The Broken Watch Her Siblings Mocked Held Their Father's Final Order-Quieen - Chainityai

The Broken Watch Her Siblings Mocked Held Their Father’s Final Order-Quieen

The crystal glass missed my head by less than an inch.

It hit the mahogany wall behind me and burst into bright pieces, throwing whiskey-colored drops across the framed company photo nobody in that room had ever earned.

For one second, all I heard was the soft rain of glass on the floor.

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Then the building seemed to breathe again.

The air-conditioning hummed above us.

Somewhere outside the glass wall, a printer kept spitting paper into a tray.

Inside the boardroom, my brother stared at me like the fact that he had nearly hit me with a tumbler was somehow my fault.

“You think you deserve anything, Clare?” Daniel shouted.

His voice cracked on my name.

That would have embarrassed him later if everything had not gone worse.

My sister Rebecca stood near the window with her arms crossed over a cream blouse that probably cost more than my monthly truck payment.

She looked polished, calm, and hungry.

That was the thing about Rebecca.

She never had to throw anything.

She just waited for Daniel to do it and then acted disappointed in everyone else.

The probate attorney sat at the far end of the table with a yellow legal pad, three folders, and the haunted look of a man who had started his morning believing rich families were at least polite when they destroyed each other.

They are not.

They simply destroy each other with better furniture.

My name is Staff Sergeant Clare Bennett, United States Marine Corps.

I had spent most of my adult life learning how to move through fear without letting fear move me.

I had heard rounds crack close enough to feel the air twitch.

I had dragged a wounded corporal behind a truck while dust stuck to the sweat on my neck and somebody kept screaming for a medic.

I knew what danger sounded like.

That morning, danger sounded like my brother’s Italian loafers scraping against the polished floor of Bennett Global Logistics.

Dad had died fourteen days earlier.

The funeral had been all flags, black suits, carefully lowered voices, and people telling me he had been proud of me.

I believed some of them.

I wanted to believe him.

But Dad had never been easy to read.

He was the kind of man who could build a billion-dollar logistics empire and still sit alone in his kitchen at 5:30 in the morning eating toast over a paper towel.

He loved schedules.

He loved locked drawers.

He loved silence when everyone else wanted an explanation.

My siblings loved the parts of him that could be appraised.

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