Rejected by Three, I Chose Revenge Chapter 15

Rejected by Three, I Chose Revenge Chapter 15

The boardroom doors felt heavier than usual as I pushed them open, the weight of twenty-three years of lies pressing against my shoulders Every head turned toward me, conversations dying mid-sentence as I stepped into the mahogany-paneled sanctuary where Whitman Group’s fate had been decided for three generations.

Vivian sat at the head of the conference table like a queen holding court, her navy dress perfectly pressed, her smile radiating confidence The board members were arranged around her like loyal subjects-Harrison Caldwell nodding approvingly at something she’d just said, Margaret Sterling leaning, forward with interest, David Chen scribbling notes on his tablet.

“Hazel,” Richard said from his position near the windows, his voice carefully neutral. “I wasn’t expecting you.”

“I’m sure you weren’t.” I moved to the center of the room, feeling twenty pairs of eyes tracking my movement. The tablet in my hands felt like a weapon loaded with ammunition I’d been gathering for months. “But since this meeting concerns the future leadership of Whitman Group, I thought the board should have all the relevant information before making their decision.

Vivian’s smile never wavered, but I caught the flash of something predatory in her eyes. “Of course, sister. Though I’m not sure what you could possibly add to our discussion about qualified leadership.”

The emphasis on ‘qualified’ was deliberate, designed to remind everyone of my supposed inadequacies. But I’d learned to armor myself against her barbs

“Actually, I think you’ll find my contribution quite illuminating.” I connected my tablet to the room’s presentation system, feeling a surge of satisfaction as the first document appeared on the massive screen behind me. “Especially regarding the question of legitimacy.”

The bank statement filled the screen in crisp detail-Richard Whitman’s personal account, showing a transfer of fifty thousand dollars to Maria Elena Sanchez, dated just three months ago. The room went silent except for the hum of the air conditioning.

“This is one of hundreds of similar transactions,” I said, my voice cutting through the silence like a blade. “Dating back twenty-four years. Regular payments from my father’s personal accounts to the same woman. Maria Sanchez-former Whitman household employee.”

Richard’s face had gone pale, but he maintained his composure. “Hazel, this is hardly the time or place for-*

“For what, Father? For the truth?” I clicked to the next slide, revealing a photograph that made several board members gasp audibly. Richard and Maria, arms wrapped around each other outside a Geneva hotel, their faces clearly visible in the afternoon sunlight. “This was taken six months ago. During what you

told Mother was a solo business trip.

The room erupted in murmurs, board members exchanging shocked glances. Vivian’s composure finally cracked, her perfect smile faltering as she stared at

the screen.

“This is… this is fabricated,” she stammered, her voice losing its usual musical quality. “She’s clearly manipulated these images to-‘

“To what?” I interrupted, advancing another slide. “To forge twenty-four years of financial records? To create false hotel registries? To manufacture DNA

evidence?”

The genetic testing results filled the screen, clinical and undeniable. Maria Elena Sanchez and Vivian Whitman: 99.7% probability of maternal relationship. Richard Whitman and Vivian Whitman: 99.9% probability of paternal relationship.

‘Ladies and gentlemen,” I said, my voice steady despite the adrenaline coursing through my veins, “meet the real illegitimate daughter of the Whitman family.”

Chaos erupted. Harrison Caldwell shot to his feet, his face flushed with indignation. Margaret Sterling was frantically typing on her phone, probably alerting her investment firm. David Chen stared at the screen in stunned silence, his earlier notes forgotten.

“This is impossible,” Vivian shrieked, her carefully constructed facade completely shattered. “She’s lying! She’s always been jealous, always trying to destroy what I’ve built!”

But her hysteria only made the evidence more damning. I watched as board members who had been hanging on her every word minutes before now looked at her with disgust and suspicion.

Richard finally found his voice, moving toward the screen as if he could somehow make the evidence disappear. “The circumstances are… complicated Yes, I had a relationship with Maria, but that doesn’t change Vivian’s qualifications, her contributions to this company-

“Her qualifications?” Margaret Sterling’s voice cut through his protestations like ice. “You mean her qualifications as the product of an extramarital affair that

you’ve been covering up for decades? Her qualifications as someone who’s built her entire identity on a lie?”

*The board has a right to know about conflicts of interest,” Harrison added, his earlier warmth toward Vivian completely evaporated About compromised judgment. About leaders who can’t be trusted.”

I clicked to the final slide-a compilation of medical records, birth certificates, and hospital documentation that told the complete story The baby switch. orchestrated by Richard and Maria. The deliberate deception that had lasted over two decades. The systematic favoritism that had elevated an illegitimate child while suppressing the true heir.

“This is what you’ve been voting to support,” I said, my voice carrying across the stunned room. “A leadership structure built on fraud, maintained through lies, and compromised by personal relationships that should have been disclosed decades ago.”

Vivian was sobbing now, her mascara streaking down her cheeks as she clutched the edge of the conference table. “You don’t understand, she gasped 1 never asked for any of this. I never wanted to hurt anyone. I just… I just wanted to belong somewhere.

For a moment, I almost felt sorry for her. Almost. Then I remembered seven years of humiliation, of being treated like an unwanted stranger in my own home, of watching her bask in love and attention that should have been mine.

“The question before this board,” I continued, ignoring her breakdown, “is whether Whitman Group should be led by people who have demonstrated such a fundamental lack of integrity. Whether shareholders and employees deserve better than leaders who built their power on deception.”

David Chen was the first to speak, his voice quiet but firm. “I move for an immediate vote of no confidence in Richard Whitman’s leadership.

“Seconded,” Margaret Sterling said without hesitation.

One by one, hands rose around the table. Richard’s allies, his carefully cultivated supporters, his longtime friends-all abandoning him as the weight of

evidence made denial impossible.

The final tally was devastating: twelve votes for removal, two abstentions, zero votes of support.

As security escorted a broken Richard from the boardroom, as Vivian collapsed into Harrison Caldwell’s arms still sobbing about fairness and family, I felt the shift in power like a physical thing. The Whitman empire was leaderless, vulnerable, ready to be claimed by someone with the vision and strength to

rebuild it.

Someone like me.

The war was far from over, but this battle-this crucial, decisive battle-was mine.

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