The board voted quickly. Dad was removed from operational control pending investigation, Vanessa lost her consulting position, and I was officially recognized as the majority beneficiary of the company my mother built. For the first time, neither of them could rewrite reality.
Outside the meeting, Vanessa blamed me for everything. She claimed I had destroyed her future and driven Mason away. But I no longer felt the need to defend myself. The life she was mourning had been built on deception from the beginning.
Over the following months, the company was restructured, wasteful spending ended, and my mother’s name was restored to its rightful place. Dad eventually agreed to a settlement that required repayment and his permanent resignation. His apology arrived later, but it contained excuses instead of accountability.
One year after that disastrous party, I stood beside my mother’s grave and told her everything. As I walked away, my phone buzzed with another call from Dad. I looked at the screen, slipped it back into my pocket, and kept walking. This time, I never called back