That’s when the bell over the door chimed. A tall woman in a charcoal coat walked in slowly, phone still recording at her hip. Behind her, three men in dark suits and earpieces fanned out along the wall. The construction crew went dead quiet. Marcus turned, annoyed. “We’re closed for a private conversation. Get out.” The woman didn’t blink. She walked up to my counter, picked up one of the torn lease pieces, and read it out loud, calm as Sunday morning. Then she looked at Marcus. “Interesting. Because I signed the deed on this building last Tuesday. The whole block, actually. Cash. And this deli’s lease was the one condition of sale.” Marcus laughed, but it came out cracked. “Lady, I don’t know who you think you are —” She slid a business card across the counter. He picked it up. I watched the color drain from his face in real time. His mouth opened. Closed. Opened again. “You’re — no. No, you’re supposed to be in Zurich, you don’t — Ellie doesn’t know anyone like —” The woman smiled for the first time. “Ellie taught me AP History in 2003. She let me eat here for free the whole year my mom was in chemo. I told her one day I’d pay her back.” She turned to the suits behind her. “Gentlemen, please escort Mr. Vale off MY property. And pull his permits on the Riverside project — all of them — by end of business.” Marcus stumbled backward into a table. The young mom started clapping. Then the teachers. Then the construction crew. Marcus looked at me like he was seeing a ghost — the tired old deli lady who apparently once fed a hungry scholarship kid named Priya Chen, now worth 2.4 billion dollars. He tried to speak. She held up one finger. “Don’t. You threatened my teacher. On camera. My lawyers will be in touch about the defamation, the harassment, and every inspector you paid off.” She turned back to me, and her eyes were suddenly sixteen years old again. “Grilled cheese, Mrs. E? Extra pickles?” I couldn’t stop crying long enough to answer.
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