I wiped my hands on a dishtowel and asked her to sit. She didn’t. She slid the papers across the marble counter and tapped them with a French-tipped nail. “Sign, Mother. Don’t embarrass yourself.” Behind her, the bell above the door jingled. In walked Daniel Ortiz, my attorney of twenty years, and beside him, Hal’s old Marine buddy Coleman, who now chaired the Cypress Avenue Historic Preservation Board. They each ordered a cinnamon roll like it was any other Tuesday. Vanessa’s smile cracked. I reached under the register and pulled out the folder Hal had left me the week before the cancer took him. “Sweetheart,” I said gently, “this bakery sits on a half-acre lot your father bought in 1989 for eleven thousand dollars. Last month, a developer offered me four point two million. I turned him down.” Her mouth opened. I kept going. “Two years ago, I placed the building into an irrevocable trust. The beneficiaries are the seven employees who stayed with me through the pandemic, and the Cypress Avenue youth culinary scholarship. Not you. You stopped calling the year your father got sick.” Daniel slid his own folder forward. “Mrs. Ellis already passed a full cognitive evaluation in March, Vanessa. On video. Filed with the county. Any incompetency petition will be dismissed, and frivolous filing carries sanctions.” Coleman bit into his roll and added, mouth full, “Building’s landmarked too, kiddo. Can’t even repaint the trim without my board’s vote.” Vanessa’s hands shook. She whispered, “But I’m your daughter.” I nodded. “You are. And the door is always open — for a daughter. Not a creditor.” I poured her a coffee in a paper cup, to go. She left her papers on the counter. I dropped them in the compost bin with the eggshells, and started the next batch of sourdough as the sun came through the window, exactly the way Hal always loved it.
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