Noon came. I hadn’t slept. I was arranging sourdough in the window when the little bell above my door rang and Marcus walked back in, flanked by two men in matching gray suits carrying leather folios. “Last chance, sweetheart,” he said, sliding the same papers across the same counter. “Sign, or by Monday this place is a parking lot.” He was mid-sentence when the bell rang again. A tall man in a long black coat stepped inside, shook the rain off his sleeves, and quietly closed the door behind him. He didn’t look at Marcus. He walked straight to my counter, picked up one of the croissants I’d been arranging, took a slow bite, and finally turned. “Marcus,” he said, brushing crumbs off his lapel the same way Marcus had brushed them off his cufflinks. “You’re twelve minutes late to a meeting on the fourteenth floor. My floor.” Marcus’s face went the color of the flour on my apron. The man in the coat set the croissant down, reached across the counter, and gently squeezed my hand. “Sorry I’m late, boss,” he said. “Legal took longer than I thought.” Then he turned to Marcus and slid a different folder across the counter — a folder with Marcus’s own signature on the top page, and the logo of the parent company that had quietly bought Marcus’s firm three weeks earlier. The company I’d inherited from my father the winter before, and had been running out of this bakery every morning between the four a.m. bake and the seven a.m. rush. Marcus opened the folder. His two suits took one step back from him, not toward him. He looked up at me the way a man looks up when he finally hears the floor crack. “Ma’am,” he started. I picked my tip jar up off the floor, set it back on the counter, and slid his buyout papers into the trash. “It’s Mrs. Halloran,” I said. “And you’re twelve minutes late.”
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