Chapter 3: The Truth Comes Out
Chapter 3: The Truth Comes Out
Three days later, the board requested a full forensic audit.
I agreed immediately.
If my father wanted to fight...
Everything would become public.
Every document.
Every signature.
Every hidden debt.
The accounting team worked around the clock.
Seven years of financial records.
Hundreds of contracts.
Thousands of transactions.
The results shocked even seasoned auditors.
Richard hadn't just made bad decisions.
He had hidden losses.
Moved company money to cover Brielle's failed businesses.
Used corporate accounts to pay for luxury vacations.
Purchased jewelry labeled as "client entertainment."
Nearly twelve million dollars had quietly disappeared.
The board sat in stunned silence.
One director finally spoke.
"We could face shareholder lawsuits."
I nodded.
"Which is why we're correcting everything now."
That evening, local business news exploded.
WHITMORE BOARD REMOVES FOUNDER AFTER FINANCIAL MISCONDUCT.
NEW CEO SAVED COMPANY YEARS BEFORE POWER SHIFT.
INVESTORS PRAISE CORPORATE RESTRUCTURING.
Every headline carried my name.
Not his.
Mine.
My parents weren't prepared for life outside privilege.
The country club suspended their membership.
Luxury credit accounts were closed.
Their favorite restaurants suddenly required payment before seating.
Friends stopped returning calls.
Funny how quickly admiration disappears when the money does.
A week later, Dad appeared outside my office.
No suit.
No chauffeur.
Just an exhausted seventy-year-old man carrying a worn leather folder.
"I'd like five minutes."
I invited him inside.
He placed the folder on my desk.
Inside were photographs.
Me.
At eight years old helping him build model houses.
At twelve carrying blueprints through construction sites.
At sixteen celebrating my first scholarship.
His voice cracked.
"I forgot."
I looked up.
"What?"
"I forgot you earned everything."
For several seconds neither of us spoke.
Then he quietly added,
"I was so busy trying to save Brielle... that I stopped seeing you."
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Those words hurt more than the slap.
Because they were true.