A shot from a passing vehicle slammed through the Cookie Cart's front window and sailed through the front lobby where kids in sunshine-yellow T-shirts meet customers.
It then pierced the wall in back, narrowly missing a group of about 15 teenagers baking.
But the north Minneapolis bakery that helps teens learn jobs skills isn't backing down. Instead, it's expanding.
Among its first order of business? Bulletproof glass.
"It's our home, and we want to stay here," Anna Bregier said of the Cookie Cart, adding that talk of moving to a new location was short-lived.
On Tuesday, a City Council committee approved using up to $30,000 in federal funds to pay for 12 bulletproof windows.
And in a few months, the Cookie Cart will begin a $1.4 million renovation to install new commercial freezers and coolers, increase the size of the bakery and hire more teenagers. A campaign has raised nearly all of the funds needed for the renovation from private sources.
"We're going to be able to have twice as many people in this space," said executive director Matt Halley, who helped drive the growth plan.