I slid the binder slowly across the table. Brielle’s eyes lit up like she’d already won. “Take it,” I said softly. “But before you do, open to the last page.” She rolled her eyes for the audience of relatives, flipped to the back, and her smile cracked. Taped inside was a notarized letter, dated six weeks before Mom died. Mom’s lawyer, Mr. Hensley, had drafted it the afternoon I drove her to his office in the rain. The letter stated that the recipes, the handwritten cookbook rights, and the small LLC Mom and I had quietly registered, “Ruth’s Kitchen Table,” belonged solely to me. Two regional grocery chains had already signed letters of intent to carry the sourdough and the cinnamon braid under our family name. Brielle’s hands started shaking. “This is a joke,” she whispered. “You don’t even have a real job.” I pulled out my phone and turned the screen toward her: the first deposit, $48,000, an advance from the distributor, with Mom’s signature beside mine on the contract. “Mom knew,” I said. “She knew which daughter showed up at 4 a.m. and which one showed up for photos.” Aunt Lorraine set down her coffee. Uncle Ray cleared his throat and quietly said, “Brielle, sit down.” Brielle tried to laugh. “Fine, keep your little muffin business.” I closed the binder and pulled it back to my chest. “It’s not little. And it’s not yours. Mom left you something too, by the way. Check your envelope.” She tore it open right there. Inside was a single index card in Mom’s looping handwriting: “Be kinder to your sister. Love, Mom.” No check. No deed. Just one sentence, twenty years too late. Brielle stood up so fast her chair hit the wall. I stayed seated, the binder warm against my heart, and for the first time since the hospice, I could breathe. Six months later, our cinnamon braid hit 1,200 stores. The label reads: “Baked from Ruth’s table, by her daughter who stayed.”
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