I didn’t go for coffee. I walked to the head of the table, the seat Trevor had been eyeing for fifteen years, and I sat down. He laughed out loud. “Honey, that chair is for the executor.” “I know,” I said. The lawyer, Mr. Ahn, opened a navy folder and slid a single page toward Trevor. “Mr. Halloway, before we begin, your father updated his will in March. Maren is sole executor of the estate and majority shareholder of Halloway Freight. Sixty-two percent.” Trevor’s mouth opened. Nothing came out. His wife, my sister-in-law Bianca, the one who’d spent Christmas dinner telling everyone I’d “married up,” went the color of skim milk. “That’s not possible,” Trevor finally said. “He was going to leave the company to me.” “He was,” I agreed quietly. “Until he found out who’d been forging his signature on those Newark invoices last fall.” The room went so still I could hear the radiator tick. I pulled a second folder from my tote, the one I’d been quietly building for eleven months while everyone joked about my “little bookkeeping job.” Forensic accounting reports. Bank trails. The auditor’s preliminary findings. I slid it across the walnut. “Dad asked me to handle this gently, Trevor. For the kids. So here’s the gentle version: you resign as VP tonight, you repay the four hundred thousand by the end of the quarter, and the family never reads page nine.” Bianca grabbed his sleeve. “What’s on page nine?” I looked at her, the woman who’d called me a charity case at Easter. “The part where the auditors recommend criminal referral.” Trevor’s hands were shaking so hard his cufflinks rattled. He signed. Mr. Ahn nodded once and turned to me. “Madam Chair, shall we continue?” I picked up the pen my father-in-law had left me, the one engraved quiet women finish loudly, and I smiled at Trevor across the table. “Actually, Trevor, three sugars in mine.”
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