“Gerald,” I said, “before I sign anything, I’d like you to meet someone.” I tapped my phone twice. The double doors opened, and in walked Eleanor Cho — silver-haired, sharp-suited, carrying a leather portfolio thicker than Gerald’s ego. “This is my attorney. She also happens to be lead counsel for the Maple Street Historical Preservation Coalition.” Gerald’s bourbon glass paused mid-air. See, what Gerald didn’t know was that six months ago, when his shell company started sniffing around my block, I’d quietly filed paperwork to have the entire row designated a protected historic district. My bakery used to be a 1908 Carnegie reading room. The approval had come through Tuesday. Eleanor opened the portfolio. “Mr. Whitmore, the demolition permits you pre-purchased through Apex Holdings are void. The twenty-two million in deposits from your investors? Non-refundable, per your own contracts.” Gerald’s face went the color of cold oatmeal. Then I slid my own envelope across the table. “And these are the recordings. Every threat you just made. Every threat from the last four months. Connecticut is a one-party consent state, Gerald. I checked.” David finally looked up. “Dad… what did you do?” I turned to my husband, the man who’d watched his father bully me for two years and stayed silent. “David, the divorce papers are in the envelope too. I filed Monday. The bakery stays in my name, like the prenup your father insisted on.” I stood, brushing flour from my jeans onto his imported rug. “Gerald, you were right about one thing. I am just a baker. But this baker owns the corner you needed, the recordings that’ll end you, and the last laugh.” I walked out into the cold Connecticut night, and for the first time in two years, I could breathe. The next morning, my bakery opened at six. The line went around the block.
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