The attorney slid the papers toward me. “Power of transfer, Mrs. Whitfield. Your grandson has secured majority proxy from the minority shareholders. It’s cleaner if you sign.” Tyler smirked. “You should be knitting, not negotiating cotton futures.” I took a slow sip of coffee. “Tyler, sweetheart. Do you remember what I taught you about thread?” He rolled his eyes. “Grandma, please.” “A single strand snaps,” I said softly. “But woven right, it holds a man’s whole weight.” I opened the manila folder in front of me and slid it across the table. Inside were the actual shareholder records — not the ones his attorney had been shown. Every “minority shareholder” Tyler had wooed over eighteen months? They were holding companies. Three of them. All registered in Delaware. All owned by a trust called Harold’s Loom, LLC. “That trust,” I said, “is me.” The color drained from his face. “You’ve been buying back shares in secret since your first visit,” I continued. “The moment you asked about my will. I own ninety-one percent of Whitfield Textiles, Tyler. Your proxy is worth nothing.” The attorney began quietly packing his briefcase. I turned to the board. “Effective today, Tyler Whitfield is removed from every advisory role, every stipend, every credit line bearing this company’s name.” Tyler’s voice cracked. “Grandma — you can’t — I have debts —” “I know about the debts,” I said. “I know about the yacht, the Miami condo, the woman who isn’t your wife. I’ve known for a year.” I stood, my knees aching, and walked to the door. “Your grandfather built this floor by floor with hands that bled. You tried to take it with a pen. Go home, Tyler. And next Christmas — don’t call unless you’ve earned the right to.” The door clicked shut behind me. In the hallway, I finally let one tear fall. Just one. Then I straightened my cardigan and went back to work.
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