I picked up the pen. Victor smiled, the slow kind that thinks it’s already won. Then I clicked it twice and set it back down. “Before I sign,” I said, “you should know I invited someone to witness it.” The boardroom doors opened. In walked Margaret Hartwell — yes, that Hartwell, the eighty-two-year-old matriarch who owned forty-one percent of the firm and whose family name was bolted to the half-built tower downtown. Behind her came her granddaughter Priya, our outside counsel, carrying a tablet. Victor’s smile slipped one inch. “Margaret, this is a private personnel matter—” “Sit down, Victor,” she said, and he sat like a schoolboy. Priya turned the tablet around. On screen: the audio waveform of his voice, three minutes ago, threatening me. Beside it, a folder of forty-seven emails. The voicemail where he called me ‘the brown girl with the mouth.’ The expense report where he’d billed the lake house weekend to a client. Margaret didn’t raise her voice. She never does. “Elena designed the cantilever that saved us eleven million dollars. You tried to take her name off the patent application last March. Did you think I don’t read what I sign?” Victor opened his mouth. Closed it. “Effective tonight,” Margaret continued, “you are separated from this firm for cause. Your equity reverts. Your NDA does not protect you from what these women choose to say next.” She turned to me. “Ms. Reyes. The board met an hour ago. The Hartwell Tower will be renamed at your discretion, and the senior partner office on forty-two is yours, if you’ll have it.” I looked at Victor — small now, the way he’d promised to make me. I picked up the gold pen, slid it into my pocket, and smiled. “I’ll have it,” I said. “And Victor? Keep the lake house. You’re going to need somewhere quiet to read the lawsuit.”
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