I didn’t move. I smiled — small, polite, the kind of smile my grandmother used to call “the one before the storm.” “Of course, Vivian,” I said. “But before I go, the donor asked me last week to walk him through the load-bearing logic on the cantilevered roof. Should I forward him your notes, or…?” Vivian’s smile twitched. The donor, Mr. Halvorsen, leaned forward. “Yes, actually. Vivian, I’d love to hear your reasoning on the twelve-degree tilt. I had concerns about wind shear.” Silence. Vivian opened her mouth. Closed it. Opened it again. “Well, the — the calculations are quite technical —” “I’ll pull them up,” I said gently, and clicked to slide forty-seven. My name was on every footer. Every revision log. Every stamped engineering consult. I walked them through it — the way the roof mimicked the wing of a heron native to the lake, the way the rainwater collection fed the community garden, the way the budget came in nine percent under because I’d sourced reclaimed cedar from a mill an hour north. Mr. Halvorsen stood up at the end and shook MY hand. “Young lady, this is the most thoughtful civic design I’ve seen in twenty years. I’d like you as lead architect on the Halvorsen Foundation’s next three projects.” The mayor nodded. The council clapped. Vivian’s blazer suddenly looked less powerful and more like a costume. She cornered me in the hallway after. “You humiliated me.” I tilted my head. “No, Vivian. I just stopped fetching the coffee.” I gave my notice the next morning. Halvorsen’s contracts followed me out the door — eighteen million in billings, gone in a Monday. Six months later I opened Hannah Reyes Studio in a sunlit loft three blocks from the Lakeside site. On opening day, a delivery arrived: a single red blazer, dry-cleaned, with a note. “Found this in your old office. Thought you might want to burn it. — The intern who saw everything.” I didn’t burn it. I framed the note.
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