Marcus cleared his throat and launched in, gesturing at the renderings like a magician selling a trick. He talked about cantilevers. He talked about wind shear. He used the word “obviously” four times in ninety seconds. The lead client, a quiet woman named Ms. Aoki, tilted her head. “And the foundation adjustments after the soil report?” she asked. Marcus blinked. “The soil report was within tolerance.” “It wasn’t,” I said softly. Every head turned. I stepped forward and opened my portfolio. “The geotechnical survey flagged differential settlement on the northeast corner three weeks ago. I submitted revised pile specifications Monday. Marcus, you initialed them.” I slid the page across the table. His signature sat there like a confession. Ms. Aoki picked it up. “So the plans he just presented are the outdated set?” Silence. Marcus laughed, the high nervous one. “She’s confused. She’s not even on this project—” “I’m the lead structural engineer on this project,” I said. “I have been since the proposal phase. You were assigned as client liaison eleven days ago.” I turned to Ms. Aoki. “The corrected drawings are in your inbox, timestamped. I wanted to walk you through them today, but Mr. Pell felt the adults should handle it.” The room didn’t laugh. It exhaled. Ms. Aoki closed the folder slowly. “Hartwell can keep the contract,” she said, “on the condition that she runs the meetings from now on. All of them.” Marcus opened his mouth. Our managing partner, who’d been silent in the corner, finally spoke. “Marcus. My office. Now.” I gathered my portfolio while the clients packed up around me. Ms. Aoki paused at the door. “Twelve years?” she asked quietly. “Twelve years,” I said. She nodded once. “Took him twelve minutes to hand you the room.” I sat down in the leather chair Marcus had patted. It was, I noticed, surprisingly comfortable.
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