I didn’t say a word. I just slid a thin manila folder across the polished wood toward Marcus. He laughed, flipping it open with the back of his hand like he was swatting a fly. Then his smile died. Inside were three documents. The first was a medical evaluation from Johns Hopkins, dated last Tuesday, declaring me of sound mind and excellent cognitive function — I’d seen this coming six months ago, when Marcus started ‘forgetting’ to invite me to meetings. The second was the company bylaws, highlighted in yellow: any board member attempting a hostile takeover through false medical claims forfeits their shares and seat immediately. Marcus owned twelve percent. Not anymore. The third document was the worst for him. It was a recording transcript — Marcus on the phone with a corrupt geriatric doctor, offering forty thousand dollars for a fake dementia diagnosis on his own father. I’d had my assistant Diane, the woman Marcus called ‘that useless old secretary,’ wear a wire for three weeks. Diane had been with me since 1987. She loved Eleanor like a sister. She’d been waiting for this moment. I finally spoke, my voice steady as iron. ‘Marcus. You’re not just off the board. You’re terminated as VP, effective immediately. Security is waiting outside that door.’ His face went white. ‘Dad — Dad, wait, we can talk about this —’ I stood up slowly, buttoning my cardigan. ‘Your mother spent her last breath asking me to be patient with you. I’ve been patient for twenty years.’ I looked at the board. ‘I’m naming Diane Coleman as the new Executive Vice President. She knows this company better than my own blood.’ Diane walked in carrying a small box for Marcus’s things. He started crying — actual tears, the first I’d seen from him since he was nine. I paused at the door and turned back one last time. ‘The nursing home, son? I already toured one. It’s lovely. I bought it. You start Monday — in the kitchen.’
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