The lobby went dead silent. Two receptionists looked away. A junior analyst pulled out his phone, then thought better of it and slipped it back into his pocket. Derek stepped closer, close enough that I could smell his cologne over the spilled coffee, and he lowered his voice into that hiss men like him save for people they think can’t fight back. “Down. Now. Or security walks you out with nothing but the clothes on your back, and I make one phone call and your kids don’t eat next week.” I felt my jaw lock. I thought about my mother, who cleaned offices just like this one for thirty-one years so I could sit in the rooms Derek thought he owned. I slowly set the paper cup on the marble floor. That’s when the elevator behind him chimed. Eleanor Park, my chief of staff, stepped out in a cream suit, flanked by two members of the legal team and the head of HR. She didn’t look at Derek. She looked at me, and gave the smallest nod. “Ma’am,” she said clearly, so the whole lobby heard, “the board is ready for you upstairs. And the buyer’s representative from Halden is already in the room.” Derek’s face did something I’ll remember for the rest of my life. First confusion. Then a nervous little laugh, like he was waiting for the punchline. Then his eyes dropped to the janitor badge on my chest, and up to Eleanor, and back to me, and all the color drained out of him in one clean sweep. “Ma’am?” he whispered. “There must be some mistake.” I bent down, picked up the paper cup, and dropped it gently into his open hand. “You told me to clean up my mess, Derek. Consider that your last instruction from me as an employee.” Eleanor turned to HR. “Escort Mr. Vance to his office. He has fifteen minutes to collect personal items. Revoke all access before he reaches the parking garage.” I walked past him toward the elevator, and I didn’t look back. I didn’t need to. The whole lobby was already watching him learn my name.
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