emily, wait—” But I was already untying my apron. I laid it gently over the back of my grandmother’s chair, the one Diane had been sitting in like a throne. “You have until Sunday to move her things out of my house,” I told him. “After that, the locks change.” I walked out into the morning light, the smell of cinnamon following me down the porch steps. For the first time in three years, I could breathe. And somewhere behind me, I heard Diane finally, beautifully, run out of words.
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