I wiped my hands slowly on my apron and smiled at him — the same smile I gave him when he was six and stole cookies from the cooling rack. “Tyler, sweetheart,” I said, “before you sign me into a home, you should probably meet someone.” The bell above the door jingled. In walked Margaret Chen, my attorney, holding a leather folder, followed by David Whitaker from the Vermont Heritage Trust. Tyler’s smirk slipped. “Eighteen months ago,” Margaret said, opening the folder, “Eleanor placed Miller’s Bakery, the building, the land, and the original recipes into an irrevocable charitable trust. It’s now a registered historic culinary landmark. It cannot be sold, transferred, or inherited by any family member. Ever.” Brittany’s sunglasses came off. “What?” Tyler stammered. “You can’t — Grandma, that was supposed to be mine —” “Supposed to be?” I said softly. “Honey, you haven’t walked through that door in four years. Not for my birthday. Not when your grandfather passed. You came today with paperwork.” I slid a second envelope across the counter. “This is the trust fund I’d set aside for your wedding. Forty-two thousand dollars. I redirected it last week — to a scholarship for young bakers from low-income families. The first recipient starts apprenticing here on Monday. Her name is Rosa. She’s nineteen. She cried when I called her.” Brittany turned on her heel and walked out without a word. Tyler stood frozen, mouth open, as the lunch crowd quietly began to clap — Mrs. Petersen, Officer Daley, the schoolteachers who’d been coming here for thirty years. I picked up a warm cinnamon roll, wrapped it in wax paper, and held it out to him. “For the road, sweetheart. The bakery’s still open to customers. Just not to vultures.” He left the cinnamon roll on the counter. I gave it to Rosa the next morning, and she ate it standing right where I was standing, learning how to fold the dough my mother taught me to fold, in a building no one would ever take from us again.
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