Tyler didn’t sit. He slammed a folder on the counter, scattering powdered sugar across a tray of sfogliatelle. “I’m serious, Grandma. Brittany and I found a buyer. Two point four million for the building. You sign today, we move you to Sunnyvale Gardens by Friday.” Brittany smirked. “It’s really for your own good, Rose.” My name is Rosa. She knew that. I picked up the folder, flipped past the forged power-of-attorney pages he thought I couldn’t read, and set it gently aside. Then I rang the little brass bell Sal hung above the register in 1981. From the back room walked my attorney, Marie Castellano — Tyler’s own godmother — followed by Detective Ruiz from the 78th precinct, who’d been quietly nursing an espresso at the corner table for twenty minutes. Tyler’s face went the color of raw dough. “Sweetheart,” I said, “three months ago you used my Social Security number to open four credit cards. Last month you tried to refinance this building with a signature that isn’t mine. The bank called me. They always call me, Tyler. I bake their Christmas panettone.” Brittany started backing toward the door. Marie slid a thick envelope across the counter. “Rosa transferred the bakery into an irrevocable trust six weeks ago,” she said. “Beneficiaries: the seven employees who’ve worked here over a decade, and the culinary program at Saint Agnes. You inherit exactly what’s in this envelope.” Tyler tore it open with shaking hands. Inside was a single laminated coupon. One free cannoli. Detective Ruiz stepped forward with the warrant. As they walked Tyler out past the morning regulars, I turned the radio up — Dean Martin, Sal’s favorite — and called out, “Next in line, please!” Mrs. Kowalski ordered her usual seeded rye. The bell above the door jingled. The ovens kept breathing. And somewhere, I swear, Sal was laughing.
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