Vivienne slid a typed resignation letter toward me with one manicured finger. “Be a good girl, Hannah. Don’t embarrass your father’s memory.” I looked at the eleven directors. Not one met my eyes. So I opened the folder. “Before I sign anything,” I said, “I’d like to introduce someone.” I pressed a button on the conference phone. A warm, gravelly voice filled the room. “Good evening, everyone. This is Walter Kim, managing partner at Kim, Osei and Bramwell.” Vivienne’s smile froze. Walter had been my father’s attorney for thirty-one years. “As executor of Daniel Calloway’s estate,” he continued, “I’m obligated to remind the board that Mr. Calloway’s trust granted his daughter Hannah a controlling sixty-two percent voting interest the moment she completed eighteen months of operational training under the COO. That milestone was reached on Monday.” The silence cracked like glass. I slid copies of the certified trust amendment to every director. Page seven was highlighted. Vivienne lunged for one, scanning, her lips going white. “This is forged,” she hissed. “It’s notarized and filed with the Delaware court,” Walter said calmly. “As is the forensic audit Hannah commissioned in March. Mrs. Calloway, you may want to consult your own attorney before the next agenda item.” I finally looked her in the eye. “You spent eighteen months telling everyone I was nothing. I spent them learning everything.” I turned to the board. “Motion to remove Vivienne Calloway as interim chair, effective immediately, pending review of the seven hundred thousand in undocumented transfers to her sister’s consulting LLC.” A director cleared his throat. “Seconded.” Eleven hands went up, slowly, then all at once. Vivienne stood, her chair scraping like a wounded animal. “Hannah, please —” “Security will walk you out,” I said quietly. “Leave the keys to my father’s office on the desk. The cream and gold is coming down tomorrow.”
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