And I was the old woman standing between them and everything they had already spent in their minds.
By nine o’clock, Natalie’s company email was locked.
By nine fifteen, her agency funding was frozen.
By nine thirty, her corporate cards were canceled.
By ten, the board was notified that any leadership transition was fraudulent and unauthorized.
By ten twenty-two, Natalie called me thirty-seven times.
I did not answer.
At eleven, she came to my front door.
I watched from upstairs as she stormed up the walkway in sunglasses, hair perfect, mouth tight with rage.
Graham followed behind her.
Miriam stood beside me.
“Do you want to speak with them?”
“No.”
“Good.”
Mrs. Bell had already called a security company.
Adrian had already arranged a forensic audit.
Miriam had already prepared the letter that would change Natalie’s life before lunch.
The doorbell rang.