I pulled out a slim leather folder and slid it down the length of the table. It stopped perfectly in front of Preston’s untouched water glass. “What’s this?” he said, still smirking. “Open it,” I said. He flipped the cover. His smirk cracked first at the corners, then collapsed entirely. Inside was a second will — dated fourteen months after the one he was holding — notarized, witnessed by Dad’s oncologist and his priest, and video-recorded on Dad’s iPad from his hospital bed. In it, Dad left the house and a modest trust to Preston. Everything else — the company, the patents, the Greenwich property, the offshore accounts Preston didn’t even know existed — went to me. “This is a forgery,” Preston hissed. “Play the video, Marcus,” I said quietly. The general counsel, who had been Dad’s friend for forty years, tapped his laptop. Dad’s face filled the screen, thin but clear-eyed. “Preston, if you’re watching this, it means you tried. Nora bathed me. Nora held my hand. Nora read me Hemingway when I couldn’t sleep. You sent flowers through an assistant. A company is not a trophy. It’s a responsibility. She earned it. You didn’t.” The room went so silent I could hear the HVAC hum. Preston’s wife stood up and walked out without looking at him. The board members, one by one, turned their chairs a quarter-inch toward me. I stood, smoothed my cardigan, and picked up the gavel Dad used to open every meeting for thirty years. “Preston,” I said gently, “security will help you gather your things from Dad’s office. You have twenty minutes. And the pearl necklace — you can keep it. Mom would’ve wanted you to have something soft to remember her by.” He opened his mouth. Nothing came out. I turned to the board. “Now. Shall we discuss Q3?”
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