Richard stood, tapped his glass, and the lawn went silent. “Before I announce my successor,” he said, “I want to thank the person who actually saved this firm two years ago — when we were one quarter away from collapse and didn’t know it.” Vanessa straightened in her seat, already arranging her humble face. Richard smiled at me. “Maya. Would you come up here, please?” The quartet stopped mid-note. Vanessa’s champagne flute froze halfway to her lips. I walked up slowly, the gravel crunching under my flats. Richard turned to the investors. “Two years ago, my daughter-in-law — the schoolteacher you’ve all been condescending to — noticed something in our quarterly report Daniel brought home. She flagged a pattern in three of our fund managers’ trades. Turned out to be a forty-million-dollar fraud scheme we’d have never caught in time.” He paused. “What none of you know is that Maya has a master’s in forensic accounting from Wharton. She left finance to teach because she wanted to. Not because she couldn’t hack it.” He lifted his glass. “Effective Monday, Maya Whitfield will serve as Chief Compliance Officer of Whitfield Capital, reporting directly to the new chairman — my son, Daniel.” The applause started slow, then swelled. Vanessa’s face had gone the color of the tablecloth. She’d been gunning for that compliance seat for three years. I took the microphone, looked right at her, and said softly, “Thank you, Richard. I’ll try not to spill champagne on the real numbers.” Daniel was already laughing. Richard winked. Vanessa set her glass down so hard the stem snapped. As I walked back to my seat, I leaned close to her ear and whispered, “The grown-ups are still talking, sweetie. You can go pour yourself another.” She didn’t come to Christmas that year. Nobody missed her.
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