Marcus slid the papers closer. “Sign it. Mom already agreed. The building’s worth four hundred grand and you’re running it into the ground selling muffins to retirees.” His wife giggled behind her phone. I picked up the pen, turned it slowly in my fingers, then set it back down. “Funny,” I said. “You brought a lawyer but not a copy of the actual will.” Marcus’s smirk twitched. “The will’s a formality.” I reached under the counter and pulled out a sealed envelope, the wax stamp still intact, Grandma’s looping handwriting on the front: To be opened only in Marcus’s presence. His lawyer’s face went pale before I even broke the seal. Inside was a notarized deed, dated six months before she passed, transferring full ownership of the bakery AND the building to me, alone. Attached was a second document, a trust she’d quietly built from forty years of savings I never knew about, three hundred thousand dollars, also in my name, contingent on one condition: that I never sell to family. Grandma had known. She’d always known. I slid the papers toward Marcus. “You came for a deed. Here’s one. Read the bottom line.” His wife stopped filming. The lawyer cleared his throat and muttered, “Sir, we should leave.” Marcus’s voice cracked. “She wouldn’t do this to me.” I leaned forward, quiet as the morning. “She didn’t do anything to you, Marcus. She did everything for me. Because I was here. I held her hand when yours was too busy swiping a credit card.” I walked around the counter, opened the front door, and the little bell chimed like Grandma was laughing somewhere. “The bakery opens in ten minutes. You’re standing where my paying customers sit.” He left without a word, his wife trailing behind, her phone dark. I locked the door, pressed my forehead to the glass, and whispered, “Thank you, Rosie.” Then I tied my apron tighter, turned on the ovens, and started the cinnamon rolls, just like she taught me.
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