Brett puffed up, certain he’d won. “The bank already approved the buyout,” he announced to the room. “Grandma signed everything last spring when she was, you know…” He tapped his temple and chuckled. A few diners gasped. My oldest regular, Mr. Halverson, set down his wine glass so hard it rang. I let the silence stretch, then reached under the hostess stand and pulled out a slim leather folder of my own. “Brett, sweetheart,” I said gently, “what I signed last spring was a revocable trust. Revocable. Say it with me.” His smile cracked. I slid the documents across the bar. “Three weeks ago, after I found the forged addendum you slipped into my Christmas cards, I dissolved it. The deed, the liquor license, the trademark on Nonna’s Table — all transferred to a worker co-op. Every server, every dishwasher, every line cook here owns a piece now.” Maria, my head waitress of nineteen years, stepped out from the kitchen drying her hands. Behind her came Diego, Anh, and little Sam who started as a busboy at fifteen. They formed a quiet half-circle around Brett. “Your investors,” I continued, “were notified Monday. I believe the word their lawyer used was ‘fraudulent inducement.’ They’re suing you, not me.” Brett’s folder slipped from his fingers. “You can’t — Grandma, I’m family —” “You stopped being family,” I said, “the day you told the bank I had dementia.” Mr. Halverson stood up and began to clap. Table by table, my dining room rose with him, forks still in hand, until the applause shook the wine glasses. I picked my apron back up, tied it slow, and turned to Maria. “Two specials on table six, love. And someone please show my grandson to the door — he’s not on tonight’s reservation.” Brett stumbled out into the rain. The oven was still warm. The gnocchi was still waiting. And for the first time in months, I hummed while I cooked.
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