I wiped my hands on my apron and smiled the way Harold taught me to smile at difficult customers. “Brittany, sweetheart, why don’t you and Chase have a seat. I’ll bring you both a cinnamon roll. On the house.” She rolled her eyes but sat. Chase smirked, sliding the contract across the marble. “Six hundred thousand, Eleanor. Cash. We’re turning it into a wine bar. Final offer.” I set down two warm rolls and a folder of my own. Then I waited. The bell jingled again, and in walked Marcus Chen, my attorney, followed by a woman in a navy blazer carrying a leather portfolio. “Eleanor,” Marcus said gently, “shall we?” I turned to Brittany. “Honey, do you remember three Christmases ago, when you told me at dinner that this bakery was an embarrassment and you’d never set foot in it again?” Her face went pale. “I recorded that, dear. Not on purpose. My hearing aid syncs to my phone now. Marcus has a copy. So does my estate planner.” I slid the folder open. “Last spring, I placed the bakery, the building, and the two storefronts next door into a community trust. The trust funds culinary scholarships for foster kids in Chatham County. The woman beside Marcus is the trust director. I am no longer the legal owner of anything you came here to take.” Chase stood up so fast his chair scraped. Brittany’s mouth opened and closed. “But,” I added, sliding a smaller envelope toward her, “Harold did leave you something. He always believed in second chances.” She tore it open, hands shaking. Inside was a single laminated recipe card. Buttermilk biscuits. And a note in his handwriting: “Earn it.” The trust director smiled. “We’re hiring a counter clerk, actually. Minimum wage. Six a.m. start. Apron required.” I picked up my rolling pin. The morning rush was about to begin, and I had bread to bake.
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