I spent my whole life building an empire, trusting that blood would always be stronger than greed—until I heard my brother whisper, “When he’s gone, it’s all mine.” The glass slipped from my hand and exploded against the floor. I couldn’t breathe. Then I saw our mother’s face—drained, horrified, guilty. She already knew. And in that crushing silence, I realized the unthinkable: she was about to choose between her own sons.
I had spent thirty-two years turning a failing family hardware shop in Columbus, Ohio into a regional construction supply company with warehouses in three states, government contracts, and a name people in our industry respected. Every brick of it had cost me something. Sleep. Time. Marriage. Pride. My father had died before he could see…