He Gave My Brother-In-Law The Company, But I Kept The Real Books-eirian

Cole Beckett learned the company by sweeping floors no client ever saw.

Before he learned bids, he learned broom closets.

Before he signed a change order, he learned why the old vendor who knew Warren by voice always wrapped cabinet hardware twice.

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His father, Warren Beckett, believed a man should know the weight of a box before he argued about what was inside it.

So Cole carried boxes.

He cleaned job sites after crews had gone home.

He drove across town for one missing hinge because a retail manager had a grand opening the next morning and Warren had promised it would be done.

He sat in the passenger seat while his father talked through estimates, permits, insurance certificates, payroll forms, and the small ugly details that kept a clean company clean.

Warren had built Beckett Commercial Services in a rented garage with one truck and a promise he repeated like scripture.

If the work is honest, the name can survive.

Cole believed him.

That was why he stayed when competitors offered more money.

That was why he answered calls during dinners he ate alone.

That was why, when the fire suppression system failed on a Saturday and ruined a whole section of new flooring, Cole spent eleven hours saving the project before Warren arrived Monday morning.

Warren only said, “Good man.”

For Cole, that had been enough.

Greg Haines entered the company through a side door made of marriage and charm.

He had married Laura, Cole’s older sister, and moved through family dinners like a man who had never doubted he belonged at the head of the table.

Greg remembered birthdays.

Greg praised Warren’s stories.

Greg told clients he could get things done faster because he knew people.

He always knew people.

He knew a cheaper supplier.

He knew a crew that could work weekends.

He knew a way around delay, paperwork, and price.

Cole watched him and heard a warning in every shortcut.

Warren heard ambition.

Five years after Greg joined the company, Warren retired.

He announced it in the Thursday crew meeting, wearing a collared shirt that made the room go quiet before he said a word.

Cole expected a transition plan.

He expected responsibility.

He expected, at least, a private conversation after twelve years of giving his life to the place.

Warren gave Greg sixty percent ownership.

Cole received forty.

Greg would lead.

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