Granddaughter Humiliated Grandma at Dinner, Then the Trust Clause Hit-eirian

My name is Loretta Abercrombie, and for most of my adult life, people believed I was harder than I actually was.

They saw the company before they saw the woman.

They saw Abercrombie Media Group in its glass-fronted East Coast headquarters, with editors carrying marked-up manuscripts through the halls and young publicists whispering into phones about launch dates, author tours, and six-figure contracts.

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They did not see the first office.

That office had one window, one leaking ceiling tile, and one secondhand desk I bought from a bankruptcy sale with a corner already cracked.

I was thirty years old then, too proud to admit I was terrified and too stubborn to fail quietly.

No inheritance built that company.

No husband signed checks behind me.

I built it with second mortgages, unpaid invoices, rejection letters, manuscript piles taller than my kitchen counter, and coffee so black it felt less like a drink than a survival method.

By the time my daughter Joanna was born, Abercrombie Media Group had become stable enough to look respectable from the outside.

Inside, it was still held together by long nights, loyal employees, and my refusal to let bigger houses bully us out of books we believed in.

Joanna grew up around paper.

She did homework on my office floor while editors argued about cover art over her head.

She learned the smell of fresh ink before she learned multiplication.

She used to say the company sounded like rain because someone was always typing somewhere.

Then Joanna got sick.

Cancer is a word people say carefully when it belongs to someone else.

When it belongs to your only child, it stops being a word and becomes the weather in every room.

She died at thirty-nine.

She left behind one little girl.

Cassandra.

Eight years old, tiny braids, school uniform too large at the shoulders, and a stuffed rabbit she carried absolutely everywhere, even into the hospital room during Joanna’s final week.

At the funeral, Cassandra pressed her face into my sweater and cried until the wool was wet against my skin.

I remember one of Joanna’s friends trying to take her hand, and Cassandra only gripped me tighter.

So I became what the child needed.

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