I wiped my hands on my apron and picked up the pen. Trevor’s smirk widened. The developer, a man named Kessler, already had his phone out, probably texting his architect. ‘Smart choice, Mrs. Halloran,’ he said. I clicked the pen twice. Then I set it down. ‘Before I sign anything, Trevor, you should meet someone.’ I nodded toward the corner booth where a quiet woman in a navy blazer had been nursing the same coffee for an hour. She stood. ‘Trevor Halloran? I’m Dana Pierce, attorney for the Halloran Family Trust. Your father restructured ownership of this property eleven years ago, before he passed. The diner, the lot, and the two acres behind it belong to a trust. Your mother is sole trustee. You were removed as beneficiary in 2019, after the incident with the second mortgage.’ The color drained out of Trevor’s face like someone pulled a plug. Kessler slowly lowered his phone. ‘Trevor, you told me your mother was the obstacle. You told me you controlled the asset.’ ‘I—I do, basically, she listens to—’ ‘Basically isn’t a signature, son.’ Kessler stood, buttoned his jacket, and looked at me the way men look at people they suddenly realize they underestimated. ‘Mrs. Halloran, I apologize for the ambush. If you ever decide to sell, on your terms, here’s my card.’ He set it down gently, like an offering, and walked out. Trevor was still standing there, mouth working around words that wouldn’t come. I slid the contract back across the counter to him. ‘You wanted me to sign on my knees, baby. Instead, you’re going to bus table four. Tony called out sick.’ ‘Mom, please, the investors—’ ‘Are not my problem. But the lunch rush is yours. Apron’s on the hook where your father left it.’ He stared at that apron for a long moment. Then, because he had nowhere else to go and nothing else left to bargain with, he tied it around his waist. The bell over the door jingled. Lunch rush walked in. And for the first time in twenty years, my son finally learned what it cost to build the place he tried to sell.
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