I reached into my leather portfolio and slid a single blue folder across the table. Gerald didn’t touch it. Marcus did. His smirk melted somewhere between page two and page three. “That,” I said softly, “is the trust Daniel filed the week before his diagnosis. He knew, Gerald. He knew you’d come for the company the moment he was gone.” The room went so quiet I could hear the ventilation hum. I opened my laptop and turned it toward the board. “Voting shares. Sixty-eight percent. Held in my name since our second anniversary. Daniel signed them over the same night you told him at Christmas that he’d only succeeded because he married up.” Gerald’s face drained of color. “As for my mother,” I continued, sliding a second folder toward him, “she passed away when I was nine. Whatever story you paid that private investigator to invent, I already have his signed retraction. And a defamation filing ready with my attorney downstairs.” Marcus stood up so fast his chair scraped. I didn’t look at him. “Sit down, Marcus. You’re not on the board anymore. That was the eight a.m. vote. You missed it because you were golfing with the man you tried to bribe last week — who, by the way, recorded the entire conversation.” I closed the laptop gently. “Gerald, you have until Friday to vacate the executive suite. The forensic accountants start Monday. Every wire you moved through the Cayman subsidiary is already flagged.” I stood, smoothing my blazer, and walked to the door. At the threshold I turned. “Daniel used to say the kindest thing about you was that you underestimated everyone. He was right. It was kind — to me.” I left them sitting in the silence my husband had built, brick by careful brick, for the day he knew was coming. Outside, the elevator doors opened. I stepped in alone, and for the first time in six months, I let myself smile.
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