I didn’t sit down. I walked, slowly, past the rows of folding chairs, past my husband’s cousins smirking into their coffee, past the CFO who’d ignored my emails for ninety-three straight days. I climbed the three carpeted steps to the stage and gently took the microphone from Gerald Hargrove’s manicured hand. “You’re right,” I said softly. “A woman like me could never run this company the way you have.” Gerald smiled. The room laughed. Then I opened the portfolio. “Which is why, six weeks ago, I purchased the controlling forty-one percent stake from your brother Martin — the shares you forgot existed because you cut him out of Thanksgiving in 1998.” The laughter died in one collective breath. “Combined with the nine percent David left me, that’s a majority. I called this shareholder meeting, Gerald. Not you.” His face went the color of old paper. I turned to the room. “In the last four months, an independent audit has found two-point-three million dollars in vendor kickbacks routed through a shell company in Delaware. The board has the file. The SEC received their copy at nine a.m. this morning.” Gerald lunged for the mic. Security — my security now — stepped between us. “Effective immediately,” I continued, voice steady the way David always said it was when it mattered, “Gerald Hargrove is removed as CEO. Sandra Liu, who he passed over for promotion four times, will serve as interim chief.” Sandra stood up in the third row, hand over her mouth. I looked down at Gerald, who was still trying to find words. “You told me at the funeral that I should move on with dignity and let the men handle things. I am moving on, Gerald. With dignity. And I am handling things.” I set the microphone down gently, the way you set down something fragile you no longer need, and walked off the stage to the loudest silence I have ever heard.
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