I didn’t take the pen. I took off my apron instead, folded it neatly, and laid it on the counter like a flag being retired. ‘Before I sign anything, sweetheart,’ I said softly, ‘let’s read the original deed aloud. For the customers.’ Tessa rolled her eyes, but my lawyer, Henry, was already standing up from table four, where he’d been quietly nursing a cortado for the last hour. He opened a leather folder. ‘Hollis & Daughters LLC,’ he read, ‘is wholly owned by the Margaret Hollis Revocable Trust, restructured in 2019. No board. No shareholders. No voting rights extended to any family member. Ever.’ The color drained from Tessa’s face like buttermilk down a drain. Daniel stood up from his corner booth, sputtering, ‘Mom, that’s not — we discussed —’ I held up one floury finger. ‘You discussed. I listened.’ I turned to Tessa. ‘You called me slow. Sentimental. You told my regulars I was a liability.’ I slid a second envelope across the counter. ‘That’s a termination letter. Effective immediately. And a bill for the three hundred dollars in croissants you’ve been pocketing for your roommate since June. Security footage is attached.’ She opened her mouth. Nothing came out. I looked at Daniel, my only son, the boy I’d put through college on cinnamon rolls and overnight shifts. ‘You stood in my bakery and tried to steal it from me to give to a child who’s never once asked how I’m doing. So here’s my vote.’ I picked my apron back up and tied it on. ‘I’m not retiring. You are — from this family business, from my will, from my Sunday table — until you remember who taught you how to braid challah.’ The morning crowd burst into applause. Tessa ran out crying. Daniel sat back down, head in his hands. I turned to my next customer, smiled, and said, ‘Sourdough’s fresh. What can I get you, honey?’
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