Sign the resignation letter, Grandma, or I’ll have you declared incompetent by Friday

I picked up the pen. Tyler’s smile widened. Linda exhaled. Then I set the pen down, unopened, and slid a manila folder of my own across the table. “Before I sign anything, Tyler, the board should see Exhibit A.” I nodded to Robert, our outside counsel, who’d quietly flown in from Chicago that morning. He passed copies to every seat. Tyler’s smirk cracked as he flipped the first page. “Those are wire transfers,” I said softly, “from Hartwell’s operating account to a shell company in Delaware called Apex Freight Holdings. Registered to one Tyler J. Hartwell. Three point two million dollars over fourteen months.” The room went silent enough to hear the HVAC hum. “Exhibit B is the forensic audit. Exhibit C is the letter from the U.S. Attorney’s office confirming receipt of my voluntary disclosure last Tuesday.” Linda’s coffee cup hit the saucer with a clatter. “Mom — Mom, wait —” I turned to her, my voice still gentle. “You signed the second page of the loan guarantee, sweetheart. Co-signer. I asked Robert to redact your name from the federal filing. For now.” Tyler shot to his feet. “This is a setup! She’s senile, she —” “I’m the founder, the majority shareholder, and per Article Nine of the bylaws you tried to amend last month, I’m also still Chairman Emeritus with veto authority over executive appointments.” I finally picked the pen back up — and signed a different document Robert handed me. “That was your termination, effective immediately. Security is waiting outside. Your laptop and badge stay on this table.” Tyler’s face drained of color. Two officers stepped through the glass doors. As they walked him out, I turned to the remaining board. “Now. Let’s discuss who actually wants to run a trucking company instead of loot one.” Linda was crying. I reached over and squeezed her hand. “Help me rebuild it, baby. The right way this time.” She nodded. Outside the window, one of our blue rigs rolled out of the lot, hauling something honest down the interstate — the way Hartwells are supposed to.

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