Hand over the bakery keys, Margaret. Mom left it to whoever actually deserves it

“Trevor,” I said quietly, “can I see the date on that will one more time?” He smirked and flipped it open like he was doing me a favor. “October 14th. Signed, witnessed, notarized. Try and fight it, sis.” I nodded slowly. Then I reached into my purse and pulled out a thin manila envelope. “Mom signed something on October 14th, alright,” I said. “But it wasn’t that.” I laid three documents on the table. The first was a hospice intake form, time-stamped 9:12 a.m. on October 14th, noting Mom was non-verbal and unable to hold a pen due to advanced neuropathy. The second was a sworn affidavit from her hospice nurse, Diane, who had sat with her every hour that day. The third was a letter from Mom’s actual attorney, Mr. Halverson, confirming her real, updated will, filed in August, leaving the bakery and the building to me, and a trust of $40,000 to Trevor, “to be released only upon completion of financial counseling.” Trevor’s face drained. “That’s a forgery,” he stammered, pointing at my papers. “No,” Mr. Halverson said, stepping out from behind the coat rack where I’d asked him to wait. “That,” he nodded at Trevor’s folder, “is the forgery. And I’ve already contacted the notary whose stamp you used. She retired in 2019.” Aunt Linda gasped. Cousin Pete quietly put down his plate. Trevor opened his mouth, closed it, opened it again. I picked up Mom’s mug. “You can keep the forty thousand, Trevor. Mom wanted you to have a chance. But the bakery? The ovens she taught me to use when I was nine? The booth where Dad proposed?” I walked past him toward the door. “You were never going to deserve those. And deep down, she knew it.” The next morning, at 4 a.m. sharp, I unlocked the bakery, tied on Mom’s old apron, and started the dough. The sign out front got a fresh coat of paint that week. It now reads: Ruth & Daughter — Since 1982.

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