I didn’t move. I just slid my badge across the table — slowly, the way you push a chess piece you’ve been planning for months. Brielle laughed. “Smart girl. Daniel would be proud you finally know your place.” Her lawyer cleared his throat and began reading the clause: as Daniel’s blood sister, she was entitled to controlling interest if the surviving spouse “failed to maintain active executive status.” She’d been counting on the fact that I’d taken a three-week bereavement leave last spring. What she didn’t know was that I’d read that clause the night Daniel proposed. I opened my folder and slid a second document across the glass. “Before you redecorate my office, Brielle, you might want to read page four.” Her lawyer’s face went the color of old paper. Two years ago, I’d restructured the firm into a private trust — every client contract, every patent on our modular housing system, every dollar of goodwill — held by an entity Daniel and I created the week after his diagnosis. The architecture firm Brielle was inheriting? An empty shell. A name on a door. Forty-two dollars in a checking account. “You’re welcome to the LLC,” I said. “The lease is up Friday. The staff already signed with Holloway Design Group — which, funny thing, I incorporated last month.” Brielle stood so fast her chair shrieked. “You can’t — Daniel would never —” “Daniel drafted it himself,” I said quietly. “He knew you’d come. He left you a letter. Page seven.” She read it. I watched the color drain from her face line by line. Whatever he’d written, she folded the page into her purse and didn’t speak again. I picked my badge back up off the table, clipped it to my blazer, and walked out past the lawyers. The receptionist — my receptionist — was already printing new business cards. Holloway Design Group. Founder and Principal Architect. Daniel’s middle name, finally, on the door.
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