The woman who could survive loss.
The woman who could build from nothing.
The woman who could be humiliated, betrayed, struck, and still rise before sunrise with blood on her blouse and legal papers in her hand.
I returned home before noon.
There was work waiting.
Authors waiting.
A company waiting.
A life waiting.
At my desk, I opened a manuscript from a sixty-two-year-old debut novelist who wrote in her cover letter that she almost did not submit because she feared it was too late.
I smiled.
Then I wrote back personally.
It is not too late. Send the full manuscript.
Sunlight filled the room.
My phone was quiet.
No one was trying to move me from my chair.
No one was calling me outdated.
No one was measuring my life by how quickly they could inherit it.
I picked up Henry’s fountain pen from the cedar box and signed the first page of a new publishing contract.
My hand was steady.
Not young.
Not unscarred.
Steady.
And that was enough.
Natalie thought I was in the way.
She was right about one thing.
I was in the way.
In the way of theft.
In the way of greed.
In the way of a lie dressed as succession.
In the way of people who thought age made me invisible.
But by sunrise, I remembered what they had all forgotten.
I was not standing in their way.
I was standing on what I built.
And nobody gets to inherit a throne by striking the queen.
THE END!