The next morning I did not come back as Elena the janitor. I came back as Elena Cole, majority shareholder, in a charcoal coat and the same worn shoes Vanessa had mocked the day before. The lobby froze when the security guard who had escorted me out the night before stood up and quietly opened the glass doors for me. I walked past the espresso bar, past the marble counter still stained with my granola crumbs, and into the boardroom where Vanessa was mid-presentation about employee efficiency. She turned, saw me, and the color drained from her face in real time. Elena, she whispered, what are you doing up here. I set the broken lanyard on the table in front of her, right next to the untouched pastry tray. I told the room, quietly, that as of this morning every employee on the cleaning, security and cafeteria staff would receive a fifteen percent raise, paid lunch breaks, and access to the same wellness program the executives enjoyed. Then I turned to Vanessa. You told me people like me were born to scrub. My late husband built this company from a single laundromat, scrubbing floors with his own hands. He taught me that the person emptying your trash can see your character more clearly than any performance review. Security will help you gather your things. Vanessa’s mouth opened and closed like she was drowning. As she was walked out, my daughter Mia came running through the lobby in her little rain boots, waving a get well card she had made for me the night before. I knelt down and caught her, granola crumbs and all, right there on the marble. The staff who had watched me get humiliated the day before began to clap, softly at first, then loud enough to shake the glass. Mia looked up at me and asked if the mean lady was gone. I kissed her forehead and told her yes, baby, the mean lady is gone, and no one is ever going to talk to Mommy like that again.
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