I clicked the pen twice. “Before I sign, Marcus, humor your forgetful old man. Read me paragraph nine.” He rolled his eyes but read it aloud. “Transfer of all voting shares, effective immediately, to Marcus J. Halloran.” I nodded slowly. “And paragraph ten?” He hesitated. “Indemnification of the transferor against any prior… financial irregularities.” The room went quiet. I leaned forward. “Funny word, irregularities. Like the four hundred thousand dollars routed through the Tampa shell account last March? The one signed off by a Marcus J. Halloran while I was at your mother’s grave?” His face drained. Diane finally looked up and slid a second folder across the table. Bank statements. Wire confirmations. A forged signature blown up so large you could count the tremors he tried to mimic from mine. “I didn’t forget those meetings, son. I skipped them. Because the forensic accountant I hired in January needed access to your office while you were pitching my company to vultures.” Marcus’s wife let go of his shoulder like it had burned her. The board members started murmuring. I capped the pen and set it down gently. “Here’s what’s going to happen. You’re going to resign tonight. You’re going to repay every cent, with interest, from the trust your grandfather left you. And you’re going to drive yourself to your mother’s grave tomorrow morning and tell her what you tried to do to the man she loved for forty-one years.” He opened his mouth. Nothing came out. I stood, buttoned my jacket, and walked to the door. At the threshold I turned back. “Oh, and Marcus? The dementia diagnosis you’ve been whispering about? My doctor faxed my cognitive results to every board member this morning. I scored higher than you did in college.” I closed the door softly. I didn’t need to slam it. The silence behind me was loud enough.
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