Hand over the badge, sweetheart. The board needs a real leader, not a glorified

I picked up the remote and clicked once. The projector hummed. Bradford’s smirk flickered. “Before we vote,” I said, “I’d like to thank Bradford for volunteering to present the Q3 vendor audit. Since he’s clearly prepared.” The screen filled with wire transfers — seventeen of them, routed through a shell company called Aspen Ridge Holdings, totaling four point two million dollars siphoned from our defense subcontract over eighteen months. Bradford’s face drained. “That’s — that’s confidential—” “It is,” I agreed. “Which is why I forwarded it to the Department of Defense Inspector General on Monday. And to Aunt Margaret. You remember her. The majority shareholder.” The double doors opened. Margaret Mills walked in, seventy-six years old, cane tapping, eyes like cut glass. She didn’t look at Bradford. She looked at me. “Continue, Elena.” I clicked again. Emails. Bradford promising a competitor our propulsion schematics in exchange for a board seat after the “transition.” Audio of him laughing about pushing out “the Reyes woman” before the federal review hit. The directors finally looked up. One by one. Bradford lunged for the laptop. Security was already behind him. “Aunt Margaret, this is a setup, she’s twisting—” “You tossed her nameplate in the garbage,” Margaret said quietly, “in front of the board I built. In a company your grandfather bled for. You’re not a Mills. You’re a tourist.” She turned to the room. “All in favor of removing Bradford Mills from every position he holds, effective immediately.” Twelve hands rose. Bradford was escorted out still shouting my name. Margaret walked to the trash bin, fished out my nameplate, and set it gently back in front of my chair. “Madam CEO,” she said. “Your meeting.” I sat down. Picked up my coffee. Still warm. “Item one,” I said. “Vendor ethics.” And for the first time in eleven years, every single person in that room was listening.

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