I took the pen. I clicked it once. The room held its breath — David’s cousins filming on their phones, the senator’s wife leaning forward, Margaret practically purring. Then I set the pen down and opened my own folder instead. ‘Margaret, before I sign anything, I’d like to introduce myself properly. I never got the chance.’ I pulled out the first page. ‘Elena Cruz, PhD in structural engineering, MIT. I’m the lead consultant who redesigned the Whitfield Tower foundation last spring — the one that passed inspection after your firm failed it twice.’ The color drained from her face. I pulled out the second page. ‘I’m also the anonymous buyer who acquired forty-one percent of Whitfield Industries’ outstanding shares over the past eighteen months, through my late father’s trust. He invested every bonus you ever gave him. Every Christmas envelope. For thirty-one years.’ Margaret’s wine glass tipped, spilling red across her ivory gown. ‘That’s — that’s not possible —’ ‘It’s very possible,’ I said softly. ‘The board voted yesterday. I’m the majority stakeholder now.’ I slid one more document across the table — the same way she’d slid the prenup. ‘This is a notice of termination. Effective Monday, you’re no longer Chairwoman. The board found the offshore accounts, Margaret. The ones you hid from David’s father before the divorce.’ David stood up beside me, took my hand, and looked at his mother with eyes I’d never seen before. ‘I knew, Mom. I’ve known for months. I was waiting to see if you’d choose decency over pride. You didn’t.’ Margaret opened her mouth, but nothing came out. I picked up the prenup, folded it neatly, and tucked it into my clutch. ‘I’ll keep this. As a reminder of who I was the night I stopped being quiet.’ We walked out together, past the senator, past the cousins, past the cream roses. And somewhere in heaven, I swear I heard my father laugh.
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