I folded the apron slowly, set it on the counter, and slid it toward her. “Sweetheart,” I said, “before you redecorate, you might want to read the lease.” Tiffany rolled her eyes and waved the transfer papers. “The lease is in the business name, Grandma. I already checked.” “Did you check who owns the building?” Her smile cracked. From under the register, I pulled a worn leather folder — the one I’d been quietly updating with my attorney, Marcus, for the last three months. Because the moment my baker, Luis, told me Tiffany had offered him a raise to ‘forget’ a missing deposit, I knew. I’d bought the building in 1991. I’d put it in a family trust in 2004. And six weeks ago, I’d removed Tiffany as a beneficiary and named Luis and my two longest employees as successor trustees. “The developer you’ve been emailing? Brennan Holdings?” I said. “Marcus called them yesterday. They were very interested to learn the ‘authorized seller’ had no authority at all. They’re considering fraud charges.” The color drained from her face. The bell above the door jingled. Two officers stepped in, polite, quiet, exactly as Marcus had arranged. Behind them came her mother — my daughter — who had finally seen the forged checks I’d mailed her the night before. Tiffany’s voice climbed. “Mom, tell her! Tell her I was just trying to help!” My daughter didn’t even look at her. She looked at me. “I’m so sorry, Mom.” I nodded once. Then I turned to Tiffany. “You wanted the badge? Here.” I tapped the apron. “It’s earned, not inherited. You can start earning yours by paying back every cent. Luis is your new manager. Be on time Monday.” She opened her mouth. Nothing came out. The officers escorted her out gently — no cuffs, just consequences. I tied a fresh apron on, picked up my piping bag, and called to the waiting customers, “Sorry for the delay, loves. Croissants are on the house.” The applause started slow. Then it filled every corner of the room I’d built with my own two hands.
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