I didn’t break. I smiled. “Brandon, sweetheart, before Friday comes, I think the board should hear something.” I slid my own folder across the table. Inside were six months of forensic accounting reports I’d commissioned the moment our CFO whispered that inventory numbers weren’t adding up. Brandon had been routing shipments through a shell company registered in his girlfriend’s name, skimming roughly four hundred thousand dollars a quarter. He’d forged my signature on three vendor contracts. He’d even tried to mortgage one of our distribution centers behind my back. The color drained from his face as board members opened their copies. “You see,” I said quietly, “I added you to the executive team because your father asked me to, on the night he died, to watch over you. Not the other way around.” I turned to our chairman. “I’m invoking the morality clause in Brandon’s contract, effective immediately. Security is waiting outside.” Brandon stammered something about family, about loyalty, about how I’d regret this. I stood up slowly, smoothed my blazer, and walked around the table until I was directly in front of him. “Loyalty,” I said, “is what your father showed me for thirty-one years. Loyalty is what I showed you when I sat through every parent-teacher conference, every graduation, every Christmas after he was gone. What you showed me today is exactly who you are.” I nodded to the chairman. The doors opened. Two security officers escorted Brandon out while he shouted that I’d be hearing from his lawyer. Three weeks later, the district attorney filed charges. Six months later, I sold the company to a competitor for sixty-two million dollars and donated a third of it to a scholarship fund in my late husband’s name. Brandon sent me one letter from his minimum-security facility, asking for help with his legal fees. I sent it back unopened, with a single line written on the envelope: Move on with dignity, sweetheart. I already have.
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