I picked up the pen. Marcus leaned back, satisfied, already mentally spending the bonus he thought my exit would earn him. “Smart girl,” he said. I clicked the pen twice. Then I set it down, untouched. “Marcus,” I said quietly, “do you remember the compliance training in March? The one you skipped?” His smile flickered. “They taught us that every conference room on the executive floor records audio for legal protection. Has since 2019.” The color left his face in stages — forehead first, then jaw. I slid my phone across the table, screen up. On it was an email, timestamped four minutes ago, sent to Diane Hartwell, the founder’s daughter and incoming CEO. Attached: seventeen months of expense reports I’d quietly archived, showing Marcus routing “consulting fees” to a shell company registered to his brother-in-law. Three hundred and forty thousand dollars. “I wasn’t going to send it,” I said. “I really wasn’t. I was going to give my notice next month and walk away clean. But then you decided to invent a relationship to destroy my reputation on the way out.” The conference room door opened. Diane stepped in with two people from legal and a man I recognized from corporate security. She didn’t look at Marcus. She looked at me. “Claire, I’m so sorry it took us this long. Would you join us in my office? We’d like to discuss the VP role.” Marcus stood up too fast, knocking his chair. “Claire — Claire, wait, we can talk about this —” I picked up my blazer. At the doorway I turned around one last time. “Marcus,” I said, “sign the resignation letter. Your choice, sweetheart.” I left the pen on the table. Six weeks later, I was running his floor. The shell company was a federal matter by then. And the wool rug in his old office? I had it replaced. It never really suited the room.
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