I picked up the resignation letter, smoothed it flat, and slid it back across the table untouched. “Tyler, sweetheart,” I said softly, “before you bury your grandmother, you should check who’s holding the shovel.” I opened the leather folder beside me and placed three documents in front of him. The first was the company bylaws, highlighted in yellow: any board member attempting to remove the founder without a unanimous vote forfeits their position immediately. The second was the unanimous vote that had taken place that morning at 7 a.m., before Tyler had even finished his espresso. Eleven signatures. His was the only one missing. The third was a forensic audit showing the $2.3 million he’d quietly funneled into a shell company in Delaware registered to his girlfriend. The room went so silent I could hear the harbor gulls outside. Tyler’s face drained from smug pink to hospital white. “Grandma, wait, I can explain—” I raised one finger, the way I used to when he’d lie about stealing cookies. “You spent nine months underestimating the woman who taught you to tie your shoes. I spent nine months listening.” I nodded to the back of the room, where two federal investigators stepped forward, badges already out. They’d been waiting in the executive lounge since lunch. As they walked Tyler past me, I reached up and straightened his collar, the way I had on his first day of kindergarten. “I loved you enough to give you everything,” I whispered. “But I love what I built enough not to let you steal it.” He cried. I didn’t. I turned to the board, opened my notebook, and said, “Now. Item two on the agenda. The Q4 expansion into Savannah.” The meeting lasted another forty minutes. I never raised my voice once.
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