Hand over the patent paperwork, Eleanor, before you embarrass yourself in front of real

Brandon slid a thick contract across the table, the kind of document designed to drown people who don’t read footnotes. “Just sign the assignment, sweetheart. The investors want the IP under the family LLC. It’s cleaner.” The family LLC. The one he’d quietly made himself majority manager of two months after Daniel’s funeral, while I was still picking out a headstone. I opened my leather folio slowly. Inside wasn’t a pen. It was a certified letter from the USPTO, a sealed filing from my attorney, and a printed email thread Brandon thought he’d deleted. I laid them out one by one, like cards in a winning hand. “Before anyone signs anything,” I said, voice steady, “the three core patents aren’t owned by the family LLC. They never were. They’re held by a trust in my son’s name, filed eleven days before Daniel passed. Daniel signed them himself, from his hospital bed, with two nurses as witnesses.” The room went so quiet I could hear the air conditioning. Brandon’s face drained. “That’s not possible. I have the original assignment—” “You have a draft,” I said gently. “Daniel never signed it. He told me you’d try this. He told me exactly which weekend you’d try it.” I turned to the lead investor, a silver-haired woman who’d been watching Brandon all morning with the patience of a hawk. “Ms. Halvorsen, the technology is available for licensing. Directly. Through me. Brandon has no signing authority, no equity, and as of 9 a.m. this morning, no seat on this board.” I slid the final page toward him — a unanimous written consent from the remaining directors, my sister’s signature right at the top. He stared at her name like it had bitten him. “She wouldn’t—” “She did,” I said. “The day she found the burner phone, Brandon.” I stood, gathered my folio, and walked past him. At the door I paused. “You were right about one thing. Let’s talk to real engineers. They’re waiting in the next room. For me.”

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