I set the printouts down. Slowly. I didn’t cry, didn’t argue—just walked to the credenza and poured water like he asked. Brenton smirked at Marcus. “See? Trainable.” Then the phone on the boardroom wall lit up. Not the conference line. The red one. The one only three people in the building can dial. Our CEO, Mr. Halden, went pale and answered on speaker because the red line demands speaker. A woman’s voice filled the room, calm as glass: “Robert, I’m two minutes out. Please have the Q4 architect meet me at reception—the one who authored the Meridian model. I want to shake her hand before the board vote.” Brenton laughed nervously. “That’s me, ma’am, Brenton Cole—” She cut him off. “I didn’t ask for a name, Mr. Cole. I have the commit logs. I have the client emails. I have every version history from a certain Dorchester Gmail account CC’d to my office since March. Put her on.” Every head swiveled. To me. The intern who “smelled like copier toner.” I stepped forward and said, “This is Nia.” The voice softened. “Nia. My daughter told me what you built. I’m buying the whole model—and the woman who made it. See you downstairs.” Marcus dropped his pen. Brenton’s face did this slow, wet collapse, like a cake left in the rain. Mr. Halden whispered, “Nia… that’s Katherine Vance. She owns 61% of this company.” I picked up my printouts, tucked the deck under my arm, and paused at Brenton’s chair. “Refills are self-serve now.” I didn’t slam the door. I closed it soft. That’s the sound that hurts them more.
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