They Thought 64 Percent Was Enough to Sell the Company Until an Unexpected Stakeholder Appeared

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The boardroom lights in Sterling Heights headquarters had the color and mercy of a winter afternoon: white, unsparing, and designed for people who had something to prove. They buzzed faintly above the mahogany table, a low electrical hum that threaded through the silence and made the air feel pressurized, like the room itself was holding its breath. I sat in the corner chair.

The one angled away from the windows. The one that never caught the skyline in its reflection, never positioned anyone close enough to the head of the table to suggest ambition. Nobody fought over that chair.

It was, in every sense, the seat for someone who wasn’t supposed to matter. In this family, that had always been my job. My name is Natalie Coffee.

Twenty-eight years old. Archivist by title, ghost by expectation. I set my notepad squarely on my lap, kept my spine straight, and breathed the way you learn to breathe when you’ve spent years disappearing in rooms full of people who need you small: shallow, deliberate, without apology.

Tiffany, my stepmother, didn’t bother to turn her head when she snapped her fingers. “Coffee,” she said, as if ordering an object from a shelf. “Make sure it’s hot this time.

Yesterday was embarrassing.”

She said embarrassing the way someone might say contagious. I rose without scraping the chair, smoothed the hem of my gray sweater, and walked out to the executive kitchen. Tiffany’s eyes found the fabric for a fraction of a second as I passed, catching on the softness of something laundered too many times, and I saw the satisfaction move across her face.

What happened next changed everything… FULL STORY on the next page.
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