I wiped my hands on a towel and walked to the register without rushing. “Vanessa, sweetheart,” I said gently, “why don’t we step into the back office?” She smirked at the regulars and followed, heels clicking like she’d already won. I closed the door, poured two cups of coffee, and slid a manila folder across Harold’s old oak desk. “Before you padlock anything, you should read what’s inside.” She flipped it open with a bored sigh. Her face changed on page two. The bakery deed wasn’t in Harold’s name. It hadn’t been since 2009, when Harold quietly transferred the property and the business into a living trust under my maiden name, Eleanor Marsh, with documentation signed, notarized, and filed in three counties. Page four was the letter Harold wrote her the week before he died, the one she’d refused to open at the hospital. He’d written, “If you ever try to take what Eleanor built beside me, know that I saw this coming, and I chose her.” Page six was the cease-and-desist my attorney had prepared the moment Vanessa first called threatening probate. And page eight, the part that finally cracked her composure, was a recording transcript from her own voicemail to me three weeks ago, where she’d laughed about “squeezing the old widow out before she figures out what the corner lot is worth to developers.” Vanessa’s mouth opened and closed like a fish on dry tile. “You can’t,” she whispered. “I already did,” I said. I slid one more page forward, a restraining order, signed that morning by Judge Patterson, a man who’d been eating Harold’s almond croissants every Sunday for fifteen years. “You have twenty minutes to leave my bakery, and you are not welcome back. Not at the counter. Not at Thanksgiving. Not at my funeral.” She grabbed her Chanel coat and fled past the line of regulars, who, I noticed, did not move aside for her. I walked back to the front, tied my apron tighter, and called out, “Who’s next, loves?” The morning rush exhaled, and somewhere, I swear, Harold did too.
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