Marcus pointed gently toward Mr. Lewis. “When children said they weren’t hungry, he knew they were lying. When the school ignored us, he fed us. When our parents were drowning, he made sure we ate.”
Vance rolled his eyes. “That is very touching, gentlemen, but business is business.”
“No,” Marcus said coldly. “Greed is greed. Business is what happens when grown men protect the people who protected them.”
Vance’s face reddened.
“I don’t care who you are. The sale is done. Once my commission clears, I’m leaving this town.”
“The sale is done,” Marcus agreed. “Through our private investment group.”
Vance stared at him. “Your group?”
Marcus nodded. “You thought you were selling this place to a faceless developer. You sold it to us.”
Mr. Lewis looked up sharply.
“What?” he whispered.
David reached into his coat and pulled out a folder. “The land is no longer under Vance’s control.”
Thomas looked at the principal. “And we reviewed the way he rushed the sale, the eviction notices, and Mr. Lewis’ termination.”
Leo’s voice dropped. “Our attorneys found enough irregularities to bury him.”
Vance stepped back. “You can’t threaten me.”
Ben looked him in the eye.
“Nobody threatened you. You signed everything yourself.”
Marcus held up a document. “Including a declaration stating you personally orchestrated the sale and approved the evictions without proper tenant review.”
Vance’s mouth opened, but no words came out.
Marcus turned toward him fully. “As the new owners of this land and major donors to the district’s funding board, we have already requested your immediate removal pending investigation.”
“You’re ruining me over him?” Vance shouted, pointing at Mr. Lewis. “Over a broke old janitor?”
For the first time that night, Mr. Lewis stepped forward.
His hands were no longer shaking.
“I might not have money in the bank,” he said softly. “But I was never broke.”
Vance sneered. “You’re still a loser.”