“I’m afraid there’s been a misunderstanding,” I said, my voice steadier than it had ever been. I reached into my canvas tote and pulled out a navy folder. “Before anyone signs anything, the board should see this.” Vanessa laughed, sharp and theatrical. “She’s bluffing. She’s a glorified secretary.” The chairman, old Mr. Whitfield, raised a hand. “Let her speak.” I opened the folder. “Three years ago, when the company nearly collapsed, I was asked to restructure the Eastlake acquisition. I did. Quietly. Under Vanessa’s name, because she insisted. I kept every email, every draft, every signed authorization.” I slid copies down the table. “What Vanessa never read carefully was clause 14. The restructure transferred forty-one percent of voting shares into a trust. The trustee,” I paused, “is me.” The room went silent. Vanessa’s smile cracked. “That’s not possible. Daniel would have told me.” “Daniel signed it,” I said softly. “The night before he filed for divorce from his first wife. He wanted the family protected from people exactly like you.” I turned to the board. “I’m not resigning. I’m calling for a vote of no confidence in Vanessa Hartley as Chief Operating Officer, effective immediately.” Mr. Whitfield’s eyes glittered. “Seconded.” Hands rose around the table, one after another, like dominoes. Vanessa stood so fast her chair toppled. “You ungrateful little—” “Careful,” I said. “There are witnesses. And HR is already on their way up.” She grabbed her bag and stormed out, heels stabbing the marble. The door hissed shut behind her. Mr. Whitfield turned to me with the faintest smile. “Madam Trustee. Shall we begin?” I picked up the pen Vanessa had given me, the one meant to end my career, and signed my name on a brand-new page. Outside, the city lights flickered on, one by one, like an audience finally taking their seats.
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