I walked to the coffee cart, poured a cup, and set it gently in front of Vanessa. She didn’t even glance up. “Good girl,” she purred. Then the double doors opened, and Mr. Avery, the company’s outgoing chairman, walked in with two attorneys. Vanessa straightened, already smoothing her blouse for her big introduction. “Gentlemen,” Avery said, “thank you for waiting. I’d like to formally introduce the new majority shareholder and incoming CEO of Whitmore Holdings.” Vanessa stood up. She actually stood up. Avery turned — and gestured to me. “Dr. Claire Whitmore. The anonymous investor who’s been quietly buying out failing divisions for the past four years. She now owns sixty-three percent of this company.” The room went silent. Vanessa’s coffee cup froze halfway to her lips. Daniel finally looked up from his phone. “Claire?” he whispered. “That’s — that’s not possible. You’re a nurse.” “I’m a trauma surgeon,” I said softly. “And I invested every bonus, every overtime check, every dollar you all mocked me for saving.” I opened the leather folder. “Vanessa, I reviewed your expense reports this morning. Forty-two thousand dollars in personal charges billed to the company in the last quarter alone. Spa retreats. A handbag in Milan. A weekend in Aspen with someone who isn’t my brother.” Daniel’s head snapped toward her. Vanessa’s face drained of color. “Claire, please — we’re family —” “You’re right,” I said. “That’s why I’m giving you a choice. Resign quietly, repay every cent, and I won’t press charges. Or stay, and read about yourself in tomorrow’s paper.” She grabbed her purse with shaking hands and ran for the elevator. I turned to the board. “Now. Shall we talk numbers?” Mr. Avery pulled out the chair at the head of the table — the one with my name engraved underneath — and smiled. “Welcome home, Dr. Whitmore.” Outside the window, the city lights flickered on, one by one, like applause.
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