Hand over the bakery deed, Grandma, or my lawyers will bury you in paperwork

I set down the rolling pin, wiped my hands on my apron, and finally looked at him. “Tyler, do you remember what you told me when you were nine?” He rolled his eyes. “Grandma, I don’t have time for—” “You told me,” I continued, “that when you grew up, you’d protect this bakery because it smelled like home.” Brielle snorted into her oat milk latte. Tyler’s jaw tightened. “Sentiment doesn’t pay property taxes. Sign the deed transfer or I’ll have you declared mentally unfit. I’ve already spoken to a doctor.” That’s when the bell above the door jingled. In walked Marcus, my attorney of thirty years, followed by two men in gray suits I didn’t recognize. Tyler’s smug grin slipped. “Margaret,” Marcus said gently, “is this the grandson you mentioned?” I nodded. Marcus turned to Tyler. “Six months ago, your grandmother restructured everything. The bakery, the building, and the three adjacent lots she quietly purchased in 1998 are held in a charitable trust benefiting the Frank Holloway Culinary Scholarship for first-generation students.” Tyler’s face drained. “That’s not—she can’t—” “She can. She did. And these gentlemen are from the Department of Justice.” One of the suits stepped forward. “Mr. Holloway, we have questions about the falsified medical evaluation submitted under your name last Tuesday, and the wire transfers from your firm’s escrow account.” Brielle slowly slid her engagement ring off and placed it on the counter. “Tyler, you said the money was clean.” She grabbed her purse and walked out without looking back. Tyler stared at me, trembling. “Grandma, please. I’ll lose everything.” I picked up my rolling pin and went back to my dough. “Sweetheart,” I said softly, “you lost everything the moment you forgot what home smelled like.” The oven timer dinged. The cinnamon rolls were ready. And for the first time in months, I smiled.

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