Warren tapped the contract twice. You have until noon, Elena. Then I own the lease and the recipes. My hands shook. I set the pen down. That is when the woman in the hoodie stood up. She was maybe twenty six, quiet, the kind of customer who tipped in twenties and never spoke. She walked to the counter and slid her phone toward Warren, screen up. Mr. Colt, she said, my name is Priya Ashford Colt. My mother is Diane Ashford Colt. Warren went the color of raw dough. Diane Ashford Colt is the majority shareholder of Colt Hospitality Group, the woman who inherited it from her father, the woman Warren married and then quietly tried to push off the board last spring. Priya kept her voice even. I have been sitting in this bakery every Tuesday for six months because Elena fed me for free the week I lost my scholarship. I recorded the last eleven minutes. The health inspector call. The supplier threat. The forty two thousand dollar buyout on a property appraised at four hundred thousand. Mom is on speaker. Warren looked down at the phone. A woman’s voice, cold and clean, said, Warren, resign by end of day or I file the recording, the tax memos, and the emails to Cayman with the SEC on Monday morning. Which do you prefer. He opened his mouth. Nothing came out. Priya slid my buyout contract into the trash on her way back to the booth. She sat down, picked up her cafe con leche, and smiled at me for the first time in six months. Warren left without his pen. By Friday, Rosa’s Bakery had a new twenty year lease at one dollar a year, signed by Diane herself, delivered by courier with a note that read, thank you for feeding my daughter when no one else would. I still bake three hundred muffins before sunrise. The corner booth is reserved. Warren parks his own car now, three blocks away, at a meter.
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