Brielle smirked at Coreen like they’d already won. Coreen leaned in and whispered, “Smart girl. Don’t make a scene.” I walked to the back office, pulled a navy-blue folder from the safe, and returned holding it against my chest like armor. The line of customers had gone silent. Even the espresso machine seemed to hold its breath. I slid the folder across the counter. “Before you sign anything,” I said, “you should probably read page four.” Brielle rolled her eyes and flipped through. Her smile cracked first. Then Coreen snatched it from her. Page four was the deed. My father had quietly placed Marigold & Crumb in an irrevocable trust three months before he died — a trust I was the sole beneficiary of, and that legally could not be transferred, sold, or gifted to any blood relative of Coreen’s for as long as I drew breath. Page five was even better. It was a notarized letter from my father, dated the week before his stroke. I read it out loud, voice steady. “To my daughter Hazel: If Coreen or Brielle ever try to take what you built, show them this. They drained my savings. They mocked your mother’s memory. They will not touch one croissant of yours.” A customer in the back actually gasped. Brielle’s face went the color of raw dough. Coreen started stammering about “misunderstandings” and “family healing.” I pointed to the door. “You’re trespassing on private property. I have it on four cameras. Leave, or I call Officer Reyes — he’s two doors down getting his usual cappuccino.” Brielle tried one last shot. “Dad would be ashamed of you.” I smiled for the first time that morning. “No, Brielle. He signed page five because he already was — of you.” They walked out to the sound of my regulars slow-clapping. I turned to the next customer, wiped the counter, and said, “Sorry about the wait. What can I get started for you?” The brown butter was still warm. The bakery was still mine. And for the first time in seven years, it finally felt like it.
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