Vanessa tapped her pen against the contract. “Sign it, Eli. Today. I’ve already got a buyer for the building. Some boutique gym chain. They’re gutting the kitchen Monday morning.” I finally looked up. “Before I sign anything, Vanessa, you should probably call your father’s attorney. The real one. Not the cousin you flew in from Tampa.” Her smile flickered. “Excuse me?” I reached into my apron and pulled out a worn manila envelope, the corners stained with olive oil. Inside was a notarized partnership agreement, dated nineteen years ago, and a handwritten codicil her father signed six weeks before he passed — in the hospice, with two nurses as witnesses. I slid it across the table. The room went very still. “Your father restructured everything last March,” I said softly. “Crane and Park became an equal partnership in two thousand and six. And when he got sick, he added a clause. If either partner dies, the surviving partner gets right of first refusal on the deceased’s share — at book value. Not market.” Her lawyer picked up the page. His face drained. “Ms. Crane,” he whispered, “this is valid. And recorded with the county.” Vanessa’s pen clattered to the table. “That’s impossible. He would have told me.” “He tried,” I said. “You were in Mykonos. Twice.” I stood up slowly, untying my apron. “I already paid the book value into the estate this morning. Forty-one thousand dollars. The bistro is mine, Vanessa. All of it.” Her mouth opened and closed. The boutique gym buyer, sitting quietly in the corner, cleared his throat and quietly stepped out. “You can’t do this,” she hissed. “I’m his daughter.” “And I was his partner,” I said. “He knew the difference.” I walked to the door, then turned back one last time. “The dishwasher’s broken, by the way. If you’d ever worked a single shift, you’d know that. Don’t come back tomorrow. Table six is already booked under my name.”
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