I wiped my hands on my apron and walked out from behind the counter. “Vivian,” I said quietly, “you should have called first. I would’ve made coffee.” She smirked at her suited friends. “Save the charm. The probate filing is right here. This property reverts to the surviving spouse.” I nodded slowly. Then I walked to the little framed photograph hanging by the register, the one of Dad and me on opening day, and lifted it off the wall. Behind it was a small wall safe. The whole bakery went silent as I spun the dial. Out came a single manila envelope, edges soft from years of handling. “Dad gave me this the week before he died,” I said. “He told me you’d come one day.” Inside was the original deed, transferred into my name in 2017, two full years before she ever met him. Stamped, notarized, recorded with the county. Underneath it, a letter in his shaky handwriting: “Ellie-bug, the bakery was never part of my estate. It was already yours. If Vivian shows up waving papers, give her this and tell her I knew.” Vivian’s face drained of color. One of the suited men actually took a step backward, reading over my shoulder. “There’s more,” I added, pulling out a second document. A cease-and-desist from Dad’s attorney, pre-signed, pre-dated, waiting for exactly this moment. “He paid the retainer in advance. Mr. Callahan is expecting your call.” The fur coat suddenly looked too heavy on her shoulders. “Harold wouldn’t—” “Harold did,” I said. “Because Harold knew you.” My oldest regular, Mr. Pham, started clapping from his corner booth. Then the table of nurses joined in. Then the construction guys by the window. Vivian turned and walked out into the cold without a word, her suited men trailing behind like embarrassed children. I locked the door behind her, flipped the sign back to OPEN, and went to pull the next tray from the oven. The cinnamon knots were perfect. Dad would have loved them.
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