I slid my portfolio open with deliberate slowness. Preston smirked, mistaking it for surrender. “You’re right, son,” I said softly. “A man my age shouldn’t be running a company this size.” His lawyers exchanged victorious glances. Marlene finally looked up, hope flickering across her face — hope for her inheritance, not for me. I pulled out a single envelope and placed it in the center of the table. “Which is why, three months ago, I sold my controlling shares.” The room went dead silent. Preston’s smirk cracked. “Sold them? To who?” I opened the envelope and slid out a photograph. It was Rosa, our night-shift dispatcher for twenty-two years, the woman who’d covered for Preston when he crashed a company truck at nineteen and begged me not to tell his mother. Beside her stood her son Miguel — the quiet Stanford-educated logistics analyst Preston had mocked as “the janitor’s kid” at last year’s Christmas party. “Rosa and Miguel now own fifty-one percent of Hayes Logistics,” I said. “Miguel is your new CEO. He starts Monday.” Preston’s face drained white. “You can’t — that’s my company —” “It was never your company,” I said. “You’ve been an employee since the day you started. And Miguel already reviewed your expense reports. The fake vendor invoices. The shell company in Delaware. Four hundred thousand dollars, Preston.” One of his lawyers quietly closed his briefcase and stood up. Marlene started crying — the performative kind. I turned to her. “I put your college fund into a trust for your children, not you. They’ll get it when they turn twenty-five, if they choose to speak to me by then.” I stood, gathered my portfolio, and walked toward the door. At the threshold I paused. “Oh, Preston — security is waiting outside to escort you out. Rosa insisted. She said you always did have trouble finding the exit.” I closed the door on the sound of his world collapsing, and for the first time in months, my hands weren’t shaking at all.
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