I thought about my father teaching me compound interest at the kitchen table.
I thought about every time I had been told to shrink.
I thought about every check I wrote to rescue people who resented me.
I thought about the night in my mother’s driveway when I understood no one was coming to save me—and realized, in the same breath, that maybe that was the making of me.
The stock opened strong.
Then climbed.
Then climbed again.
Commentators called it a market surprise, a founder triumph, a breakthrough story. They always find polished language once a woman becomes too successful to ignore.
But wealth was never the real victory.
Exit was.
The power to leave without begging.
The power to refuse contamination.
The power to look at a bloodline determined to consume you and say, with your life instead of your mouth, no more.
That night, after the interviews and congratulations and celebration dinner, I stood alone on a rooftop terrace above the city with a glass of champagne in my hand and Manhattan glittering below me.
People think revenge always has to be loud.
Sometimes it is.
Sometimes it arrives in court filings and frozen accounts and men stripped of the titles they thought made them immortal.