I wiped my hands slowly on my apron and smiled the way David used to smile right before he checkmated someone. “Vivienne,” I said, “you’re absolutely right. The recipes should go to family.” Her glossed lips curled in triumph. She actually extended her palm. That’s when I reached under the counter and pulled out a slim manila folder instead of the ledger. “Before David passed,” I said, loud enough for the line to hear, “he registered every single recipe, the name ‘Margaret’s Hearth,’ and the storefront trademark under a living trust. Sole beneficiary — our daughter Elena. Co-trustee — me. Do you know who is explicitly named as prohibited from any managerial, financial, or branding involvement?” I slid the page across the glass. Her own name was highlighted in yellow, three times. The color drained from her face like someone pulled a plug. “But that’s not the fun part,” I continued. “The fun part is that your boyfriend Marcus? He emailed me last Tuesday asking to license the name. I forwarded that email to your husband, my brother, who has been wondering why you’ve been in Sedona four weekends in a row.” A woman in the back of the line gasped and covered her mouth with a croissant. Vivienne’s hand started shaking so badly her car keys rattled. “You can’t —” she started. “I can,” I said gently. “And Vivienne? The Yelp review? Post it. Every regular in this shop already left a five-star response to a fake one-star you posted under your maiden name in April. IP addresses are a beautiful thing.” She backed toward the door, knocking into a display of blueberry scones. The bell above the door jingled as she fled into the street. I turned to the stunned line of customers, picked up my tongs, and smiled. “Who’s next? The cardamom buns are still warm.” That night, Elena and I lit a candle by David’s photo, and for the first time in a year, the bakery felt like ours again — untouchable, and finally, completely safe.
Related Posts
Just sign the resignation letter, Elena, before I have security drag your immigrant behind
I didn’t pick up the pen. Instead, I set my portfolio down and opened it slowly, the way you open a door you’ve been waiting […]
You can keep crying into your little spreadsheets, sweetheart, but this promotion was always
What Brad didn’t know was that the Whitfield account he’d been ‘saving’ wasn’t his to save. Eighteen months earlier, when I first onboarded the client, […]
Hand over the bakery keys, Grandma, before you embarrass yourself any further. Nobody buys
I poured myself a cup of coffee, slow and deliberate, while Brielle’s friends filmed. ‘Sweetheart,’ I said, ‘before you redecorate, you should meet someone.’ The […]
