I wiped my hands on my apron and finally looked up. ‘Tyler, sweetheart,’ I said, ‘before you bury me, you should know who actually owns this building.’ His lawyer’s smirk twitched. I reached under the counter and pulled out a slim blue folder Frank had prepared the year before he passed. Inside was the deed — not in my name, not in Tyler’s father’s name, but in the name of the Birch Street Community Trust, a nonprofit Frank and I quietly founded in 1998. Every loaf sold, every birthday cake, every wedding tier had funded scholarships for the neighborhood kids. Including, I reminded Tyler gently, the twenty-two thousand dollars that paid his first two years of college. The trust had nine board members. I was only one vote. ‘You can’t declare a charity unfit, dear.’ The lawyer started packing his briefcase before Tyler even processed it. But I wasn’t finished. I slid a second envelope across the counter — a letter from that very developer he’d been whispering with. Turns out the man’s daughter was one of our scholarship recipients, now a pediatric nurse. When he learned whose shop his ‘partner’ was trying to seize, he’d pulled the offer and sent me an apology along with a donation. Tyler’s face went the color of raw dough. The regulars, who had heard every word, began to clap. Slowly. Then louder. Officer Reyes, who’d been eating a bear claw in the corner, stood up and tipped his cap to me. Tyler stammered something about family, about loyalty. I handed him a warm cinnamon roll in a paper bag. ‘On the house,’ I said. ‘For the road.’ He hasn’t called since. But last Tuesday, a young woman came in, set down a check from the trust, and told me her little brother just got accepted to nursing school because of us. I cried into the croissant dough. Frank would have, too. Some inheritances aren’t meant to be cashed. They’re meant to be kneaded, baked, and given away — one warm loaf at a time.
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