“Before we continue,” I said softly, “I think the board should see page four.” The lead investor, a silver-haired woman named Diane Marsh, raised an eyebrow and reached for the folder. Trevor laughed. “Whatever cute little spreadsheet she printed at Kinko’s, Diane, I assure you—” Diane held up one finger without looking at him. The room went silent. She opened the folder. Her eyes moved down the page. Then up. Then down again. “Trevor,” she said slowly, “are you aware that 51% of the voting shares of Whitfield Holdings were quietly purchased over the last eighteen months through a private trust called Margaret’s Daughter LLC?” Trevor’s smirk cracked. “That’s… that’s not possible. Those shares aren’t for sale.” “They were,” I said. “Every time you took out a personal loan against company stock to fund your boat, your Aspen condo, your girlfriend’s gallery. I bought every share the bank dumped. Quietly. Legally. Through Mom’s old attorney.” His face drained of color. Diane turned the page toward him. His own signature stared back, twenty-three times. “So to clarify,” Diane said, “the woman you just told to go bake cupcakes is, in fact, the majority owner of this company?” I stood up. The blazer felt heavier suddenly, like Mom was standing behind me. “Trevor, you’re not being bought out. You’re being voted out. Effective immediately. Security is waiting in the lobby to collect your badge.” He shot up from his chair. “You can’t do this! Dad left this company to me!” “Dad left the company to the family,” I said. “Mom left the recipe for survival to me. Turns out hers was more valuable.” I turned to the board. “My first motion as majority shareholder: we rename the parent company Margaret Whitfield Holdings. All in favor?” Every hand at the table went up. Except his. Trevor walked out past the glass doors where two guards waited. I sat back down, opened my laptop, and finally, quietly, let myself smile.
Related Posts
Hand over the bakery keys, Grandma, before you embarrass yourself any further. Nobody buys
I poured myself a cup of coffee, slow and deliberate, while Brielle’s friends filmed. ‘Sweetheart,’ I said, ‘before you redecorate, you should meet someone.’ The […]
Hand over the bakery keys, Grandma, before you embarrass yourself any further. Nobody buys
I poured myself a cup of coffee, slow and deliberate, while Brielle’s friends filmed. ‘Sweetheart,’ I said, ‘before you redecorate, you should meet someone.’ The […]
Hand over the bakery keys, Grandma, before you embarrass yourself any further. Nobody buys
I poured myself a cup of coffee, slow and deliberate, while Brielle’s friends filmed. ‘Sweetheart,’ I said, ‘before you redecorate, you should meet someone.’ The […]





