The double doors opened. Marcus stood, buttoning his jacket, beaming his shark smile. Two assistants in tailored suits walked in, followed by a silver-haired attorney I recognized from Forbes. They scanned the room. Then they turned, and walked directly to me. ‘Mrs. Hollister,’ the attorney said, bowing slightly. ‘Lighthouse is ready whenever you are.’ The room went silent. Marcus laughed nervously. ‘I think there’s been a mistake. The principal of Lighthouse Capital isβ’ ‘Standing right here,’ I said quietly, standing up. I slid a leather folder across the table to him. ‘I founded Lighthouse four years ago. Under my maiden name. While you were telling your friends I was too stupid to read a balance sheet, I was buying the debt you couldn’t service.’ Marcus’s face drained. David finally looked up, and for the first time in years, I saw him really see me. ‘The diner in Ohio,’ I continued, ‘belonged to my grandfather. He left me his savings and one piece of advice: never argue with a man who underestimates you. Just outwork him.’ I tapped the folder. ‘I now own seventy-one percent of Hollister Industries. The merger is approved β on one condition.’ Marcus’s voice cracked. ‘Anything.’ ‘Effective tonight, you resign. No severance. No board seat. And you will personally apologize to every assistant, every junior employee, every waitress you’ve ever spoken down to.’ He opened his mouth. I raised a hand. ‘Or I liquidate the company by Monday and you lose the lake house, the jet, and the pension.’ He sat down hard. I turned to David. ‘You have until morning to decide whose name you want on your next contract β your father’s, or mine.’ I picked up my coffee cup, refilled it myself, and walked out. Behind me, I heard the silver-haired attorney say, very softly, ‘She told us you’d ask her to pour the coffee. She bet me fifty dollars.’
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