Bradley waved a dismissive hand. “Eleanor, since you’re standing, be useful. Get the coffee.” Another laugh. I walked — not to the coffee cart, but to the head of the table. I set the envelope down in front of Gerald Hartwell, the chairman, the only man in the room who’d ever remembered my mother’s name. “Gerald,” I said, voice steady, “you asked me three months ago to quietly audit the Cayman transfers. Here it is.” The laughter died like someone had unplugged it. Bradley’s bourbon glass froze halfway to his mouth. Gerald opened the envelope. Page one: $4.2 million rerouted through a shell company registered to Bradley’s fiancée. Page two: forged signatures — mine, used without permission. Page three: the SEC intake confirmation, filed that morning at 7:14 a.m. “You — you can’t —” Bradley stammered. “I already did,” I said softly. “Nineteen years of your family trusting me with the books, Bradley. You should’ve wondered why I never got promoted. It wasn’t because I wasn’t qualified. It was because I asked too many questions.” Gerald stood slowly. His hands were shaking, but not at me. “Bradley. Security is downstairs. Go meet them.” Bradley looked at the room for backup. The same executives who’d laughed thirty seconds ago suddenly found their notepads fascinating. As he was escorted out, Gerald turned to me. “Eleanor. The CFO seat has been empty for six months. I was waiting for the right person to stop being polite about it.” I picked up Bradley’s abandoned bourbon, walked it to the coffee cart, and poured it down the drain. Then I sat down at the head of the table — in the cardigan my mother knitted me the year she died — and opened the quarterly reports. “Shall we begin?” I said. Nobody laughed this time. Nobody ever did again.
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