Twenty minutes later the bell over the door jingled and in walked a tall woman in a charcoal suit, silver hair pinned back, tablet under one arm. Bryce didn’t even look up from his phone. He was still lecturing me about “market realities” and how my little pie case wasn’t going to survive Q3. The woman set her tablet on the counter, ordered a black coffee, and slid a business card toward Bryce without a word. He glanced at it, annoyed, then looked again. Then a third time. The color drained out of his face in real time, like somebody had pulled a plug. “Margaret,” he stammered, standing up so fast his stool screeched. “I— I didn’t know you were in town, I— we can absolutely revisit—” Margaret Halloway, his aunt, the actual chairwoman of Halloway Holdings, sipped her coffee and finally looked at him. “Bryce. Sit down.” He sat. She turned to me and smiled, the kind of small warm smile you only get from someone who’s known you a long time. “Hi Nora. Sorry it took me a minute. Traffic on the bridge.” Then, without raising her voice: “Bryce, this diner isn’t on the acquisition list. It was never on the acquisition list. Poppy fed me every day the year my husband was sick. I told your father, in writing, that this corner comes off the tower plan. You’d know that if you read anything I send you.” She tapped her tablet. “Also, effective this morning, you’re not on the tower plan either. HR will call you before you reach your car.” Bryce opened his mouth. Closed it. Opened it again. Margaret slid a fresh copy of my lease across the counter, already signed, rent frozen for another twenty years. Then she looked at the torn pieces floating in my coffee, looked back at Bryce, and said quietly, “Apologize to Nora. On your feet. Loud enough for her regulars to hear.” The trucker put his fork down. The line cook turned off the grill. And for the first time in six months, my diner was very, very quiet.
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