Tyler turned, annoyed, expecting some confused old friend. Instead, a sharp-eyed woman in a charcoal blazer stood up from booth six and walked over, sliding a leather folder onto the counter. “Tyler, this is Marisol Reyes,” I said. “My estate attorney. She’s been sitting in this bakery every Tuesday for the last eleven months.” His smirk flickered. Marisol opened the folder. “Mr. Whitaker, three things you should know. First, your grandmother transferred Sweet Magnolia into an irrevocable trust last March. She is not the owner anymore — the trust is. Second, the beneficiaries are the seven employees who’ve worked here over a decade, plus the children’s literacy program down the street. You are not listed. Third —” she slid a printed email across the counter, “— the developer you’ve been secretly negotiating with? He’s my client too. He pulled his offer this morning after I forwarded him the voicemails you left pretending to speak on Eleanor’s behalf. That’s wire fraud, Tyler. Federally prosecutable.” The color drained from his face. The customers had gone silent. My granddaughter Hannah, the quiet one who’d been bussing tables since she was twelve, stepped out from the kitchen in her apron. “I’m the new operations manager, Tyler,” she said gently. “Grandma trained me herself.” Tyler’s mouth opened and closed. He grabbed for the folder; Marisol slid it smoothly out of reach. “I’d suggest you leave,” she said, “before Eleanor decides to press charges instead of just blocking your number.” He stumbled backward, knocking into a chair, and fled out the jingling front door. I picked my piping bag back up and turned to the half-finished tray of magnolia cupcakes. “Hannah, honey,” I said, “pull table four’s order. We’ve got a bakery to run.” The applause started softly, then filled the whole room like sunrise.”
Related Posts
Hand over the deed, Grandma — that lake house is wasted on a woman
I reached into my purse and pulled out a thin manila envelope. Brittany rolled her eyes. ‘Oh my God, is this another scrapbook?’ Tyler snickered […]
Pack your little cardboard box, sweetheart, and try not to cry in the elevator
I rode the elevator down with that cardboard box balanced on my hip and a USB drive tucked inside my blazer pocket. Madison didn’t know […]
You’re being demoted, Eleanor. Effective immediately. Try to keep up with the interns this
At 9 a.m. the next morning, Tristan called an all-hands meeting in the main atrium to announce his “vision for a younger, sharper firm.” He […]


