Vanessa clicked to slide two. The renderings loaded beautifully — until the title bar flickered. Because every file in that deck was hosted on MY secured cloud, watermarked with MY licensing signature, the same signature the state board required for any public-works submission. She didn’t know that. She’d never read the regulations. She kept talking, gesturing at the glass atrium I’d dreamed up at 3 a.m. for months, calling the cantilever “her favorite little touch.” Then slide four froze. A soft chime echoed through the speakers. On the giant screen, an automated compliance notice bloomed in red: “PRESENTER UNVERIFIED. LICENSED ARCHITECT OF RECORD: HANNAH REYES. PROCEED?” The room went silent. Vanessa laughed too loudly. “Just a glitch, ignore it —” but the mayor was already squinting. My boss, Daniel Vance, rose halfway from his seat, face draining. I walked forward, calm as Sunday morning. “It’s not a glitch,” I said into the lapel mic I’d quietly clipped on. “State law requires the architect of record to personally present any municipal project over twenty million. If she continues, this entire bid is void.” Gasps. Vanessa spun on me, hissing, “You set me up.” I shook my head. “No. You stole a presentation without checking who legally owned it.” I turned to the investors. “If you’ll allow me, I’ll walk you through the real vision.” For the next forty minutes, I spoke without notes — every load calculation, every community workshop, every grandmother I’d interviewed about the riverside benches. The mayor signed the letter of intent before dessert. Daniel pulled me aside by the coat check, sweating through his collar. “Hannah, about Vanessa —” “She can pack her rhinestones,” I said softly. “And Daniel? I’m opening my own firm Monday. The investors already asked.” I walked out into the cold air, blueprints still under my arm, and finally, finally exhaled.
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