Two days later, Trent called an all-hands meeting to announce the promotion. He stood at the front in his too-tight blazer, smirking at me in the back row. “After careful consideration,” he began, “the regional director role is going to someone who truly embodies our values — Chad from sales.” Chad, twenty-six, whose biggest contribution last quarter was a PowerPoint with three typos in the title slide. The room clapped politely. Trent’s eyes found mine, waiting for me to crumble. Instead, I stood up. “Congratulations, Chad,” I said warmly. “You’ll need this.” I slid a folder down the long table. Trent frowned. “What is that?” “My client list,” I said. “All 187 accounts. They’re yours now. I resigned this morning.” The clapping stopped. Trent laughed nervously. “Maya, don’t be dramatic. Where exactly are you going?” I picked up my bag. “Across the street. I bought the building eight months ago. Quietly. Through an LLC.” The blood drained from his face. “I also bought our two biggest competitors last quarter. I’ve been merging them into one firm — Lyra Group. We officially launched at 6:04 a.m. on Tuesday.” A junior analyst gasped. Trent stammered, “You — you can’t poach our clients —” “I didn’t,” I said gently. “They called me. Turns out when you spend six years building real relationships instead of taking credit for them, people remember your name.” I turned to the room. “Anyone tired of being told they’re lucky to be here — my HR director is downstairs. We’re hiring forty-two roles today. Full remote. Profit share. Actual maternity leave.” Eleven people stood up immediately. Including Chad, who whispered, “I’m so sorry, Maya,” as he passed Trent. Trent grabbed my sleeve at the elevator. “Maya, please, we can renegotiate —” I looked down at his hand until he let go. “Trent,” I said softly, “be grateful I’m even considering not buying this building too.” The doors closed on his face. Three weeks later, I did buy it. His desk is in storage. Mine faces the sunrise.
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