I wiped my hands slowly on my apron and smiled the way David used to smile right before he checkmated someone. “Vivienne,” I said, “you’re absolutely right. The recipes should go to family.” Her glossed lips curled in triumph. She actually extended her palm. That’s when I reached under the counter and pulled out a slim manila folder instead of the ledger. “Before David passed,” I said, loud enough for the line to hear, “he registered every single recipe, the name ‘Margaret’s Hearth,’ and the storefront trademark under a living trust. Sole beneficiary — our daughter Elena. Co-trustee — me. Do you know who is explicitly named as prohibited from any managerial, financial, or branding involvement?” I slid the page across the glass. Her own name was highlighted in yellow, three times. The color drained from her face like someone pulled a plug. “But that’s not the fun part,” I continued. “The fun part is that your boyfriend Marcus? He emailed me last Tuesday asking to license the name. I forwarded that email to your husband, my brother, who has been wondering why you’ve been in Sedona four weekends in a row.” A woman in the back of the line gasped and covered her mouth with a croissant. Vivienne’s hand started shaking so badly her car keys rattled. “You can’t —” she started. “I can,” I said gently. “And Vivienne? The Yelp review? Post it. Every regular in this shop already left a five-star response to a fake one-star you posted under your maiden name in April. IP addresses are a beautiful thing.” She backed toward the door, knocking into a display of blueberry scones. The bell above the door jingled as she fled into the street. I turned to the stunned line of customers, picked up my tongs, and smiled. “Who’s next? The cardamom buns are still warm.” That night, Elena and I lit a candle by David’s photo, and for the first time in a year, the bakery felt like ours again — untouchable, and finally, completely safe.
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