I didn’t cry. I set the keys down gently, like I was placing a wounded bird on the counter, and I asked Vivienne one question. “Before I walk out, can you tell everyone here what the name of our supplier co-op is?” She blinked. Laughed. Said she didn’t need to memorize vendor trivia to run a restaurant. I nodded and pulled a slim folder from under the register. Inside were the articles of incorporation for Ember & Oak Hospitality LLC, signed three years ago, when Dad’s co-signed loan was paid off in full, refinanced under my name only, with a notarized release he’d forgotten he signed at the closing because he was too busy on a golf call. The restaurant, the lease, the liquor license, the trademark, the Instagram handle with its two hundred thousand followers, all of it sat under an LLC that listed exactly one member. Me. I slid the folder toward my father. His face went the color of raw dough. Vivienne snatched it, scanned it, and started laughing the way people laugh right before they scream. Then my head chef, Marco, stepped out of the kitchen holding his own envelope, the one I’d given the whole staff that morning, profit-share agreements I’d been planning to announce at the anniversary party next week. Every server, every cook, every dishwasher now owned a sliver of the place Vivienne thought she’d inherited over eggs benedict. I untied my apron, folded it neatly, and handed it to her. “You wanted the keys, sweetheart. Lock up when the brunch rush ends. Oh, and the staff vote on new management is Tuesday. I hear the busser you laughed at is running.” The room didn’t clap. They did something better. They went back to eating, like I’d never been in danger at all. Dad followed me to the door, whispering my name. I kept walking. Some inheritances you give yourself.
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