Step aside, janitor. The grown-ups are talking about real money

Bradford kept going, because men like Bradford always do. “Seriously, did someone call you to unclog a toilet? Because the Mercer Tower contract is forty million dollars, and last I checked, mops don’t sign acquisition deals.” He turned to the room. “Can someone walk the help back to the basement?” Karen from legal looked at her shoes. The junior partners suddenly found their water glasses fascinating. I set the tool bag down on the polished walnut table — slowly, deliberately — and unzipped it. Bradford smirked, expecting a wrench. Instead, I pulled out a thin leather folio and slid it across to him. “Open it,” I said. He flipped the cover, and the smirk died in stages. Inside was the deed of ownership for Halcyon Architecture — and the name on it was mine. “Six years ago,” I said quietly, “my father, Daniel Park, founded this firm. When he passed, I inherited controlling interest. I asked the board to keep my identity private because I wanted to see how people treated the man they thought couldn’t help them. I fixed your skylight, Bradford. I rewired your conference room. I brought you coffee the morning of the Henderson pitch, and you told me to use the service elevator next time because my uniform was ‘depressing the clients.'” The room went arctic. Bradford’s mouth opened and closed like a dying fish. “The Mercer Tower deal,” I continued, “requires my personal signature. I’ve reviewed your proposal. It’s a vanity project that would have bankrupt a junior division to inflate your bonus.” I picked up his name placard, looked at it once, and dropped it into my tool bag. “You’re terminated, effective immediately. Karen, please escort Mr. Kessler to the service elevator. I hear it’s depressing — but it builds character.” Bradford stood there shaking as security arrived. I turned to the rest of the table and smiled, the same polite smile I’d given him every morning for six years. “Now,” I said, “shall we talk about real money?”

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