The CEO set down his espresso and said, “Actually, I flew in specifically to meet the engineer behind commit hash 7A-Delta.” Brad’s smile froze. Chelsea’s eyes darted to her printout, searching for a hash she’d never seen. “That commit rewrote our entire threat model overnight,” the CEO continued, “and every line traces back to one GitHub handle: quietmaya_dev.” The room went so silent I could hear the espresso machine hiss in the hallway. Brad laughed nervously and said, “Right, quietmaya, that’s a shared team account we all contribute to.” The CEO tilted his head. “Is it? Because I’ve been mentoring quietmaya through our founders’ program for eighteen months. We’ve had weekly calls. I know exactly what she looks like.” He turned to the corner and said, “Maya. Would you like to walk them through the architecture, or should I?” I stood up slowly, cardigan and all. Brad tried to interrupt: “She’s junior, she doesn’t have the full context—” The CEO raised one finger and Brad shut his mouth so fast his teeth clicked. I walked to the front, opened my laptop, and pulled up the private repo only two people on Earth had access to: me, and the man in the grey turtleneck. Chelsea whispered, “Oh my God.” I clicked to the contributor page. My face. My name. Sole author, 4,812 commits. Then I clicked one more tab: the acquisition paperwork. Under “Technical Co-Founder, 12% equity,” was my legal name. Brad had just tried to steal a pitch from someone who already owned a piece of the buyer. The CEO smiled and said, “Brad, Chelsea, HR is waiting in the hallway. Maya, shall we discuss your new title over lunch?” I picked up the coffee Brad had ordered me to fetch, set it gently in front of him, and said, “You were right about one thing. Optics do matter.” Then I walked out with the man who’d just made me a millionaire before my thirtieth birthday.
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