On my seventy-first birthday, my granddaughter stood at the head of my table and announced, “Starting Monday, I’m taking over the company.”

Inside were layers of my life.

The deed to the Pasadena house.

The original incorporation papers for Alden House Books.

Clara’s birth certificate.

Natalie’s guardianship documents.

My will.

My living trust.

My late husband Henry’s fountain pen.

And at the bottom, in a navy folder marked in my attorney’s handwriting, were the papers I had forgotten because love made me careless.

Alden Family Trust — Contingency Control Clause.

I sat down slowly.

My attorney, Miriam Clarke, had insisted on it ten years ago when Natalie first joined the company.

“She is ambitious,” Miriam had warned. “That can be beautiful. It can also be dangerous. Protect yourself.”

I had waved her off.

“She’s my granddaughter.”

Miriam had looked at me over her glasses.

“That is exactly why you need protection.”

Now, with blood drying at my mouth, I opened the folder.

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