I clicked the pen twice. Then I set it down. “Brandon,” I said softly, “before I sign, read paragraph nine of the shareholder agreement your father drafted in 2008.” His smirk flickered. He hadn’t read it. He never read anything. Our general counsel, Marcus, cleared his throat. “Paragraph nine states that any attempt to force the founding CEO into involuntary resignation triggers an automatic buy-back clause at one dollar per share, exercisable by the founder within 24 hours.” The room went silent. Brandon’s face drained of color. “That’s — that’s not enforceable —” “It was notarized,” I said. “Your father insisted. He told me, ‘Ellie, if Brandon ever grows up to be like his uncle Ron, you protect what we built.'” I slid open the drawer and pulled out a folder I’d kept ready for six months. Ever since I’d found Brandon’s emails to our competitor in Zurich. Ever since I’d watched him charge a yacht weekend to the company card and call it “client development.” I’d been waiting. “I exercise the clause,” I said. “Effective now.” Marcus nodded. “The board was briefed yesterday. Six of seven directors signed off this morning.” Brandon shot up. “You can’t —” “I just did.” I stood, smoothed my blazer, and walked to the head of the table. “You’ll receive thirty-seven dollars for your shares. That’s the dollar amount, multiplied. Security will escort you to collect your things. The Zurich emails go to the SEC Monday unless you sign the non-compete on your way out.” He sat down hard. For the first time, he looked nine years old again — the boy who’d cried at his mother’s funeral and asked if I’d still make him cocoa. “Why?” he whispered. I paused at the door. “Because your father loved you enough to protect you from yourself. And so did I. You just confused kindness with weakness.” I walked out into the hallway, where the morning light hit the founder’s portrait on the wall. My mother. Holding a copper kettle. I smiled at her, and went back to work.
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