Bradley laughed. He actually laughed. “Witnesses? Good. Let them watch you crawl, Eleanor. Dad’s gone. You were never family. You were staff he happened to marry.” The interns froze. The CFO, Marcus, set down his coffee. I slid open the top drawer and pulled out a slim leather folder Richard had given me on our fifth anniversary. “Bradley,” I said, “before you call security, you should know three things.” He rolled his eyes. “Enlighten me.” “First,” I said, opening the folder, “your father restructured Hawthorne Holdings into a private trust in 2019. The operating company you think you inherited is a shell. The trust owns the buildings, the patents, and the client contracts.” His smile slipped a quarter inch. “Second, I am the sole trustee until 2041. Your father’s words, his signature, witnessed by Judge Aldrin downstairs.” Marcus quietly stood and stepped away from Bradley, which is when Bradley’s face truly began to change. “Third,” I continued, “the apartment on 71st you’ve been living in rent-free? Trust asset. The Porsche in the garage? Trust asset. The ‘personal loan’ of four hundred thousand you took last March to cover your gambling debts in Monaco?” I turned the page. “Documented. Signed. And, per the trust language, immediately callable upon any attempt to remove me from this office.” The room went so quiet I could hear the elevator chime. Bradley’s mouth opened, closed. “You—you can’t—” “I already have.” I slid a second envelope across the desk. “Thirty days to vacate the apartment. Sixty to repay the loan. And Bradley?” I finally stood, smoothing my cheap little blazer. “Security is on their way up. But they’re not here for me.” He turned just as the elevator opened. I sat back down, opened my laptop, and approved the quarterly bonuses Richard had always insisted his staff deserved. Outside, the city lights came on, one by one, like applause.
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