I picked up the pen. Brett grinned, already turning to his audience. “See, gentlemen? Painless.” I clicked the pen twice, set it back down, and folded the resignation letter into a neat paper airplane. Then I slid it across the desk, untouched. “I think you dropped something, son.” His face went purple. “You senile—” The elevator chimed. Out stepped Margaret Hensley-Cho, my daughter, CEO since January, flanked by two board members and the company’s general counsel. Brett’s smirk evaporated. “Mom?” he said — no, wait, that was the intern behind him. Margaret didn’t even look at Brett. She walked straight to me, kissed my cheek, and said, “Morning, Dad. Sorry I’m late. Traffic.” The boardroom went so quiet you could hear the HVAC. Margaret finally turned. “Brett. I got the recording from the desk intercom. All of it.” Brett stammered. “Sir — ma’am — I was motivating—” “You were humiliating the man who founded the floor you stand on. My father stepped down as chairman in 2009 so engineers could lead. He kept a maintenance badge because he likes fixing things with his hands. Including, apparently, personnel problems.” She slid a folder to him. “Your NDA, your severance waiver, and a list of the four federal contracts you’ve jeopardized by berating a protected senior employee on camera. Security will walk you to your car.” Brett opened his mouth. Margaret raised one finger. “The next words out of your mouth determine whether we add defamation to the list.” He left in silence. I picked up my mop. One of the executives — old Hideo, who remembered me from the hangar days — started clapping. Then another. Then the whole glass room. Margaret leaned in and whispered, “Floor 14 bathroom’s clogged again, Dad.” I smiled. “On my way, boss.” Forty-one years. Some legacies you don’t sign away. You scrub them in, one quiet morning at a time.
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