Granddaughter Mocked Grandma’s Bakery on Camera and Lost Her Inheritance to the Loser Uncle

Granddaughter Mocked Grandma's Bakery on Camera and Lost Her Inheritance to the Loser Uncle

I poured myself a cup of coffee, slow and deliberate, while Brielle’s friends filmed. ‘Sweetheart,’ I said, ‘before you redecorate, you should meet someone.’ The bell above the door jingled. In walked Daniel Ortiz, my attorney, carrying a navy folder, and behind him, Mrs. Chen from the credit union, and behind her, my youngest son Thomas — the one Brielle had spent years calling ‘the loser uncle’ because he drove a delivery van instead of leasing a Mercedes.

Daniel set the folder on the counter. ‘Ms. Hollins, the trust transfer is finalized as of Monday.’ Brielle’s smile twitched. ‘Trust? What trust? Mom said the bakery was going to me.’ I took a sip of coffee. ‘Your mother told you a story, baby. Six weeks ago, after you posted that video calling me a wrinkled relic, I moved Hollins Bakery — the building, the recipes, the trademark — into an irrevocable trust. Beneficiary: Thomas. He’s been baking with me since he was nine. He knows why we fold the butter cold.’

Her ring lights wobbled. ‘You can’t — I already told my followers —’ ‘I know,’ I said gently. ‘I watched. Three hundred thousand people watched you call me a relic. So I called Channel 7. They’re doing a feature Sunday: Sixty Years of Magnolia Street. Thomas is the new face.’ Thomas stepped forward, quiet as ever, and slid a small white box across the counter to her. ‘A dozen cupcakes, on the house. Consider it severance.’

One of her friends had already stopped filming. Another was edging toward the door. Brielle’s voice cracked. ‘Grandma, please, I was joking, it was content —’ I leaned across the counter, close enough that only she could hear. ‘Content costs, sweetheart. Now step aside. You’re blocking the paying customers.’ She left without the cupcakes. The line behind her clapped. And Thomas, my quiet boy, finally tied on the apron I’d been saving for him since he was nine years old.

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