Vanessa slapped the folder onto the counter. “Dad’s amended will,” she announced. “Turns out he left the cafe to me. I’m being generous letting you finish your shift.” The regulars went silent. Mr. Alvarez lowered his newspaper. Mrs. Chen stopped stirring her tea. I wiped my hands slowly on a dish towel and looked at the document. It was dated three weeks before Dad died — back when he couldn’t hold a pen, let alone sign his name in the looping script Vanessa had clearly traced from a birthday card. “Interesting,” I said. “Because Dad didn’t own the cafe when he died.” Her smile flickered. “Excuse me?” I reached under the counter and pulled out a leather binder Dad had pressed into my hands the night before hospice. “He transferred it to me in 2019. Full deed. Notarized. Filed with the county. He said you’d come back one day waving paperwork, and I should be ready.” I slid the certified copy across the counter. Vanessa’s face drained. “That’s — that’s not possible. The lawyer said —” “Marcus Hale?” I asked gently. “The one you’ve been dating since March?” The cafe inhaled. Vanessa’s mouth opened and closed. “I had coffee with his wife last week,” I continued. “Lovely woman. She’s the one who tipped me off that you two were drafting something. So I called Dad’s actual attorney, and we filed a preemptive affidavit Tuesday.” I tapped her forged document. “This? This is evidence. The police report goes in tomorrow morning unless you’d like to walk out that door and never contact me again.” Vanessa grabbed the folder with shaking hands. “You wouldn’t —” “Try me.” She fled. The bell above the door jingled like applause. Mr. Alvarez folded his paper. “Maren, honey — another cortado when you get a moment.” I smiled, tied my apron tighter, and got back to work. Dad’s cafe. My cafe. Still standing.
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