Marcus laughed and knocked over my display tray, croissants tumbling across the tile. “You think anyone’s coming to save a nobody like you? I own this block. I own the inspectors. I own the bank that holds your little loan.” He leaned so close I could smell his cologne. “Tomorrow your health permit disappears. Next week your lease. Move on with dignity, sweetheart, before I make it ugly.” That’s when the quiet regular in the gray hoodie finally set down his cup. He’d been coming in every Tuesday for eight months. Always ordered the same almond croissant. Always tipped in cash. Always said thank you, ma’am. I only knew him as Daniel. He stood up slowly, pulled a phone from his pocket, and said six words into it: “Send the team. Rosetta Bakery. Now.” Within four minutes three black SUVs pulled up outside my window. Men in suits walked in without knocking. One handed Daniel a leather folder. Marcus’s smug grin cracked as Daniel opened it and slid a document across my counter, right on top of the buyout offer. It was the deed to the entire block — Marcus’s glass tower project included — purchased at auction that morning by a private holding company. Daniel’s company. Marcus’s face went white. “Wait. Wait, you’re — you can’t be — ” Daniel finally looked up from his coffee. “You threatened my baker, Marcus. My grandmother came here every Sunday for forty years. This bakery isn’t for sale. Yours is. Effective this morning, you’re just a renter. And I don’t renew leases for men who twist women’s wrists.” Marcus stumbled backward into the shattered tip jar. The businessman on his laptop was already recording. The couple by the window finally moved — to hold the door open for the security team escorting Marcus out. Daniel picked up a coin from the floor, dropped it into my palm, and quietly asked if I still had any almond croissants left.
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