The Sterling executives filed in wearing suits that cost more than my rent. Marcus stood at the head of the glass table, laser pointer twitching in his hand, explaining my neural network like a tourist reading a foreign menu. Priya nodded beside him, adjusting her pearls. I stood by the credenza pouring coffee, invisible in flats and a gray cardigan, exactly the way they liked me. Then Sterling’s CEO, a silver-haired woman named Delphine Marchetti, raised one finger. She asked why the confidence interval collapsed under seasonal drift on slide fourteen. Marcus laughed the laugh of a man who has never opened a Jupyter notebook. He said, and I quote, the math is proprietary, Delphine, you wouldn’t want the weeds. Delphine did not blink. She said she had personally funded three Stanford AI labs and she very much wanted the weeds. Priya’s smile cracked like cheap porcelain. Marcus pivoted and said their junior analyst could maybe explain the technical bit, gesturing at me the way you gesture at a lamp. I set the carafe down. I walked to the projector. I plugged in the flash drive that had lived in my cardigan pocket for six days. On the screen appeared the original repository, every commit stamped with my name, Nora Aday, going back fourteen months, plus the internal chat log where Marcus wrote she’s a glorified intern, we’ll rebrand the model at launch. The room went so quiet I heard the HVAC. Delphine read the timestamps out loud, slowly, like a judge reading a verdict. She turned to our CEO and said she would sign the eighteen million dollar contract, but only if the actual architect, Miss Aday, ran the account, and only if Marcus and Priya were nowhere near her data. Our CEO looked at Marcus the way you look at a stain on a wedding dress. Security walked them out before lunch. I kept the cardigan. I framed the carafe.
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