They Tried To Remove Their Father As CEO — Then Security Asked For Their Badges-QuynhTranJP

Kayla kept the badge in her hand for several seconds after the scanner blinked red.

Not once. Not twice. Red every time.

The small plastic card that had opened every executive door for seven years suddenly became useless in her fingers. Behind her, Mariah stared at the scanner like the machine had insulted her personally. Belle’s spilled caramel latte had crawled under the conference table and reached the toe of Denise’s navy heel.

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Nobody moved to clean it.

That was the first thing my daughters did not understand about consequence. It does not hurry. It does not shout. It sits there, cold and patient, until the person who created it finally runs out of places to look.

Kayla turned back to me slowly.

“This is illegal,” she said.

Denise did not blink. “It is not.”

Mariah pointed toward the glass wall where Carl stood with two security officers. “You’re humiliating us in front of employees?”

I looked at the three envelopes, then at the family photo lying face down beside my keyboard.

“You sent the first message in front of your mother and your sisters,” I said. “I’m only finishing the conversation in the right room.”

Belle finally bent to pick up her cup, but her hands were shaking so badly the plastic lid slipped again and rolled toward the chair leg. She looked smaller than she had when she walked in. Not younger. Smaller.

“Dad,” she whispered, “can we talk privately?”

Kayla snapped her head toward her. “Belle.”

That single word told me everything. Even now, with their access gone, their cards frozen, their titles stripped, Kayla still thought she was managing the room.

I folded my hands on top of the blue folder.

“We are private enough.”

Carl opened the conference-room door. He had been with me since the warehouse days, back when our first office smelled like oil, cardboard, and wet concrete. He did not enjoy this. I could see it in his face. But he also did not hesitate.

“Ladies,” he said carefully, “I’ll need the badges now.”

Mariah laughed again, but this time there was no sound behind it. “This is insane. We’re family.”

Denise slid another page across the table.

“You were employees of Harlan Industrial Supply under at-will executive contracts. Those contracts contain a misconduct and fiduciary-interference clause. The board accepted Mr. Harlan’s recommendation at 6:22 a.m. Your termination is effective immediately.”

Kayla’s mouth opened, then closed.

There it was.

The clause they never read.

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