Mr. Hayashi stopped in front of me, not Trent. He bowed slightly, the way he always did before a serious conversation, and said, “Eleanor, the consortium is ready whenever you are. We’d like you to walk us through the final structural revisions — the ones that saved the east cantilever.” The atrium went very, very quiet. Trent’s smile flickered. “There must be a mix-up,” he laughed, stepping forward. “I’ll handle the walkthrough. Eleanor just organizes the files.” Mr. Hayashi tilted his head. “Mr. Brennan, every revision submitted to our firm for the last fourteen months was signed E. Vance, lead structural architect. We assumed your family knew.” I unrolled the blueprints across the podium. My name was stamped in the corner of every sheet, beside the license number I had earned the year before Daniel and I married. I had stayed silent because the work mattered more than the credit. But Trent had just told eighty people I was the hired help, and Mr. Hayashi did not tolerate dishonesty in a partner. I turned to the room. “The east cantilever was failing load simulations in March. I redesigned the truss system over six weekends. Trent saw the drafts on my kitchen table and presented them in Tokyo as his own.” I slid a dated email thread onto the projector — my drafts, my timestamps, Trent’s forwarded versions sent three days later. Daniel stepped out of the crowd, pale, and walked to my side without a word. He took my hand. Mr. Hayashi addressed Trent quietly. “The consortium will be revising the leadership structure tonight. Ms. Vance, would you accept the principal seat?” I picked up my clipboard — the one Trent had mocked — and signed. Trent’s champagne flute trembled so hard it spilled onto his polished shoes. The quiet one had been holding the blueprints all along.
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