Skylar laughed and repeated it, sharper this time. “You heard me. Sign the bakery over, or I’ll prove you can’t run it anymore. The doctor already thinks you’re slipping.” She waved her phone like a weapon, showing a text thread with someone named Dr. Levin. What she didn’t know was that the quiet man at the end of the table wasn’t a distant uncle, like I’d introduced him. He was Judge Harold Whitaker, my attorney of thirty years, and he had been recording since the moment she opened her mouth. He set down his napkin, slid a folder across the linen, and said gently, “Skylar, I think you should see this before you continue.” Inside were three things. First, the trust I’d rewritten six weeks ago, the day I noticed twenty-two thousand dollars missing from the bakery accounts, the day I found her forged signature on my checkbook. Second, a letter from Dr. Levin himself, confirming I’d passed every cognitive exam with a perfect score, and that Skylar had offered him four thousand dollars to say otherwise. Third, the eviction notice for the apartment above the shop, effective in seven days. Skylar’s face went the color of buttercream. “Grandma, please, I can explain—” I stood up slowly, smoothed my dress, and picked up the cake knife only to slice a second piece for the judge. “Sweetheart,” I said, “I built that bakery kneading dough at five in the morning with a baby on my hip. You think a text message and a bad doctor were going to take it from me?” I slid her plate away. “The bakery is going to the culinary scholarship fund in your mother’s name. You’ll read about it in the paper Sunday.” She ran out crying. The guests clapped, softly at first, then like thunder. I sat back down, blew out the last smoking candle, and made a wish I already knew had come true.
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