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The Hot CEO Novel Chapter 14

The foundation’s board meeting was scheduled for the first Monday of the

month, but this one felt different. I sat at the head of the conference

table—not Caleb’s old seat at the foot, but the position my mother had

always commanded. The other board members looked at me with something

I hadn’t seen before: respect without qualification.

My mother wasn’t present. She’d officially recused herself, citing “family

conflict of interest,” though everyone knew she was ensuring no one could

claim nepotism. I was on my own.

The agenda was simple: approve the new budget, confirm the solar program

expansion, and vote on the “restructuring initiative”—which was really a

deep audit of every grant, every expense, every program from the last five

years.

The CFO of Wade Industries presented the numbers. The foundation had

raised $8.3 million under Caleb’s leadership but delivered only $2.1 million to

actual programs. The rest had disappeared into “administrative costs,”

“consulting fees,” and Caleb’s “operational expenses.”

One board member, a woman named Margaret who’d served for a decade,

spoke up. “How did we not see this?”

“Because we trusted the director,” I said. “Because we saw his charm, his

connections, his ability to bring in donors, and we didn’t look closely

enough at what happened after the money arrived. That’s on all of us.”

Margaret nodded. “What do you propose?”

“Transparency. Real-time financial reporting, accessible to all board

members. Program directors report directly to the board, not to me. And we

bring in an independent auditor for quarterly reviews.”

“That’s expensive.”

“So is losing our nonprofit status because of fraud.”

The vote was unanimous—not just for the reforms, but for my continuation

as director, now permanently rather than interim. As the meeting broke up,

Margaret approached me.

“Your mother suggested you,” she said. “I was skeptical. But she was right.

You have a different style, but the same substance.”

“Thank you.”

“Don’t thank me. Prove me right.”

That became my mantra: prove them right. The foundation’s first major

event under my leadership was a fundraiser—not the black-tie gala Caleb

favored, but a community festival at one of the solar schools. Families,

teachers, local businesses. Kids running around, touching the panels, asking

questions River and his team answered with patience.

Noah and Leo worked a booth, explaining the project to anyone who’d listen.

Noah used terms like “kilowatt-hours” and “grid parity” while Leo handed

out stickers that read “Powered by the Sun, Powered by Wade.”

My mother watched from a distance, not interfering. When I joined her, she

said, “This is better than the galas.”

“It’s real.”

“Exactly.”

We walked among the families, the children, the life we’d built. She pointed

to a girl in a wheelchair, her brother pushing her up to the panel display.

“That’s your legacy now. Not the parties, not the connections. Her.”

The girl’s mother approached me, hesitant. “Are you Mrs. Wade?”

“Annabel, please.”

“My daughter’s school—it’s on the list for next year. The solar project.”

“It is.”

“Thank you. Our electric bills were so high, we were thinking about pulling

her from the after-school program. Now they say it’ll be free, powered by

the sun.” She blinked back tears. “It’s not just light bulbs. It’s possibilities.”

That’s when I understood what my mother had been trying to teach me. It

wasn’t about power for its own sake, or revenge, or even justice. It was

about creating space for other people to become themselves. Just like she’d

done for me.

The festival raised $180,000—not the millions Caleb used to promise, but

real money from real people who believed in the mission. I sent thank-you

notes myself, handwritten, to every donor over $100. Margaret saw me

working on them in the office late one night.

“Caleb used to have an assistant do that.”

“I am the assistant,” I said. “And the director. And the donor. I’m whatever

the work needs me to be.”

She smiled. “Your mother taught you that.”

“She taught me everything. I just had to learn it the hard way.”

On the home front, the boys settled into the new normal. Caleb’s supervised

visits continued, awkward but consistent. He tried, I gave him that. He

showed up on time, didn’t argue with the supervisor, and actually played

with Leo instead of checking his phone.

Noah remained wary. “He’s being good because he has to be,” he said after

one visit. “Not because he wants to be.”

“Does the reason matter if the behavior is right?”

“It matters for how long it lasts.”

Wise beyond his years, my son. But he was learning to hope, which was

more than I’d expected.

River and I worked side-by-side, our collaboration deepening. He’d become

part of the foundation’s fabric, his passion for renewable energy matched by

his practical understanding of community needs. The interns he’d brought

on were now full-time employees, the project expanding faster than we’d

projected.

One afternoon, he found me in the foundation’s small garden, taking a break

between meetings. “Your mother wants to talk about taking the project

national.”

“Of course she does.”

“Are you ready for that?”

“I don’t know. But I’ll figure it out.” I looked at him. “You’ve been a good

friend through this.”

“You’ve let me be part of something that matters. It’s mutual.”

“It’s more than that. You showed up when everything was falling apart. You

didn’t have to.”

“I wanted to.” He paused. “Annabel, I need to be honest about something.”

“Okay.”

“My feelings for you are… complicated. Professional respect, personal

admiration, and something else I’m trying not to name because the timing is

terrible and the power dynamic is complicated.”

I appreciated the honesty. “You’re right about the timing. But I’m flattered.

And when I’m ready-if I’m ready-I’ll let you know.”

“That’s fair.”

“For now, let’s just build something that lasts.”

“Deal.”

The foundation’s second-quarter report showed a 65% increase in direct

aid, with administrative costs cut to 8% of the budget-industry standard,

not the bloated 40% Caleb had allowed. Donations were up, volunteer hours

tripled, and the solar program was being cited as a model for other states.

My mother sent a single-line email: “Not bad for a housewife.”

I replied: “Not bad for a CEO who raised her.”

Her response was a thumbs-up emoji, which from her was practically a love

letter.

At home, I instituted “family meetings” every Sunday—just the three of us,

discussing the week ahead, any concerns, any victories. The boys took them

seriously, coming prepared with notes. Leo drew pictures of his goals. Noah

wrote agendas.

“This is weird,” Noah said one week. “But good weird.”

“Like pizza for breakfast,” Leo added.

“Exactly,” I said. “Unexpected, but satisfying”

The supervisor for Caleb’s visits reported progress—he was engaging more,

listening better, asking questions about the boys’ lives. But Noah remained

skeptical, and I didn’t push him to forgive. Forgiveness, I was learning, was a

personal choice, not a requirement.

One night, Caleb called—not to argue, but to ask about Leo’s soccer

schedule. “I want to come to a game,” he said. “With the supervisor, if that’s

okay.”

“It’s okay if Leo wants you there.”

“Does he?”

“Ask him.”

He did. Leo said yes, but only if Noah came too. And if they could get ice

cream after. Practical demands from a child learning to set boundaries.

The game was awkward but not terrible. Caleb sat in the back row, the

supervisor beside him. He cheered when Leo scored, and Noah didn’t flinch

at the sound of his father’s voice. Progress, incremental and real.

Afterward, at the ice cream shop, Caleb paid for everyone-including the

supervisor—and listened while Leo chattered about the game. He didn’t

check his phone once.

As we parted, he pulled me aside. “Thank you. For letting me be here.”

“It wasn’t my decision.”

“I know. That’s what makes it meaningful.”

He was learning. Slowly, painfully, but learning.

The foundation’s fall gala approached—an event I’d inherited from Caleb’s

planning. I considered canceling, but Margaret convinced me otherwise.

“Show them what the foundation should be.”

So we restructured it. No black tie, no silent auction of expensive trinkets.

Instead, a celebration of the solar schools, with the children as guests of

honor. Families who’d benefited from our programs, teachers, community

leaders. The dress code was “whatever makes you feel celebrated.”

My mother raised an eyebrow when I told her. “Risky.”

“Authentic.”

“Same thing, when it works.”

River helped plan it, insisting we power the entire event with solar

generators we’d use for the school projects. “Walk the walk,” he said.

The gala was held at the newest solar school, string lights hung between

panels, music from a local band, food from neighborhood restaurants. The

boys wore button-down shirts and actual slacks, complaining but secretly

pleased. Noah introduced me to his science teacher, who gushed about his

leadership in the classroom. Leo dragged River to the dessert table,

demanding he try “at least three cookies.”

My mother arrived in jeans and a blazer, her version of casual. She looked

around, taking in the families, the children, the energy that was nothing like

Caleb’s stuffy galas.

“This is better,” she said simply.

“You already said that.”

“It bears repeating”

During the program, I spoke—not about fundraising goals or board

development, but about the girl in the wheelchair, the mother who could

keep her daughter in after-school programs, the teacher who didn’t have to

choose between supplies and electricity. I talked about power-not the kind

Caleb had wielded, but the kind we generated ourselves.

“The foundation was broken,” I said. “Not just financially, but ethically. We’re

fixing it. Not with big checks from wealthy people who want their names on

buildings, but with community, with transparency, with work that actually

works.”

The applause was genuine. The donations that came in that night were

smaller amounts, but more of them—hundreds of people giving what they

could because they believed.

One donor, an elderly man who’d given twenty dollars cash, approached me.

“My wife passed last year. She always volunteered at the food bank your

foundation supports. After she died, the funding got cut. I stopped giving.

But tonight, I saw her values in what you’re doing. So I’m back.”

Twenty dollars from a man on a fixed income meant more than twenty

thousand from a corporation looking for tax benefits. I hugged him, and he

smelled of peppermint and old cologne, of hard times and enduring hope.

At the end of the night, River helped me pack up equipment. “You know

what this feels like?”

“What?”

“A beginning.”

He was right. The foundation was reborn. The boys were thriving. I was

whole.

Caleb watched from the periphery—he’d been invited, a gesture of

professionalism, but he’d stood apart, seeing what I’d built without him. He

left early, the supervisor trailing behind.

As I locked up, my mother waited by the car. “You proved me right.”

“I proved you wrong first. About me being weak.”

“I was never wrong about you being weak,” she said. “I was just waiting for

you to prove me wrong about you being strong”

We drove home in separate cars, but for the first time, it didn’t feel like

distance. It felt like respect.

The boys were asleep when I got home, worn out by excitement and sugar. I

checked on them, kissed their foreheads, and went to my study-my space,

my work, my life.

The numbers worked. The mission was clear. The future was bright.

And for the first time, I didn’t feel like I was borrowing any of it. It was mine.

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