Hand over the bakery keys, Eleanor. Mom’s will is clear — the eldest gets

Marcus slapped the paper down on the butcher block. “It’s notarized, Ellie. Pack your things by Sunday. I already have a buyer lined up — they want to gut this place and put in a vape lounge.” His fiancée finally looked up, snorted, and muttered, “Honestly, it smells like old bread in here anyway.” I picked up the document. Read it once. Read it twice. Then I set it down beside the proofing basket and finally spoke. “Marcus. Did you actually read Mom’s will, or did you just read the part Aunt Carol screenshotted you?” His smirk twitched. I walked to the small oak drawer under the register, the one Mom used to call her ‘truth drawer,’ and pulled out a navy folder. Inside was the real will — the updated one, signed eight months before she passed, witnessed by her attorney and her hospice nurse. I slid it across the counter. “The eldest inherits the family business,” I read aloud, “provided they have actively operated it for no fewer than five consecutive years prior to the date of death.” I looked up. “You’ve operated it for zero. I’ve operated it for twelve.” The color drained from his face. “That — that’s not—” “There’s more.” I turned the page. “In the event the eldest does not qualify, ownership transfers fully to the child who served as primary caregiver during her illness.” I let that sit in the air like steam off a fresh loaf. “That would be me, Marcus. The one who held her hand. The one you didn’t call.” His fiancée slowly lowered her phone. The doorbell jingled — my 6:15 regular, Mr. Alvarez, walking in for his usual rye. I smiled at him, then back at my brother. “The bakery isn’t for sale. But the apartment upstairs is — I was going to rent it cheap to a single mom from church.” I picked up his fake document, walked to the oven, and tossed it onto the coals. “You can show yourselves out. Mind the flour. It clings to cheap suits.” Marcus opened his mouth. Closed it. And for the first time in his life, my brother left a room without the last word.

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