The auctioneer cleared his throat. “Before we finalize the sale of Henry Whitman’s Bakery, the estate attorney has requested the floor.” Vivian’s smile twitched. A small man in a gray suit stepped forward — Mr. Alder, Grandpa’s lawyer of forty years. He nodded at me. I opened the leather folder and handed him the document inside. “As Mr. Whitman’s executor,” Alder said, “I’m obligated to inform the room that the property at 414 Maple Street is not, in fact, part of the auctioned estate.” Gasps. Vivian’s check lowered an inch. “Six months ago, Henry Whitman transferred full ownership of the bakery — building, recipes, and trademark — to his granddaughter Claire, in exchange for one dollar and her continued care during his illness. The deed was filed publicly in March.” The room turned to Vivian like a slow tide. “That’s impossible,” she snapped. “The family agreed —” “The family wasn’t there,” I said quietly. “I was. Every night. Every hospital visit. Every time he forgot my name and I told him again.” Alder continued, “What was auctioned today is the commercial lot next door — the empty one Ms. Vivian Whitman just purchased for eight hundred thousand dollars. Non-refundable.” Someone in the back actually laughed. Vivian’s face went the color of raw dough. “You knew,” she hissed at me. “I tried to tell you,” I said. “Three times. You told me to go pour someone a coffee.” I lifted the folder. Inside was one more page — Grandpa’s handwriting, shaky but clear. *Claire, if she shows up in pearls, let her buy the parking lot. Love, Pop.* I walked past her, past the aunts who’d never returned my calls, past the uncle who’d called me a stain on the family name. At the door, I turned. “We open at six tomorrow. First coffee’s on the house.” Then I stepped out into the morning, where the smell of cinnamon was already drifting down Maple Street — from my bakery.
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