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Father turned on her. “Don’t say another word.”
She snapped, “Why? You were happy enough when it benefited you.”
Their perfect marriage started cracking in public.
At the edge of the room, I saw staff standing still with trays in their hands. Some had known me as a child. One older woman looked like she had waited years for this.
Adrian stepped up beside me.
So I turned away from my parents and faced the room.
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“Do you know what the real problem is?” I said. “All of you know the names of wines, donors, and horse breeds. But half the people in here couldn’t tell you the names of the people who keep this place running.”
No one moved.
Adrian stepped up beside me. “Our first act as incoming co-chairs will be a full review of staff treatment, retirement support, housing stipends, and education aid tied to the estate and foundation.”
Then I heard a small voice behind me.
Mother stared at me and said quietly, “After everything, you would still take from me?”
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I laughed once. “You threw your pregnant daughter into the rain and threatened my child. Do not talk to me about loss.”
She flinched.
Then I heard a small voice behind me.
“Mom?”
I turned fast.
“Are you okay, Mom?”
Elia was standing there with our babysitter from the car. Big eyes. Pink shoes. Confused, but not scared.
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I dropped to my knees. “Hey, baby.”
“Are you okay, Mom?”
I put my hands on her shoulders. “Yeah. I am now.”
She looked past me at the room full of frozen adults. “Why is everyone weird?”
Adrian knelt beside us. Elia looked at him and asked, “Are we still using purple?”
We met with staff one by one.
He smiled. “Always.”
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Then he stood and said, loud enough for the room to hear, “This is who the family is now.”
The next week brought calls, statements, board reviews. People who had ignored me for years suddenly wanted my perspective.
I ignored most of them.
Adrian and I took control of the foundation. Not like victors. Like people cleaning out a poisoned house.
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