Nana Ruth set down her teacup. “Tyler, sweetheart,” she said softly, “why don’t you read the folder you brought first?” He laughed and flipped it open, ready to gloat. His smile cracked on page two. Because the deed he’d printed from the county website still listed the original 1962 transfer — to Ruth and her late sister Margaret, jointly. Margaret was my other grandmother. The bakery had never been Tyler’s bloodline to claim. Tyler’s father had married into the family. I watched his face go the color of raw dough. “That — that’s a clerical error,” he stammered. “It’s really not,” I said, stepping into the light. I pulled out my own folder. Inside: the updated deed Nana had signed three months ago, transferring full ownership to me, witnessed by her attorney and her doctor, with a notarized capacity evaluation attached. Below that, the LLC paperwork for Ruth’s Hearth, Inc., already operational. And below that, a cease-and-desist letter, drafted that morning, citing the seventeen voicemails Tyler had left threatening an elderly woman with institutionalization. “Elder coercion is a felony in Vermont,” I said. “My lawyer flagged every voicemail. She’s mailing copies to your firm’s ethics board on Monday — unless you’d like to apologize, leave the brandy, and never contact Nana again.” Tyler’s mouth opened and closed like an oven door. Nana Ruth finally looked up, her voice gentle as rising dough. “You came here to take from a tired old woman, Tyler. Hazel came here at four in the morning, every morning, for six years.” She slid the brandy glass out of his hand. “Drive safe, dear.” He left without his folder. The kitchen smelled like cinnamon and quiet victory. Nana squeezed my floury hand, and somewhere in the dark farmhouse, the proof oven dinged — right on time.
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