I didn’t sit down. I walked past Bradley, past the velvet rope, and slid the envelope into the hands of Mr. Hartwell himself — the founding partner, the man whose signature mattered more than any in the room. Bradley laughed nervously. “Sir, ignore her, she’s just an associate having a moment—” Mr. Hartwell raised one finger, and the room went silent. He opened the envelope. Inside were time-stamped CAD files, original sketches dated eighteen months before Bradley’s so-called ‘breakthrough,’ and a notarized letter from the Lakeshore client confirming that every design revision had come directly from my email address. Mr. Hartwell’s jaw tightened. He turned the first sketch toward the crowd. The watermark in the corner read ‘M. Chen, 2:14 AM.’ Bradley’s face drained of color. “That — that’s a misunderstanding, I supervised her, the concepts evolved together—” “Funny,” Mr. Hartwell said, “because the client just told me on the phone yesterday that they refused to sign the next contract unless Maya Chen was the lead architect. They said you couldn’t even explain the load-bearing calculations last Tuesday.” A gasp rippled through the room. Mr. Hartwell took the microphone Bradley had been clutching. “Effective tonight, Maya Chen is promoted to Principal Architect of the Lakeshore Division. Bradley, your access badge is deactivated. Security will walk you out before dessert.” Bradley lunged for the blueprints on the easel — and Mr. Hartwell calmly placed his hand over them. “Those belong to her. They always did.” The crowd erupted. Cameras flashed. Bradley stumbled backward into a waiter, champagne soaking the lapels of the suit he’d bought with my stolen bonus. I stepped to the podium, unrolled my drawings, and finally — finally — said the words I’d rehearsed in the dark for three years: “Good evening. My name is Maya Chen. Let me show you what I actually designed.”
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