I picked up the pen. Tyler’s grin widened. Megan finally exhaled. I clicked it twice, then set it down beside the agreement, untouched. “Before I sign anything,” I said, “let me thank you for the lovely dinner.” I reached into my purse and pulled out a slim folder. “I had a feeling tonight might be special, so I brought a gift of my own.” I slid it to Tyler. He opened it, and the color drained from his face. It was the minutes from yesterday’s emergency board meeting. At 4 p.m. Wednesday, I had voluntarily stepped down as CEO of Hartwell Logistics and transferred operational control, not to family, but to the Hartwell Foundation, a charitable trust funding scholarships for single mothers, the way I had been when I started the company. My personal shares were placed in an irrevocable trust with one trustee: my housekeeper Rosa, who had stayed by my side for thirty years while my own daughter forgot my birthdays. “You can’t,” Tyler whispered. “I already did,” I said. “Signed, filed, notarized.” Brad stood up so fast his chair tipped. “That money was supposed to be ours!” “Was it?” I asked. “Funny, I don’t remember any of you earning it.” Then I turned to Megan. “The doctor you bribed? Dr. Patel called me this morning. He recorded your offer. My lawyer has the file.” Megan started crying, the ugly kind, mascara running into the gravy. I stood up, smoothed my dress, and picked up my coat. “I left each of you something in my will,” I said at the door. “A handwritten letter. You can read them at the funeral, if you bother to come.” Rosa was waiting in the car. She’d made me a thermos of tea. As we drove away from the house I’d bought them, I watched Tyler in the rearview window, still holding that worthless agreement. Three months later, the first Hartwell Scholarship was awarded to a twenty-two-year-old waitress with a baby on her hip. She cried. I cried too. My family never called again. I slept like a queen.
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