employees thought highly of her. He needed people like her who cared for the company and the beer. People who werenât constrained by what they were or were not supposed to be.
Just like he wasnât.
âSheâs young,â Delores finished.
Zeb snorted. Compared to his assistant, almost everyone would be.
âBut sheâs very good,â Delores said with finality.
âGood.â He had no doubt that Casey Johnson would fight him at every step. âMake sure HR fast-tracks her hires. I want her to have all the help she needs.â
He was looking forward to this.
Four
âT hank you all for joining me today,â Zeb said, looking out at the worried faces of his chief officers, vice presidents and departmental heads. They were all crammed around the conference table in his office. They had twenty minutes until the press conference was scheduled to start and Zeb thought it was best to give his employees a little warning.
Everyone looked anxious. He couldnât blame them. Heâd made everyone surrender their cell phones when theyâd come into the office and a few people looked as if they were going through withdrawal. But he wasnât about to run the risk of someone preempting his announcement.
Only one person in the room looked like she knew what was coming nextâCasey Johnson. Today she also looked like a member of the managerial team, Zeb noted with an inward smile. Her hair was slicked back into a neat bun and she wore a pale purple blouse and a pair of slacks. The change from the woman whoâd stormed into his office was so big that if it hadnât been for the faint spiderweb scar on her cheek, Zeb wouldnât have recognized her.
âIâm going to tell you the same thing that Iâm going to tell the press in twenty minutes,â Zeb said. âI wanted to give you advance warning. When I make my announcement, I expect each and every one of you to look supportive. Weâre going to present a unified force. Not only is the Beaumont Brewery back, but itâs going to be better than ever.â He glanced at Casey. She notched an eyebrow at him and made a little motion with her hands that Zeb took to mean Get on with it.
So he did. âHardwick Beaumont was my father.â
As expected, the entire room shuddered with a gasp, followed by a rumbling murmur of disbelief. With amusement, Zeb noted that Casey stared around the room as if everyone else should have already realized the truth.
She didnât understand how unusual she was. No one had ever looked at him and seen the Beaumont in him. All they could see was a black man from Atlanta. Very few people ever bothered to look past that, even when heâd started making serious money.
But she had.
Some of the senior employees looked grim but not surprised. Everyone else seemed nothing but shocked. And the day wasnât over yet. When the murmur had subsided, Zeb pressed on.
âSome of you have met Daniel Lee,â Zeb said, motioning to Daniel, who stood near the door. âIn addition to being our new chief marketing officer, Daniel is also one of Hardwickâs sons. So when I tell the reporters,â he went on, ignoring the second round of shocked murmurs, âthat the Beaumont Brewery is back in Beaumont hands, I want to know that I have your full support. Iâve spent the last week getting to know you and your teams. I know that Chadwick Beaumont, my half brother,â he added, proud of the way he kept his voice level, âran this company with a sense of pride and family honor and Iâm making this promise to you, here, in this roomâwe will restore the Beaumont pride and we will restore the honor to this company. My last name may not be Beaumont, but I am one nonetheless. Do I have your support?â
Again, his eyes found Caseyâs. She was looking at him and then Danielâno doubt looking for the family resemblance that lurked beneath their unique